Very interesting book to go with a very interesting movie, about an intense and contentious battle.
The movie is also becomes quite a session of "Hey, it's that guy!" Of course, it later turns into "Hey, which guy is that?"
A place to talk about movies--Old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
Very interesting book to go with a very interesting movie, about an intense and contentious battle.
The movie is also becomes quite a session of "Hey, it's that guy!" Of course, it later turns into "Hey, which guy is that?"
Rapid Fire was decent, Showdown in Little Tokyo had its moments, and Laser Mission was one of the worst movies I've ever seen. Legacy Of Rage helps define the term pedestrian, and I suppose Kung Fu: The Movie was okay -- if you don't hate the Kung Fu franchise.
The movie is also becomes quite a session of "Hey, it's that guy!" Of course, it later turns into "Hey, which guy is that?"
Yep. Plus there's two character actors in that movie that I awlays tend to conflate anyway, and putting them in the same movie where they both wear desert fatigues doesn't help.
Also, about half the American soldiers in the movie are played by Brits doing American accents. Not to mention Jason Issacs doing a Texan accent.
Rapid Fire was decent
I've been meaning to catch this one, as I heard it was passable.
The movie is also becomes quite a session of "Hey, it's that guy!"
No kidding. At one point, I had it chronicled like, Legolas and Obi-wan Kenobi are on point, with that dude from Trainspotting, Hot Danny Taylor, and the kid from Lassie over there, Daniel Deronda carrying the medical supplies, and Lucius Malfoy in charge.
That's not even getting to the part where one of the Deltas was The Hulk, and all the other guys who each had been in like 100 military movies.
You know, I really wish The Crow were better. If it just had a slightly stronger script, I could upgrade my "really like" to "love." There's just something about it, the bizarre way it makes something so banal so watchable. And Ernie Hudson! Ah, Ernie Hudson. And Tony Todd.
Anyone know about the Skull Cowboy? It looks like a character that would have helped define the mythology a bit better, though after skimming a description of his scenes, I think the movie works better leaving it vague.
Heh. I looked on IMDb, and that movie is the only work the girl who played Sarah ever did.
Gah, you've just made me miss The Crow TV series terribly (I wonder if it's on DVD...) and the chick that played Sarah in that. Hopefully she'll get a good role in the next X-movie.
Gah, you've just made me miss The Crow TV series terribly (I wonder if it's on DVD...) and the chick that played Sarah in that.
So that was good? (Oh, the chick that played Sarah was Kitty. Aaah. Cool.)
I think I might quit the movies if, on my first job, the lead actor managed to get killed dead. Or my parents might make me quit the movies.
I think, as a translation of what I've read of the comics, The Crow is pretty emotionally faithful -- overwrought, baroque, somewhat extreme in its choices. I could wish it were more subtle, and that, e.g., the villains were less outré and thereby more scary. I also think Eric was a much better sass than he was a preacher.
Visually, I think the focus on the industrial style dates it a bit, but I imagine it's sort of an ur-text for many latter-day gothy types.
Was Tony Todd one of Wincott's henchmen? I completely forgot he was in it.
However, Bai Ling, David Patrick Kelly, whoever played Skank - such a good bad-guy cast.