Buffista Movies 3: Panned and Scanned
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.
Man, Depp in the Bed Blender is a classic moment.
That does end with an improbable amount of blood shooting from the bed and gushing out onto the ceiling, right? They show that scene in the montage at the beginning of
Freddy vs. Jason.
Rachel Leigh Cook will always be the chick who destroyed the kitchen against drugs.
Ha ha ha ha. Oh yes. I remember that now. ANY QUESTIONS?
P-C, Can't Hardly Wait is summer of 98, and She's All That is early 99.
Hm, well it can count as a precursor, kind of the way
X-Men
kicked off the comic book movie craze even though
Blade
came first.
Was
She's All That
really
that
much more successful than
Can't Hardly Wait?
And don't they both owe
Clueless
a lot for softening the market?
Now I'm curious about the comic book movie craze. I agree that X-Men was hysterically successful, but there was still quite a lull between that and a bunch of high-profile actors putting on the spandex.
When I had chicken pox, back in 1987, I watched
That's when I had chicken pox! Only, I watched Mannequin about 90,000 times, and I made everyone else watch it too.
ETA:
Is Netflix better than Blockbuster online? Because Blockbuster seems to offer the same thing, and is two dollars cheaper.
Rachel Leigh Cook will always be the chick who destroyed the kitchen against drugs.
Oh, shit. Really?
Does the Blockbuster service offer edited DVDs, like they were reputed to be "for contenting" their videos?
Me, I like Netflix because they were there first, and have the luxury of never having me had a confrontation with idiot clerks, which drove me away from Blockbuster as soon as I first heard of Netflix. Sour taste, not gone.
Well, according to IMDB, She's All That did $63,319,509 (domestic) on a $10 million budget, while Can't Hardly Wait did $25,339,117 on the same budget. So, um, yes.
Was She's All That really that much more successful than Can't Hardly Wait?
And don't they both owe Clueless a lot for softening the market?
That's a point. I don't remember when/why I deemed it, say, a cultural touchstone, but there may be a better candidate for "kicking off the teen movie craze of the 90s which bled into the 00s."
I agree that X-Men was hysterically successful, but there was still quite a lull between that and a bunch of high-profile actors putting on the spandex.
Well, there was a lull, yes, because the movies had to get made. I think after
X-Men
is when all the online buzz involved comic-book movies, because you had a big-name director attached to one. Thus Ang Lee took
Hulk
and John Woo took
Ninja Turtles...
which never managed to surface. If not
X-Men,
what would you suggest?
Spider-Man
?
Damn. How wrong was I?
Clueless
did $56M on twice that budget. Shows how off-kilter my perceptions are. And I have to mentally be nicer to FPJr too. This bites.
Hey, does this mean I was more right than ita?
savors this moment
If nothing else, I give
She's All That
props for embodying so many of the genre tropes that
Not Another Teen Movie
sent up so hilariously.
Watched
Denied
today. The editing made
Lost Highway
look linear, and I'll bet more than half the run time was taken up by black screens between scenelets. Sound and picture quality made me wonder if I was following in Helen Keller's footsteps. If you're tempted to watch this movie, look at this promotional shot instead. It's much better than anything actually in the movie.