Out of, I don't know..... sickness, morbid curiosity.... Thomash and I just sat through about three minutes of From Justin to Kelly.
There was a dialog exchange that, while supposedly spoken in English, contained not a single phrase I could understand or parse.
I think I need to go bash my brains out now.
I think I need to go bash my brains out now.
It only has that effect on people who actually have brains.
The writer of
Frailty
just called me a liar!
Okay, I don't think I got
all
the twists -- I missed
Fenton is a demon.
But I got all of the rest, simply by
watching the movie as if everyone was telling the truth, and seeing what felt most interesting.
I don't count it against the movie -- in fact, I really liked that.
Still, he's a meanie.
I think the only scarier "reality" of the movie than that
they (son and dad) were just psychotic
was finding out that
the son was telling the truth.
I had it in a couple layers -- what if
the victims were guilty.
But then, what if
the dad was really getting visions?
And what if Adam
was really seeing them too?
And, dude, if they
were from God,
for true?
Not to mention the creepiness of
the wrong brother
sitting there, and it wasn't going to be just
a narrated tale, but that the peril was continuing.
And since they seemed to have been clear that he
was the only surviving member of the family, how does he become a threat?
And such a great ending. It all worked for me, too.
Anyone seen They? (It's on in few minutes.)
It stars Marc Blucas.
Now see, I could respect the thought and effort that went into
Frailty
-- one of the few movies I've seen that showed, e.g., how frightening it is to be delusional (even if that does turn out not to be the case, it allowed the dad not to be a villain from the get-go). But I still got to the end and thought to myself, "Self, you know how much you hate it when the cool people get away with shitty behavior just because they're cool? That goes double when the cool person is God."
I thought it sort of undercut itself, by casting a young Fenton who was so convincing, and then throwing him away as an adult. I guess the movie didn't persuade me that his adult outcome would actually happen, and by setting up that adult outcome, the movie invalidated all of that painful thinking and hard work that had gone into his youthful outcome.
Not to spoil things too terribly.
So, I guess, a well-made film, based on a script I hated. If such a thing is possible.
I saw part of They, but it failed to catch my interest sufficiently to watch til the end.
Can anyone recommend
Something Wild
to me, the one with Jeff Daniels? Netflix should have an annotation function, because I need to make notes on why I rent certain movies. This one must be because of something random I read on the internet. It doesn't have any of my favourite stars, and it features a free-spirit woman (with awful jewelry) liberating a stuffy man. Later on it will no doubt go to hell in a handbasket and everyone learn valuable life lessons (or maybe die -- that would be cool).
But for right now, I'm wondering if I should just send it back with all but 10 minutes unwatched. Melanie Griffiths, for christ's sake. What was I thinking?