Dana it may be that I like Kyser's music. Yeah, the radio show shtick left something to be desired.
Buffy ,'Help'
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.
I finally saw Garden State last night (it's playing at the Parkway, for the EastBayistas). Liked it lots, thought Natalie Portman was fabulous, and couldn't believe my eyes when I saw Ian Holm. Loved the soundtrack, too.
The soundtrack is excellent; I was listening to it on my way to work this morning. I enjoyed Garden State a lot, but I was more annoyed by Natalie Portman than charmed by her.
Something Wild was one of the first movies that completely unhinged my expectations. For the first hour, it's a wacky slapstick 80s flick (with the Feelies! Heck yeah), but it changes tones significantly towards the end. That said, I've only sat through once since I first saw it as a teenager and even that was over a decade ago.
Movies on the list that I haven't seen are The Poltergeist, The Omen, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Rosemary's Baby, The Thing (John Carpenter verision), The Evil Dead, An American Werewolf in London, Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer, Lost Highway, and The Hitcher.
My wife and I watched American Werewolf in London the other night. That's another movie I watched as a teenager and not since, but it's aged remarkably well. It's not very suspenseful, but the visceral horror of his literal transformation into a wolf is wretchedly naturalistic. Rosemary's Baby is just plain creepy. It was on the other night, too, but since my wife is pregnant, we skipped it. Lessee, I remember Poltergeist as scary when I was younger, but I don't know if I'd feel the same way now. The Omen was just kinda silly. The original Texas Chainsaw Massacre is very creepy, partially because it was shot so cheaply that it seems like a documentary at times. The John Carpenter version of The Thing is just kinda disgusting, but occasionally suspenseful. Skip The Evil Dead in favor of the far superior Evil Dead II (which leads directly into Army of Darkness). Henry: Portrait etc. is almost more of an art-psychology movie than a horror flick. I hated it, much as I hated Man Bites Dog. That kind of nihilism isn't scary to me so much as just plain sick. Lost Highway is David Lynch's worst film and I wouldn't call it horror. In fact, it horrified me much less than, say, Mulholland Drive or Blue Velvet. I haven't watched The Hitcher since I was a teenager, but I remember it to be one of those cheesy "omnipotent serial killer" movies where Rutger Hauer could somehow predict every move C. Thomas Howell made. Probably good for late-night cable, but don't waste your money on it.
What else was on the list?
Skip The Evil Dead in favor of the far superior Evil Dead II
IIRC, II is pretty much a remake of the original. I agree that it's much better. Also, Three Stooges humor in a horror flick!
With an evil hand! The original evil hand!
For an oldie-but-goodie horror spoof, I remember liking Abbot and Costello Meet Frankenstein, with appearances by Dracula and the Wolf Man, IIRC. I remember seeing it when I was in junior high and giggling pretty much nonstop. It might be less funny now, though.
Only because I know no better. But I should remedy that.
Anyone see Ray this weekend?