Holy Jesus! You mean I can WATCH THEM?! Dude, I will check those out later.
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.
Hubby was mightily upset at Toy Story because they didn't save the hurt toys from the evil kid. He didn't trust the scare tactics to last very long and figured the kid would only be worse later.
Tom's list is mine, though I would probably switch Finding Nemo and The Incredibles. Maybe. It's very close.
I shall wait to pass final judgement until I have seen The Incredibles a bazillion more times.
Whoa. I'm nervous about this version. I may have to read the book again.
Tom's list is mine
Mine too, except that The Incredibles doesn't open here until 9th December, so I can't rate it yet.
Nemo is Benno's favourite film, so I can't say how often I've seen it; lots and lots of times, at any rate. And still I have yet to get tired of it. It's toddler-proof!
This is not my Crow. Not any of my Crows.
He looks disturbingly like Helena Bonham-Carter circa Fight Club.
Hubby was mightily upset at Toy Story because they didn't save the hurt toys from the evil kid. He didn't trust the scare tactics to last very long and figured the kid would only be worse later.
Me, too.
He looks disturbingly like Helena Bonham-Carter circa Fight Club.
Admittedly, my favourite HBC, but she doesn't quite look like she came back from the dead. More like she'd stayed there.
Hubby was mightily upset at Toy Story because they didn't save the hurt toys from the evil kid. He didn't trust the scare tactics to last very long and figured the kid would only be worse later.
One of the more amusing tidbits on the commentary track for Toy Story was when the director and writers all admitted to basing the abusive-to-toys kid on their own childhood selves. A few had distinct memories of blowing their GI Joes up with firecrackers. They all figured that the "poor kid" had been misunderstood--he was just experimenting in his fantasy playworld.