But it's not the actor kissing someone else, it's their character kissing another character...(not getting it, I guess).
Hey kids, it's another version of Evil Dead! Except not directed by Raimi, and should be it's own version and not a studio/distributor thing. Still, it fills in that last bit of DVD shelf next to all the other Evil Dead versions.
it's not the actor kissing someone else, it's their character kissing another character...
That having been said, there are still spouses that have a problem with seeing the visual, even significant others in the business.
Hey kids, it's another version of Evil Dead! Except not directed by Raimi, and should be it's own version and not a studio/distributor thing. Still, it fills in that last bit of DVD shelf next to all the other Evil Dead versions.
If they don't use Bruce Campbell (and they might not, cuz, you know, old) they really need to get ahold of Nicholas Brendon's agent.
That link also says that they'll be making a Grudge sequel now that the American remake has cracked the $100 million mark. Yay! More crab-crawling work for Takako Fuji!
eta: this site [link] says that Justin Theroux is in the running to play Ash.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no. NO!
Varnakaos said as Stone has the right to freely express himself, the audience should have the right to know.
"We cannot come out and say that (former U.S.) President John F. Kennedy was a shooting guard for the Los Angeles Lakers basketball team and so Warner cannot come out and say Alexander was gay," Varnakos said.
Has this guy ever SEEN an Oliver Stone movie?
that Justin Theroux is in the running to play Ash
Well that's...unexpected.
Oh well, better than Justin Timberlake I guess. Although seeing Timberlake put through the average Ash abuse quotient of an Evil Dead movie COULD be a lot of fun, but it would be sort of meta.
What's that quote from, Betsy?
Sherlock, Jr. is playing tonight at the Walter Reade. If you're in the New York area & can make it I urge you to see it. The film is my favorite Buster Keaton and the venue is my favorite theater in NYC. It's a little expensive for a movie, but it's worth every cent.
The film is Keaton at his peak, perhaps film comedy at its peak. Design and execution are audacious and flawless. His technique (as filmaker and as performer) is dazzling, but it's never just for show. Part of what's so extraordinary is how the stunts, jokes, and special effects (the eye-popping montage sequence!) grow organically out of the story. He sets things up so well that stuff you'd never think of (the dress stunt, the motorcycle sequence, the central conceit which Woody Allen lifted for The Purple Rose of Cairo) follows so naturally that it makes complete at the same time it takes one's breath away with its inventiveness. Nothing is forced. Just amazing, and worthy of many, many viewings.
What's that quote from, Betsy?
It's a story up at Yahoo. Some Greeks are outraged, outraged! at the implication that Alexander was bi.