Well, Ginger Snaps Back (clevah) has done pretty well in the Netflix reviews. It's now at the top of my queue.
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.
So, in this version Kong and the girl do it?
Didn't see the Jessica Lange version, didja?
Has anyone seen Christmas with the Kranks? I clicked over to Rotten Tomatoes, and it has a 4 percent rating, the lowest I ever remember seeing there.
Good Lord! That rating is lower than Catwoman and The Cat in the Hat, and only rivalled by House of the Dead. I'd heard bad reviews, but nothing to indicate there was a need to round up a lynch mob to prevent the director from filming again...
I read a few of the bad reviews for Xmas/Kranks, and the common thread was the sheer detest everyone had for the central theme that "Americans must march in lock-step with their neighbors, especially when it comes to crass commercialism in the holidays."
Most Christmas movies leave me wanting to vomit, due to their rather nasty messages (whether intended or not).
Jingle All the Way tops that list, though it sounds as if Kranks will give it a run for it's money.
Most Christmas movies leave me wanting to vomit, due to their rather nasty messages (whether intended or not).
You make an exception for The Ref, no?
Interesting stuff from that site:
Overall, Netflix controls only 8% to 9% of the DVD rental market. But the company accounts for one-third to one-half of all rentals of "indie" and low-budget movies. According to Sarandos, the Netflix executive, specialized films often outperform mainstream studio movies rented via the service.
For example, 1 in 4 Netflix subscribers have rented "The House of Sand and Fog," the critically acclaimed drama that made little at the box office. The New Zealand film "Whale Rider," whose young star Keisha Castle-Hughes earned an Oscar nomination but whose ticket sales totaled about $20 million, has been rented on Netflix more than either "Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle" or "The Hulk."
Which I'm sure means they'll go under before 2005 is out.
You make an exception for The Ref, no?
Oh HELLS yeah.
Actually, it's rather funny. When a Christmas movie sets out to present some sort of traditional image of Christmas or people, it comes across to me as vile and repulsive in the extreme.
When a movie sets out to tell a bitter, cynical Christmas story, it will almost always be adored by me.
The Ref is my favorite Christmas movie. No exceptions.
Well, "traditional" sappy Christmas story message nearly always become creepy and off-putting if you think about what they're really saying. Whereas movies that start out intending to be sick and wrong tend not to disappoint.
Case in point: Bad Santa