And I wonder, what possible catastrophe came crashing down from heaven and brought this dashing stranger to tears?

Drusilla ,'Conversations with Dead People'


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.


sumi - Dec 17, 2004 12:17:51 pm PST #7240 of 10001
Art Crawl!!!

Amazon notified me that Bringing Up Baby is available for pre-order. There's a special 2-disc dvd set coming out on March 1st.


Lyra Jane - Dec 17, 2004 12:22:13 pm PST #7241 of 10001
Up with the sun

Amazon notified me that Bringing Up Baby is available for pre-order. There's a special 2-disc dvd set coming out on March 1st.

Great news. Thank you, Sumi.


Glamcookie - Dec 17, 2004 2:16:52 pm PST #7242 of 10001
I know my own heart and understand my fellow man. But I am made unlike anyone I have ever met. I dare to say I am like no one in the whole world. - Anne Lister

Amazon notified me that Bringing Up Baby is available for pre-order. There's a special 2-disc dvd set coming out on March 1st.

Woohoo! It's about time.


Connie Neil - Dec 17, 2004 2:28:13 pm PST #7243 of 10001
brillig

Hot damn! Good news on the health/diet front. A bunch of researchers are putting together a list of the foods that will help cardiovascular health.

[link]

Treating yourself to 100 grams of dark chocolate every day appears to reduce systolic blood pressure -- the top number in a blood pressure reading -- by 5 units, and the bottom blood pressure number by almost 2 units, which research suggests may reduce the risk of cardiovascular problems by 20 percent.

Yeehah!


§ ita § - Dec 17, 2004 7:27:40 pm PST #7244 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

You know, I like the premise of Final Destination 2, but every death is so damned funny that I can't even be creeped out. My favourite so far is the one with the plate glass -- I've liked that medium for death since The Omen.


Connie Neil - Dec 17, 2004 7:32:17 pm PST #7245 of 10001
brillig

Huh, I obviously thought I was in Bitches when I posted earlier. Still, dark chocolate is good at the movies, and one shouldn't post while putting on one's shoes before running to catch a bus.


§ ita § - Dec 17, 2004 7:50:57 pm PST #7246 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I liked Final Destination because that last death was so damned funny. Just about all the deaths in the sequel are funny, yet they inspire no similar fondness. Still, nice to see a secret celebrity boyfriend working.

Just about everyone in this movie was also in Taken. Also Stargate and The Outer Limits and ... but still. Taken might just be the Kevin Bacon of Vancouver.


tiggy - Dec 17, 2004 7:54:47 pm PST #7247 of 10001
I do believe in killing the messenger, you know why? Because it sends a message. ~ Damon Salvatore

Final Destination 2 grossed me out. then again, i'm someone who couldn't finish watching Resident Evil until it was light outside. so take that for what you will.

did you like Taken, ita? it took me a few eps to get into it, but once it did i really liked it.


§ ita § - Dec 17, 2004 8:12:24 pm PST #7248 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Everything felt kinda slapsticky -- sure it was gross, but I was too busy laughing at the complex machinations that lead up to each death, and didn't feel tense.

Taken didn't end up grabbing me, no. Despite my massive Eric Close love. I think that Dakota Fanning killed it for me. Yeah, let me blame it all on her.


Fiona - Dec 18, 2004 5:47:57 am PST #7249 of 10001

BBC2 is doing an afternoon's programming just for me. A 2-hour Hitchcock doc, followed by The Lady Vanishes and The 39 Steps, possibly one of my favourite movies ever. Robert Donat, gnugh. The scene between Donat and Peggy Ashcroft as the frustrated crofter's wife? Pure sexual attraction, Hitchcock-style; and just wait until he handcuffs Donat to Madeleine Carroll....

Top 5 Frederic March movies: I Married a Witch, Nothing Sacred, The Best Years of our Lives, A Star is Born (despite James Mason being the One True Norman Maine) and Dr. Jekyll. I always preferred the Fred version to the Spence one, mainly because I couldn't buy Ingrid Bergmann as a cockney floozy. So, actually nothing to do with the leading man at all.