I don't fancy spending the next month trying to get librarian out of the carpet.

Spike ,'Chosen'


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.


§ 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.


beekaytee - Dec 18, 2004 6:45:16 am PST #7250 of 10001
Compassionately intolerant

Huh. While I've never heard Chow Yun Fat be anything but gracious (and funnily dominated by his wife) in interviews, I'm not suprised by the 'get me away from the dirty round-eye' potential.

I wish I were a bigger person and could say that this revelation reduces the volume of drool he inspires in me but it just doesn't.

Tom Hanks' politics and personality? Took him right off my table. Fwip! But not Fat. I'm shallow that way.

Just ask him to put on those shades and that leather coat and be quiet. I'm happy!


tiggy - Dec 18, 2004 7:08:24 am PST #7251 of 10001
I do believe in killing the messenger, you know why? Because it sends a message. ~ Damon Salvatore

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.

i've seen several buffistas express dislike for Dakota. i guess i'm alone in loving her. i think she's adorable and very talented.


§ ita § - Dec 18, 2004 7:14:05 am PST #7252 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

There are very few precocious kid actors that I like. Preternatural gravitas and maturity in little kids makes me sad and uncomfortable, and she can act it in spades.


§ ita § - Dec 18, 2004 7:48:49 am PST #7253 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Pullman on the HDM adaptation:

As for what it's against - the story is against those who pervert and misuse religion, or any other kind of doctrine with a holy book and a priesthood and an apparatus of power that wields unchallengeable authority, in order to dominate and suppress human freedoms. In Lyra's world, that power is wielded by a mighty and corrupt church, which differs in some ways from the church in our world just as the everyday lives of the characters do. In our own world, that sort of power has been wielded at various times in the name of religion as well as in the name of 'scientific' atheism. It's wielded politically, and it's wielded culturally; sometimes it`s a religious police force that beats women who aren't wearing the correct dress, and sometimes it's a cowardly press, cringing in front of corporate power, that cackles and jeers whenever it sees something it thinks it's safe to criticise.


Sean K - Dec 18, 2004 8:18:29 am PST #7254 of 10001
You can't leave me to my own devices; my devices are Nap and Eat. -Zenkitty

tiggy, you're not alone. I adore Dakota, and quite admire her talent.


Mikey - Dec 18, 2004 9:21:20 am PST #7255 of 10001
All this time, I thought Hunter was a bitch. Turns out she was just hungry.

Huh. While I've never heard Chow Yun Fat be anything but gracious (and funnily dominated by his wife) in interviews, I'm not suprised by the 'get me away from the dirty round-eye' potential.

I wish I were a bigger person and could say that this revelation reduces the volume of drool he inspires in me but it just doesn't.

I'll second that one, Beej.


tiggy - Dec 18, 2004 9:25:34 am PST #7256 of 10001
I do believe in killing the messenger, you know why? Because it sends a message. ~ Damon Salvatore

tiggy, you're not alone. I adore Dakota, and quite admire her talent.

yay! she was the first little kid i saw that inspired me to say that if i was to ever have a kid, i'd want one like her. for me, that's saying a lot.


Scrappy - Dec 18, 2004 10:16:07 am PST #7257 of 10001
Life moves pretty fast. You don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

The Chow Yun Fat quote--at least what I could find from looking around:

"I can't stand talking English every day or the lifestyle there ... not to mention the food," the Hong Kong-born film star was quoted as saying in Friday's editions of Chinese-language newspaper The Sun.
"I only go to America for work," he said. "When I finish work, I leave immediately. I won't stay one day longer."

This sounds like he defintely hates it here, but not that he hates Westerners. So, cranky but not racist. Still a curmudgeonly thing to say, but no worse than, for example, a friend who moved to London five years ago to direct, saying he couldn't stand living in New York or the politics of the theater scene.