totally agree with you about the ending, ita. i really like the movie, but the ending made the whole movie seem kind of pointless to me.
Dawn ,'Storyteller'
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.
Just watched Chronicles of Riddick.
Wow, that pretty much didn't make any sense at all, did it?
I couldn't even finish it, Consuela. so you're doing better than me.
Thanks for finding that, Robin. I agree that it doesn't necessarily mean he dislikes Americans or westeners. It just strikes me that he's proud of his heritage and country and prefers it to any where else, so good on him.
I still maintain "prefer" is one thing and "can't stand" is quite another.
I finally got around to taking the RotKEE dvd out of the player and putting in the other DVD set that I bought on Tuesday--Mary Poppins. Very fun, and definitely a worthwhile purchase, especially if you're as much of a fan of that movie as I am.
Some info I learned from the documentary and commentary:
The boy who played Michael Banks died when he was only 21, and his only films were the three he did for Disney with Karen Dotrice, who lost contact with him after they finished the films. Julie Andrews remembers him as "cheeky," Dick Van Dyke as "squirmy," Dotrice as "street-smart" and a bit of a hustler (he finagled a dime for every take he completed on the wires during the "We Love to Laugh" sequence, since he was scared of heights).
Dotrice (the daughter of British actor Roy Dotrice) still fondly remembers Walt Disney, to the point of tears when thinking about him for the documentary. Her mother was the reason that Elsa Lancaster was cast as Katie Nana--Dotrice's godfather was Charles Laughton, so the family was close to both Laughton and his wife Lancaster.
The children had no clue that Dick Van Dyke was playing the old director of the bank, and didn't find out until the film's premiere, when they saw his name on the final credits. They just thought he was a smelly old man who was going to die as soon as the day's shoot was over.
Julie Andrews was married to Tony Walton at the time (and pregnant with their daughter when she first met with Disney), and when Disney found out from her what her husband did (art and costume design), he was hired for the film.
And, startling me personally, was the fact that even though I was no longer watching the LotR documentaries, I still couldn't get away from one of the primary talking heads from the Appendices--Brian Sibley shows up as a "movie historian" on the documentary for Mary Poppins!
Chronicles of Riddick was all about the moments for me. I neglected to try and string them together coherently, and that's perhaps how I enjoyed it so much.
Just watched the RotK extended version. I am dizzy and sad.
(the daughter of British actor Roy Dotrice)
Also known as Wesley's DadBot!
(And the coach from The Cutting Edge.)
How much does The Day After suck, and is it a good suck or a bad suck?
I missed that ep of Angel--I remember Roy Dotrice most as Wolfgang's dad in Amadeus.
ETA: Tommyrot, Day After is pretty standard TV-apocalyptic-movie fare, just amped up by the idea of the A-bomb. For better end-of-the-world TV stuff, I'd rent the BBC's Threads, which scared the living crap out of me when I saw it.