Nope. ita threatened to sit me down and make me watch a bunch of Hong Kong movies once. Or maybe it was just Bruce Lee movies. I don't really remember. That's the closest connection I can come up with to seeing HK movies, though.
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.
I really hope SMG doesn't get cast. Too short. I'd like to see Angelina Jolie in that outfit . . . . Oh, god, would I.
I gotta go with Allyson's suggestion of Gina Torres. Just gotta.
Dude, I'd take Angelina or Gina. Mrowr.
Has anyone seen/heard anything about A Tale of Two Sisters? Looks creepy but kinda in a good way. [link]
Dude, I'd take Angelina or Gina. Mrowr.
I'll second that "Mrowr." Also, thanks for the link. Now I wanna see A Tale of Two Sisters!
So, I saw The Big Easy last night. Either that movie has the most abrupt ending ever, or for some reason it was edited for TV. I'm not sure. Otherwise, I liked it. It felt very New Orleans.
Now that you've seen The Big Easy, when Gandalf, Legolas, Gimli and Aragorn arrive at Meduseld in TTT and Hama tells them they have to disarm before he can let them enter, and the three divest themselves of bow, quiver, knife, sword, shurikan, garrotte, ankle gun and brass knuckles? I always expect Gimli to mutter, "And if that don't work, I piss on 'em."
I can certainly see why.
Though the funniness of that still wouldn't entice me to watch TTT.
Hilarious cruelty alert:
Of course, Lord Lloyd Webber's music is the whole point of the film, and Joel Schumacher, the director, does his best to find a visual style to match the vulgarity and pretentiousness of the soundtrack.
A. O. Scott (NY Times) vs. Phantom of the Opera. Scott 1, Opera 0.
And more hilarious cruelty about Phantom of the Opera from Salon:
Now it can be told: Although the press has connivingly led us to believe otherwise, Andrew Lloyd Webber and Joel Schumacher are really pseudonyms for two 11-year-old girls from Allentown, Pa., who, disgruntled because their parents wouldn't buy them canopy beds, decided to sit down and write themselves a musical, darn it. And they'd make a movie out of it, too, just you wait and see. "The Phantom of the Opera" is the long-awaited result.