I wanna see Phantom. But is Gandalfe going to let me? NoooooOOOooo. 'Cause it's a girl movie. I'll probably have to wait for the DVD and watch it w/out benefit of testosterone.
Good to know it won't make me bawl, a la Moulin Rouge. 'Cause sobbing in the theater (or, in the privacy of my own home) is embarrassing.
Hey! I'm the one who has the 3 disc Les Mis set, and who is known to burst out into snatches of Jesus Christ Superstar. So, don't be saying I won't let you see musical theater.
I can't wait for Phantom, and had no idea that I'd have to wait another 3 weeks to see it here. The 11 year old girl in me is tapping her foot impatiently.
I'm hoping I can emulate Jilli and just watch Phantom for the pretty, because I sooo much want to see the pretty. But I think I can, because I watched
Legend
multiple times just for the waltz at the end.
Peter Saarsgard? [...]got that same incandescence that Ewan has [...]HOTT!
And this would explain why the Washington Post just told me Ewan was out and Peter was in. Because I am certainly not done with Ewan yet.
Gandalfe:
Hey! I'm the one who has the 3 disc Les Mis set, and who is known to burst out into snatches of Jesus Christ Superstar. So, don't be saying I won't let you see musical theater.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, I once had the double album of Phantom (ex-Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em guy version), with extra bits. Lost it between NZ and here, tres bummere.
Raquel:
Because I am certainly not done with Ewan yet
Who is?
Anyone who is? I'll take their share.
I saw Neverland last night. It was pretty, JD was pretty pretty (and good), and the sets, costumes, etc. were lovely. I adore the whole Edwardian aesthetic. But while I didn't start making shopping lists in my head at any point, I didn't really take much away from the movie beyond nice, pretty, non-offensive. Yes, I cried at the end, but I'm an easy crier at the movies. It was sort of like a really good piece of shortbread. Tasty and satisfying, but an hour later I was ready to watch something noir or that involved explosions. I was impressed by the acting of the kid who played Peter, though.
I was just reading a British editorial about how
Alexander
just killed the renaissance of the sword-and-sandal epic. This last para makes me ask: Are these real projects that are/were in the works? Or is the author goofing?
in the wake of lacklustre returns from the historic dramas Master & Commander: The Far Side of the World, Cold Mountain and The Alamo, Hollywood is already pulling back from some of these extravagantly budgeted productions. Baz Luhrmann's Alexander project starring Leonardo DiCaprio is in limbo according to his would-be co-star Nicole Kidman. There's no sign of Vin Diesel starring as the hard-driving conqueror Hannibal, nor George Clooney charging into the Battle of Thermopylae in Michael Mann's Gates of Heaven. Nor has any major actress been announced to star in Warner's long-in-the-works Kleopatra.
I've never heard of
Kleopatra
or
Gates Of Heaven,
but the other two have had press.
I can't say I'm not sad at the swords and sandals dying, although I really would have liked a successful
Alexander,
what with all the pretty.
I've heard of Gates of Heaven, in conjunction with your very own bow-wielding boytoy. Not much about what the actual story was, just that it involved him using a sword—it could just as easily have been a David Eddings adaptation as a historical pic about Thermopylae.