Like any of that's enough to fight the Dark Master. Bator.

Xander ,'Lessons'


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.


Alibelle - Jan 08, 2005 2:42:37 am PST #7728 of 10001
Apart from sports, "my secret favorite thing on earth is ketchup. I will put ketchup on anything. But it has to be Heinz." - my husband, Michael Vartan

Go by yourself - it is the sign of a self-confident person that he or she can attend a movie by his/herself.

Okay, just to be clear, my self confidence is fine. I love going to movies by myself. I mean, I went to a foreign country by myself. So movies are not a source of problems. It's my lack of transportation to pretty theaters that is more of an issue. Because I am a theater snob, and a small, sticky little theater with poor popcorn kind of ruins the movie-going experience for me.

Going to a movie with Lee, however, is worth not going alone, though. Even if we did somehow get lost on our way inside, and ended up seeing the alternate non-funny version of Shaun of the Dead.

(And Lee, I saw Elf and quite enjoyed it. It's silly, and cute. And I would really like to own the soundtrack. So don't be too scared to watch it.)


Alibelle - Jan 08, 2005 2:51:05 am PST #7729 of 10001
Apart from sports, "my secret favorite thing on earth is ketchup. I will put ketchup on anything. But it has to be Heinz." - my husband, Michael Vartan

Frosted Flakes.

I just watched Garden State again, and in case anyone's wondering it's still a really great movie. Yet somehow I think it was funnier in the theater. I'm not sure why.


Alicia K - Jan 08, 2005 2:26:58 pm PST #7730 of 10001
Uncertainty could be our guiding light.

I tried watching Hero and had to turn it off about an hour in. Pretty? Yes. Did I care about any of them? No. Oh look, more slo-mo twirling in the air. Ooh, neat. Not so neat the 62,523rd time.

I would like to see House of Flying Daggers, however. That one looks like it would be more interesting.


Jessica - Jan 08, 2005 3:11:07 pm PST #7731 of 10001
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

I saw Hotel Rwanda and A Very Long Engagement. I think the key to enjoying A Very Long Engagement is to NOT see it directly following Hotel Rwanda. In another mood, I might have liked it, but not today. After Rwanda's raw brutality, being bombarded with that much sly charming cuteness was just exactly the wrong thing to watch, especially coming from another war story.

But everyone should see Hotel Rwanda. Don Cheadle blew me away, and the story itself is gut-wrenching.


DavidS - Jan 08, 2005 3:12:17 pm PST #7732 of 10001
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

and the story itself is gut-wrenching.

not so eager to have gut wrenched...


Gandalfe - Jan 08, 2005 4:22:49 pm PST #7733 of 10001
The generation that could change the world is still looking for its car keys.

I think the key to enjoying A Very Long Engagement is to NOT see it directly following Hotel Rwanda.

I think the key to enjoying pretty much ANYTHING would be to not have it directly following Hotel Rwanda. After that movie, you should just go sit in the park and feed the ducks, or stare at shoppers in the food court, or lie on the couch with your eyes closed. Nothing that actually requires you to think, because the thinking part of your brain will be busy for a while.


erikaj - Jan 08, 2005 4:30:24 pm PST #7734 of 10001
Always Anti-fascist!

Um, I think one of the dealers in the Wire has a part in that one, too.(/my new show likes carrots) Have not seen it yet because I hardly see movies in the theaters anymore.


reequeen - Jan 08, 2005 5:46:16 pm PST #7735 of 10001
"It's got to be the hair, Cotton. It's beautiful! Feathered and lethal. You just don't see it nowadays." Pepper Brooks - Dodgeball

I succumbed to the allure of not caring very much what I watched today. Thus I ended up watching Nurse Betty and Sabrina (the one with Harrison Ford and Greg Kinnear) on USA.

I found Nurse Betty touching and I bawled. I love Morgan Freeman, and I think Chris Rock is a workmanlike actor (not bad/pretty good kinda thang). Renee Zellweger doesn't bother me the way she does some people, and I thought she was really quite lovely in this. Even with commercials and bleepings, I really enjoyed it. I could be coming down with something, of course, but it was much better than I had expected having watched making-of, interviews, and so on. Which just goes to show that studio marketing generally sucks the big green weanie.

I liked Sabrina, too, but I have to say it was mostly because I remember the original and didn't actually "watch" it, watch it. I more listened to it and glanced at it occasionally. Harrison Ford playing Linus kinda wigged me out - I'm not saying he acted badly, it's just that my mother likes him now, for crying out loud (and I used to have the biggest crush on him based on Han Solo and Indiana Jones), so watching him try to flirt with and kiss a pretty young thing wasn't something I felt up to. Creepy.

At least it wasn't John Malkovich, the number one reason why I preferred Le Liasons Dangereuses to Dangerous Liasons. Well, he and Glenn Close, because she creeps me out too. "You're wearing paniers, dude!" .....Just my little nod to Keanu...


Frankenbuddha - Jan 08, 2005 5:52:34 pm PST #7736 of 10001
"We are the Goon Squad and we're coming to town...Beep! Beep!" - David Bowie, "Fashion"

I saw Hotel Rwanda and A Very Long Engagement. I think the key to enjoying A Very Long Engagement is to NOT see it directly following Hotel Rwanda. In another mood, I might have liked it, but not today. After Rwanda's raw brutality, being bombarded with that much sly charming cuteness was just exactly the wrong thing to watch, especially coming from another war story.

The asshat reveiwer for the Boston Phoenix (Peter Keough - who I fucking despise and he just. won't. leave.) went on bitching about how they had to throw some kind of feel good story into RWANDA. It sounds to me like they told one of the few stories they could and not just have a filmed atrocity.

Granted, there's the whole question of whether such stories should be dramatized at all (SCHINDLER'S LIST being the big example here), but given the general incomprehensible indifference to what happened in Rwanda (in this country at least), I'm a touch skeptical of this position. Some things need to be known, however they get known.


Nutty - Jan 08, 2005 6:13:14 pm PST #7737 of 10001
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

I was going to say. Welcome to Sarajevo could technically be called a "feel-good story" about the implosion of Yugoslavia, except that in fictional film format, it brought to the public some raw (real) footage they would never have seen otherwise. The videos of bodies were too much for standard news broadcast. And, I don't think all that many people walked away from Welcome to Sarajevo feeling all overcome by the wunnerfulness of the human spirit.