Spike: Heard what happened up top, offing your dad and all. Don't know if you know this, but, uh…I killed my mum. Actually, I'd already killed her, and then she tried to shag me, so I had to-- Wesley: Thank you. I'm…very comforted.

'Lineage'


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.


sumi - Jul 19, 2004 5:32:41 am PDT #890 of 10001
Art Crawl!!!

How a Meek Comic Book Company Became a Hollywood Superpower -- from the NYT so registration required. (I believe that there is a buffistas/foamy one for the NYT.)


beekaytee - Jul 19, 2004 5:33:38 am PDT #891 of 10001
Compassionately intolerant

Oooh. I loved that version of the Odyssey.

The casting was inspired.

Then again, I recognize that I have an unwholesome thing for Armand Assante. It all started with Belizaire the Cajun.


DavidS - Jul 19, 2004 5:36:50 am PDT #892 of 10001
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Diva! DavidS, have you read any of the books? They are remarkably strange. And kind of creepy.

Strega, I have the neon bright paperback editions sitting on my bookshelf right here. I really love them, though they got progressively less grounded in reality as the series went on. Despite that, Viva - one of the last ones, set in LA - is one of my favorites. It's got a Jazz Assassin! I thought Delacorta did a pretty good job tap-dancing around the age difference between Gorodish and Alba - though it was still creepy.


Astarte - Jul 19, 2004 5:44:50 am PDT #893 of 10001
Not having has never been the thing I've regretted most in my life. Not trying is.

It all started with Belizaire the Cajun.

As all good and lusty things should.

Laissez les bon temps roulet


beekaytee - Jul 19, 2004 6:11:35 am PDT #894 of 10001
Compassionately intolerant

Oui!

I love everything about that sweet little movie, and have just now discovered that it is available on Netflix. Whoohoo. Top 'o the queue.


beekaytee - Jul 19, 2004 6:33:03 am PDT #895 of 10001
Compassionately intolerant

On a completely different note.

I saw Outfoxed last night, the docu covering the Murdockization of all media. To say that the findings are outraging is an understatement.

It made me even more content with the fact that I haven't owned a tv in 6 years but even more despairing in terms of what can be done to stop the brainwashing of America.

I feel completely toothless. I live in a non-state with no representation in Congress and I can't very well threaten to stop watching Fox because, well...except for Firefly, Buffy and Angel dvds...I DON'T watch Fox!

::affecting faux Southern accent:: Oh Beauregard, what evah are we to do?


Steph L. - Jul 19, 2004 6:33:24 am PDT #896 of 10001
Unusually and exceedingly peculiar and altogether quite impossible to describe

I got to see De-Lovely yesterday. My thoughts:

1. Kevin Kline is very, very good. He impressed the hell out of me.

2. Ashley Judd is beautiful. In the early part of the movie, when her character is younger, she reminded me in little ways of JZ. I can't quite explain how, except to say that photos from the movie don't capture it, so I think it has something to do with how she moved, and her general aura of effortless glamour. Plus her hair.

3. I didn't like the way the film was structured, because it kept yanking me out of the movie. My best friend, who saw it with me, really liked the structure of the film, so YMMV.

4. The costumes were to. die. for.

5. I don't know enough about Cole Porter's life to know if my impression is correct, but I thought his relationships with men were given just the right amount of emphasis, without ever descending into cliche. (The theatre we went to was -- seriously -- full of people aged 65+, and there were audible gasps the first time Kline kissed a man onscreen.)

6. Love the music. Love love LOVE it. But then, I always have. I even liked Alanis Morisette, which is a shocker.

7. Did I mention how very, very good Kevin Kline was? Manoman.

8. Definitely worth matinee price. (For those of us in Cincinnati, that's $6 at the art house theatre.)


sumi - Jul 19, 2004 7:16:06 am PDT #897 of 10001
Art Crawl!!!

Bryan Singer is the latest director to take on the Superman movie.


P.M. Marc - Jul 19, 2004 8:41:43 am PDT #898 of 10001
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

t has sudden urge for Singer to do a World's Finest movie.


Calli - Jul 19, 2004 9:24:50 am PDT #899 of 10001
I must obey the inscrutable exhortations of my soul—Calvin and Hobbs

I saw Delovely last weekend, too. And I am Steph in most things, except for number 6. I don't think Alanis Morisette was up to her song. She seemed to be going for a breathy, strangled effect when the music required a fuller, richer voice.

But Kevin Kline was wonderful. I respected him and felt kinda sorry for him at the same time, because he has a lovely voice (you can catch him as the Pirate King in Pirates of Penzance with Linda Ronstadt sometime to hear it) and he chose to limit himself to Cole Porter's (apparently) none too phenomenal singing abilities.

I saw Delovely in a theater in Chapel Hill. So while there were many older folks in the audience, the reaction to him kissing a fella was pretty much non-existant.