Tara: 'Your One-Stop Spot to Shop for Lots of New-Age and Occult Items.' Catchy. Giles: Think so? Tara: Uh huh. In a... hard to say sorta way.

'Sleeper'


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.


Aims - Mar 07, 2005 1:52:00 pm PST #9779 of 10001
Shit's all sorts of different now.

She actually gained weight. About 30 lbs, I believe.


P.M. Marc - Mar 07, 2005 2:01:47 pm PST #9780 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

She actually gained weight. About 30 lbs, I believe.

Yep. And that pretty boyfriend of hers apparently loved it, especially the part where she gained a tummy. Which raised him up a notch in my books.


Jesse - Mar 07, 2005 2:31:11 pm PST #9781 of 10001
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

I will ignore all the medical talk and just note that in Laurel Canyon, Christian Bale looked, if not all that much heavier, softer and less muscley than he had in other stuff. And it was yummers.


Kathy A - Mar 07, 2005 3:21:25 pm PST #9782 of 10001
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

Last night, I finally was able to watch Avalon for the first time (it's been on local tv lots recently, but I never managed to tune in until it's almost done, so I didn't bother to watch). Good period film, with an interesting look at the transition between the pre-WWII urban rowhouse living that most middle-class immigrants experienced to the postwar flight to the suburbs that their children took. For his first major role in films, Elijah Wood was excellent as the Barry Levinson child-stand-in, but I just loved Aidin Quinn and Elizabeth Perkins as his parents.

I also had one of those "Who is that actor?" moments at the end, when the Elijah Wood character has grown up and we see him as an adult with his own child going to visit his grandpa. It drove me nuts until I was finally able to go online and look him up at IMDB--it was Thomas Wood (no relation to EW, AFAIK), who played the rookie agent Newman in The Fugitive ("Don't let them give you any shit about your ponytail!").

I hate it when I have those moments, and bless the day that the IMDB was created.


Mikey - Mar 07, 2005 3:29:18 pm PST #9783 of 10001
All this time, I thought Hunter was a bitch. Turns out she was just hungry.

I just watched Troy--or the parts of Troy when I wasn't getting a snack or going to the bathroom. Sorry, I couldn't bring myself to hit "pause."

Anyway, I began to wonder pretty early on why these ancient folk all sounded like limeys, or like actors who wanted to sound like limeys. And I couldn't really come up with a reason for it. If this had been made decades ago and John Wayne had been cast as Agamemnon, you could bet Hector might've been played by Steve McQueen, Paris by Robert Vaughn. Or whatever. They wouldn't have sounded like Brits.

Then I started to wonder what they would've sounded like if the cast and writers had been replaced by their counterparts on Deadwood. And I started to translate Troy into Deadwood as I watched it--Troy--and it got to be a lot more fun. Cocksucker.


Connie Neil - Mar 07, 2005 3:33:18 pm PST #9784 of 10001
brillig

If this had been made decades ago and John Wayne had been cast as Agamemnon, you could bet Hector might've been played by Steve McQueen, Paris by Robert Vaughn.

Of such thoughts are things like "The Conqueror", with John Wayne as Genghis Khan (?) and "The Vikings", with Kirk Douglas, made.


Steph L. - Mar 07, 2005 3:39:22 pm PST #9785 of 10001
the hardest to learn / was the least complicated

The One True Agamemmnon is Sean Connery.

t /unrepentant Time Bandits fan


Alibelle - Mar 07, 2005 4:30:59 pm PST #9786 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

I meant Christian Bale after he started looking normal again, after The Machinist, ita.


§ ita § - Mar 07, 2005 4:33:19 pm PST #9787 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

You thought that he looked better during The Machinist? If not, he's squarely in the Clooney/etc camp -- looked worse for a role, came back to the pretteh. It's just that he went in the other weight direction.

What's different in my response to Renée (from my response to the guys) is that I thought she looked best inbetween weights, and worse at her desired weight than at her movie size.

I don't think that's what you mean about Christian, is it?


Alibelle - Mar 07, 2005 4:45:50 pm PST #9788 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

No, I believe the quote was something like, they don't look good after packing on the pounds, or something along those lines. And I said that Christian looked better after he put on weight.

It was more of a passing comment.