Xander: I do have Spaghetti-os. Set 'em on top of the dryer and you're a fluff cycle away from lukewarm goodness. Riley: I, uh, had dryer-food for lunch.

'Same Time, Same Place'


Firefly 4: Also, we can kill you with our brains  

Discussion of the Mutant Enemy series, Firefly, the ensuing movie Serenity, and other projects in that universe. Like the other show threads, anything broadcast in the US is fine; spoilers are verboten and will be deleted if found.


Beverly - Jan 07, 2007 3:25:41 pm PST #9384 of 10001
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

Speaking of the California landscape, when I was in SF for Nillyfest, a group of us drove to wine country. I was amazed at how homelike and familiar it all felt. There is a strong resemblence to the small towns along the Blue Ridge that exist on tourism, crafts, etc., and a resemblence between those landscapes. But the plants are wrong.

If you want southeastern forest with indiginous landscape and plants, watch Last of the Mohicans, or Nell, both filmed in the NC mountains. I really resented the Cold Mountain movie because it obviously was not filmed in NC--I know that country, and made my way through the book landmark by landmark. The film just...didn't. As well as its other problems. Anyway.

Even with the plants being "wrong", or different, the California hills were still just so comfortable and familiar, and I accepted that it was because of the topography.

Heh. One of the cable channels ran a Rifleman 24-hour marathon this weekend (in the first four episodes were Dennis Hopper, Michael Landon and James Drury!), and there, in glorious black and white, was the landscape I absorbed by osmosis week by week, episode by episode of all those tv westerns. Long after they were filmed and broadcast in color, my family still clung to our dependable b&w sets, so all my memories of those shows are in black and white. But there are the childhood memories that make those hills and grassy meadows strewn with olive and other trees as much a part of my memory as my own native landscape.


Juliebird - Jan 07, 2007 3:51:53 pm PST #9385 of 10001
I am the fly who dreams of the spider

Beverly, allow me an OMG! moment. When I was stationed at Fort Bragg, I did a lot of hiking out west and in Transylvania County and drove most of the Blue Ridge Parkway. It's how I kept my sanity.

I've been to Chimney Rock State Park (twice), and I was a total geek and raced the whole trail pretending to fire my Invisible!Bow&Arrows against imaginary foes in a race to rescue an imaginary Alice.

What really bugged *me* about Cold Mountain was that they had a bouquet of fall flowers in spring. I thought they were being all clever and subtle about telling us what season it was, when in fact what they were being was wrong.

But not everyone is a plantgeek.


smonster - Jan 07, 2007 3:56:45 pm PST #9386 of 10001
We won’t stop until everyone is gay.

Cold Mountain was filmed in Romania, so my mother refused to see it. I didn't refuse, I just didn't get around to it.


Consuela - Jan 07, 2007 3:59:00 pm PST #9387 of 10001
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

I watched Last of the Mohicans, and laughed my self silly at the huge stands of rhodedendron in what were supposed to be the hills of upstate New York. *grin*

But yeah, once you've lived in California for a while you begin to realize that much of the landscape in television isn't actually at all similar to where the stories are set.


Juliebird - Jan 07, 2007 4:03:53 pm PST #9388 of 10001
I am the fly who dreams of the spider

I just wished that the two films/television shows set in New Hampshire were actually filmed in NH and didn't involve evil witchcraft or incest.


Laga - Jan 07, 2007 4:03:58 pm PST #9389 of 10001
You should know I'm a big deal in the Resistance.

I liked the pacific white-sided dolphons swimming in the waters of the north atlantic in Titanic.


beekaytee - Jan 07, 2007 4:05:30 pm PST #9390 of 10001
Compassionately intolerant

I took an elderly scientist friend of mine to Mohicans. I thought he would enjoy the historical aspect, yada yada. What he ended up doing was enjoying whinging about how wrongwrongwrong nearly everything was.

One fun thing was him taking me outside with broom handles and proving exactly why the native fighters would and could not have carried long guns running through the forest.

Hee.


Juliebird - Jan 07, 2007 4:06:04 pm PST #9391 of 10001
I am the fly who dreams of the spider

I *hated* that Doggett/dead-son episode on TXF (but what was to love about those seasons?) where he's spreading the ashes into the Atlantic and there are rocky bluffs on, based on the setting sun, the south shore of Long Island.


Topic!Cindy - Jan 07, 2007 4:10:50 pm PST #9392 of 10001
What is even happening?

I just wished that the two films/television shows set in New Hampshire were actually filmed in NH and didn't involve evil witchcraft or incest.

Heh. Are you still in NH, juliebird?

Unrelatedly...

Beverly, it probably is the Maureen O'Hara Factor that's predisposed me toward Spencer's Mountain, and really, Henry Fonda had that sort of energy too, even when he was old.

Even though I'm not from the country, I just get tired of seeing rural people portrayed as duller (in a lot of senses of that word, not just related to education/intellect) than urban people, unless they're crazy-colorful.


Juliebird - Jan 07, 2007 4:17:30 pm PST #9393 of 10001
I am the fly who dreams of the spider

not currently, but I spent 20 years of my life there, and will be crashing back with my folks there until I sort my life out. Entertainment-wise, President Bartlett was the only good thing to come out of NH, and they never filmed there AFAIK, but i doubt it. How is Eastern Europe cheaper than tax-free Live Free or Frakking Die NH?

(I mistakenly rented Hotel NH with Rob Lowe and Jodi Foster, and.... ick!)