We're proud to say that the Class of '99 has the lowest mortality rate of any graduating class in Sunnydale history.

Jonathan ,'Touched'


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.


aurelia - Jan 07, 2007 9:34:01 pm PST #9402 of 10001
All sorrows can be borne if you put them into a story. Tell me a story.

He was highly insulted over my Daniel Day Lewis lusting, because he said he also had to run up mountains, loading his gun while on the run, but carrying more gear "and wearing boots!"

But how does he look in a loin cloth?

I'm always amused by actors tying knots.


libkitty - Jan 07, 2007 9:52:43 pm PST #9403 of 10001
Embrace the idea that we are the leaders we've been looking for. Grace Lee Boggs

How is Eastern Europe cheaper than tax-free Live Free or Frakking Die NH?

I think part of it's the cheapness, but part of it is that Romania is supposed to look kinda like the US looked then. Sure, you can still get into wilderness areas here, but they're usually parks with some kind of restrictions, or really hard to get to, or have all this beautiful wilderness with a cell tower in the background or some such thing.

I just finished watching The Love Story on The Waltons. I think it was something like 120. OMG, The Waltons love just grows and grows. I think I may have to buy a second set for my mom, 'cause I can't imagine letting this go, but she just has to have them.

One thing I think is really interesting, though: the complete lack of arc. One ep may span weeks, or months, or even years, but they follow that story through to the end, then the next ep there's no reference to anything that happened. I think this changed somewhat in later eps, where the kids started with long-term loves, kids, etc., but I remember this being the case with Little House too.


Volans - Jan 07, 2007 10:18:16 pm PST #9404 of 10001
move out and draw fire

I suppose each career has to suspend their disbelief for any move or TV show that depicts something in their industry, or geography.

Oh yeah.

How is Eastern Europe cheaper than tax-free Live Free or Frakking Die NH?

I'm going to bet you can't get a decent hotel room for $1/night in NH. Or rent a whole house for $30/month.


EpicTangent - Jan 07, 2007 11:35:55 pm PST #9405 of 10001
Why isn't everyone pelting me with JOY, dammit? - Zenkitty

I suppose each career has to suspend their disbelief for any move or TV show that depicts something in their industry, or geography.

Or hobbies. Since becoming a really avid swing dancer, dancing, and especially swing dancing, scenes are SO WEAK. (Seriously! He's not even leading! You can't do that with someone you've never danced with before! And etc.)

Oh, and - Hey! Long time no see everybody!


WindSparrow - Jan 08, 2007 3:34:18 am PST #9406 of 10001
Love is stronger than death and harder than sorrow. Those who practice it are fierce like the light of stars traveling eons to pierce the night.

Oh, and yes, I know the landscape was all wrong for New England, and it bothered the historical nitpicker part of me. But I was so geeked out to see southeastern forest! And waterfalls! And rivers, and rocks, and I've actually walked that cliff path where Uncas and Alice met their doom! that the geekery sort of overcame the historical protest.

FWIW, my mother - who grew up in upstate New York, with roots so deep there that parts of our family tree get a mention in Drums Along the Mohawk - adored LotM. She gushed about how it looked like home. So while they got the flora wrong, they must have gotten the shape of the land right. It was a bubble-burster to her when I told her it was filmed elsewhere. She was also bothered by the detail of the battle scenes: her however-many-greats-is-seven-generations-back grandmother survived being scalped. I looked at those scenes and thought, "Huh. Yeah, that isn't exactly a mortal wound, is it?"

At least the love-it/hate-it The Fountain got CPR right. These things mean something to me.
That IS important. People who have not taken classes will do what they have seen on tv. Plus when I was watching "The Body" I had this whole "Lock those elbows, Buffy. Oh wait - slayer strength, maybe not." internal dialogue taking me out of the moment.


SailAweigh - Jan 08, 2007 5:43:18 am PST #9407 of 10001
Nana korobi, ya oki. (Fall down seven times, stand up eight.) ~Yuzuru Hanyu/Japanese proverb

what they do in that show is science fiction, not science.

But it's fun science fiction! And DB! Almost nekkid! ::drools a little::

I guess since a lot of movies aren't set in WI and I'm enough unfamiliar with other areas of the country (driving through once doesn't count) I don't get wierded out that the flora/fauna (dolphins are dolphins to me) aren't quite right. In fact, Madison has often been substituted for other places, particularly our capital building for the one in DC. They changed the setting for "Mad City" to a fictional town in CA because one of the actors didn't have the time to spend shooting a movie on location here. And, like Bev, old TV shows get a pass from me because I enjoyed that at a point in time when I sure as heck wouldn't have known the difference. I'm a very undemanding viewer, just give me a good storyline and good acting, I'll overlook anything else.


Ginger - Jan 08, 2007 6:16:36 am PST #9408 of 10001
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

I am twitchy about things set in Atlanta, because they almost never get it right. I can't watch The Closer, because Kyra Sedgwick is using the worst "Southern" accent I have ever heard. I'm always irritated when they show newspaper headlines, because they're never anything like a real newspaper headline. I've written thousands of headlines, and I'd be happy to write headlines for television shows for a minimal amount of money, just to save me the aggravation.


Zenkitty - Jan 08, 2007 7:01:35 am PST #9409 of 10001
Every now and then, I think I might actually be a little odd.

I watched about fifteen minutes of "The Closer" once and had to turn off the tv. That accent is awful. (Also, I hated the character.)


Kathy A - Jan 08, 2007 7:01:47 am PST #9410 of 10001
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

Romania is supposed to look kinda like the US looked then.

In Bill Bryson's "I'm a Stranger Here Myself," he goes to the local history museum in Dartmouth (where he lives) and sees photos from the mid- to late-19th century that showed the area around Dartmouth was all farmland. Most of these farms were abandoned soon after those photos were taken and the farmers moved west to easier-to-plow lands. The land is now mostly forest; he says how you can go for a walk and stumble across a crumbling barn in the middle of the woods, and also get lost for weeks.

So some areas might be less cultivated now than they were 150 years ago.


Sophia Brooks - Jan 08, 2007 7:12:40 am PST #9411 of 10001
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

I am rtwitchy about things set in theatre-- and it makes me extra mad because aren't these people in the entertainment industry? I am sure that at least some of the people involved in, say, High School Musical were IN a high school musical, but they still have people working on and building sets and costumes, on-stage, after school BEFORE the show is cast and people trying out for leads only in pairs-- WTF? And last night on Cold Case the whole solving of the murder depended on the music director/rehearsal pianist running the sound board, which seems very unusual to me, as I would think he would be conducting the orchestra/pit band/whatever-- and haveing these really extensive sound checks with him alone in the booth, with no stage manager or light board op, able to overhear, accidently, everything being said on the microphones when they weren't being broadcast over the stage.

Grrr.