Buffista Movies 4: Straight to Video
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.
Loved Grease as a wee child but always hated "tarted up" Sandy. She was so much prettier and more likable untarted. I had a similar reaction when Olivia came out with Physical. She was meant to be a good girl, damn it.
I hate musicals in general, but LOVE this musical with a message: HEDWIG!
I just really can't get past who the Perons were. It's a thing for me. Even if it's not there in the musical, I still read it as an undercurrent, and am boggled that ALW could write a musical on who these people were.
Uh, that's not for ignoring. It just isn't. (Perhaps why I have a big problem with the glorification of two of the hemisphere's really horrible people).
Microsoft employees at MSN used to have random games of volleyball.
Don't know if they still do. You'd have to ask Jilli.
Nope, they play random games of basketball.
I like
The Fifth Element,
and can't stand either
Grease
or
Gone with the Wind.
I've never seen
Evita.
For that matter, I've never seen
Top Gun,
and I don't want to. I had a chance to see it for free when it came out, because where I worked was treating all the employees to a free movie. We had the choice of
Top Gun
or
Aliens.
We had two choices because, as our manager said at the dinner afterwards, "I assumed Jilli and Aaron wouldn't want to see
Top Gun.
"
Then Sean, if you haven't already, you really don't want to see Birth of a Nation.
Fred Pete, I know. They used to have an original window card for it up at the office of the makeup artist's union that was all "See this wonderful movie about the heroic Knights of the Ku Klux Klan!"
It was all I could do to not tear that thing up every time I saw it.
Still, part of me still wants to see it, since it such a huge part of cinema history.
What, precisely, do you think Che is singing about? It ain't "look at her pretty dresses".
To be honest, I haven't heard that song, because I just can't sit all the way through it.
Joins Jilli in the "have never seen TOP GUN" corner.
Still, part of me still wants to see it, since it such a huge part of cinema history.
I've seen it for just that reason. Every time I thought it couldn't get more racist, it proved me wrong.
it gives Stockard Channing the chance to nail the hell out of "There Are Worse Things I Could Do."
She is great at that.
Weird, though, I totally thought Rizzo had the pregnancy scare in the stage production, too, or at least the version I saw (my only serious experiment with Los Angeles public transportation outside of the Gold/Red lines. 4-6 hours on buses each way for a 2.5 hour musical, and ended up stuck about 3 miles from home on the way back, but that's totally another story.) I don't think it was a re-adaptation of the stage version in light of the movie, either, because it was pretty different in lots of ways. Also, the Rizzo and/or Frenchy (whichever one sang 'There Are Worst Things I Could Do' anyway), was inCREDible in that production, easily the best thing about the show and completely worth all the trouble I went to. The only unfortunate side effect being that, when I hear the movie soundtrack (which I adore, though I agree that the ending of the movie itself is terrible or even horrible), I'm actually
disappointed
at the quality of the best song on it.
he'll be boozing and she'll be abusing Valium and they'll both be neglecting their (unplanned) kids within scant years.
Considering the aforementioned exit via flying convertible, a gritty socially realistic turnout for those two kids may be a bit much to expect.
Random thoughts from the last 150 posts:
Another iconic 80's movie: Purple Rain.
Trey and Matt = good. Michael Bay = bad. Trey and Matt talking about Michael Bay = priceless.
I never saw the appeal of Grease, myself. Well, not when I was younger. I can watch it now, and appreciate it, but, yeah, growing up in Salt Lake, every girl and every girl's parents thought that movie was the be all and end all of movies. Hell, I knew a guy and girl who got together in 6th grade JUST BECAUSE their names were Danny and Sandy. (Actually, it was Samantha, so I thought it was a bit of a stretch.) I also find amusement in the fact that they're touting this as being of good morals, when Rizzo does her "Better to fuck than be a tease or a bitch" song.
Additional random thoughts from the last 150+ posts:
I loathe The Fifth Element. Every second of that film is like fingernails on a blackboard to me.
All I remember about that movie was how terrible it was - thankfully I've repressed all actual memories of the movie itself. Poor Gary Oldman. And I think Bruce Willis was good in Moonlighting, but hasn't really done anything interesting since then. He might appear in interesting stuff, but his acting style is tired. When I think of Pulp Fiction or Die Hard, I think of Samuel L. Jackson or Alan Rickman, not him. He's not bad but he's nothing special.