Thanks for the Netflix advice, everyone.
Also, I may be one of the few people alive who has not seen Say Anything. I think it was because a friend of mine raved about it so much that I began to resent the movie for existing.
Giles ,'Selfless'
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.
Thanks for the Netflix advice, everyone.
Also, I may be one of the few people alive who has not seen Say Anything. I think it was because a friend of mine raved about it so much that I began to resent the movie for existing.
The Rocky Horror Picture Show in 30 seconds, reenacted by bunnies.
That was pretty darn cute.
I love how in the bunnified Alien, the alien is not played by a bunny, but is wearing bunny ears tied to its head.
(Whitefonted because one might find it funnier if unspoiled.)
I may be one of the few people alive who has not seen Say Anything
We own it, but for the life of me I can't remember if I've seen it or not, and I adore John Cusack. I remember a kickboxing scene, and a cranky uptight dad-of-girl, but then it blurs into The Sure Thing.
I don't remember the iconic "In Your Eyes" scene, or the origin of the term "doblerize."
I am a bad fangirl.
Tommyrot - so is the shark in Jaws. And you mean bunnified, not buffified.
Tommyrot - so is the shark in Jaws.
Hee.
or the origin of the term "doblerize."
"You must chill! I have taken your keys!"
I've gotten my mother in the habit of saying that to the dog. "Betsy, you.must.chill." cracks my ass up. Lloyd has some degree of cross-generational appeal, which is awesome, since he's our Ben Braddock, imo. God, that could be a tiresome little lj essay, huh? Fay, Anne, you should see it.(I was already just in my twenties, but it still worked.)
I love The Map of the Human Heart, and I'm always surprised to be reminded that his Cartographer is the first character we meet in that film.
I'd forgotten about that movie, but I remember being quite taken with it back when I saw it.
I've been reading the raves for The Aristocrats-- I think I'm going to see it tonight-- and it seems like a lot of people are surprised, if not shocked, that Bob Saget is practically the bluest guy in the film, if not in comedy. Isn't that common knowledge? That Danny Tanner is a sick, sick comic?