Okay, perhaps it will eventually get released or there will be a dvd.
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.
That still really makes it look like he's going to attempt to nurse with his manboobs.
Plei is me on that point.
It played at the film festival here, but I missed it. I heard it reviewed somewhere as not bad, but not great either.
We watched the worst Hammer film I've ever seen last night, and one of the actors in it kept reminding me of joss.
Which one was it?
Curse of the Werewolf, with Oliver Reed as the werewolf. The jossian guy was his co-worker in a winery or something (unclear). It was more a physical resemblance than a behavioural one.
Probably Reed in his drinking years (which was most of them, I suppose). I understand a lot of Hammer films were cut to shreds in this country because of adult content, so that may not have helped, depending on what version you saw.
Curse of the Were-Rabbit is sooooooooooo good. It's brilliantly funny and sweet and witty and full of adorable bunnies. Eventually I'll have to get it on DVD so I can pause it and read everything in the background -- as usual with Nick Park, if there are words on something in this film, it's a joke, and some of them go by too fast to catch the first time around.
Saw Capote last night. Very depressing, but also fantastically good. Philip Seymour Hoffman is amazing, and Catherine Keener is very good, too, and Clifton Collins is no slouch. Basically, the acting's great, the story's intriguing, the direction is artsy, the movie is really, really awesome.
Curse of the Were-Rabbit is totally one of the movies that I must see.