I always thought the name Serenity had a vaguely funereal sound to it.

Simon ,'Out Of Gas'


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.


Steph L. - Dec 26, 2005 5:34:20 pm PST #9360 of 10002
Unusually and exceedingly peculiar and altogether quite impossible to describe

I finally saw Goblet of Fire today.

Oh, Harry. You are slowly becoming a walking bag of trauma. Daniel Radcliffe broke my heart when Harry was clinging to Cedric's lifeless body and sobbing.

I disturb myself with the fact that, even as noseless Voldemort, I thought Ralph Fiennes was hot.

I also disturb myself with how much I want to do dirty wrong things to Harry.

Truthfully, I can see where all the Harry/Hermione 'shippers are coming from. While I, personally, think they have a fabulous platonic BFF friendship a la Veronica and Wallace, I can also see where it might seem a little 'shippy.

I know it's got to be hard to adapt such a huge book into a movie, and the important plot points were covered, and covered decently, but I still keenly felt the lack of the rest of the material.


Betsy HP - Dec 26, 2005 7:48:33 pm PST #9361 of 10002
If I only had a brain...

Jess, that's a reasonable excuse, but nightingale dung can't be all that scarce even in a postwar economy...


sumi - Dec 26, 2005 7:52:04 pm PST #9362 of 10002
Art Crawl!!!

There's a Sean Bean movie playing on IFC right now in which he isn't the bad guy.

Although, he is a soldier.


Kathy A - Dec 26, 2005 8:44:54 pm PST #9363 of 10002
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

I was just watching that, too, Sumi! Bravo Two Zero. Sean looked great in the camis, and even looked good under torture. Since I missed the first 45 minutes, I didn't catch his character's last name until he was asked for it by his captors, and then I realized that we had the book the movie was based on at the bookstore (the history section was one of mine to stock and organize, so I remember those books more than others).


Gris - Dec 26, 2005 9:08:43 pm PST #9364 of 10002
Hey. New board.

Just got back from Geisha. I enjoyed it more than i expected based on the reviews - maybe that's why. I didn't have very high hopes. It was absolutely stunningly beautiful.

The first part was better than the second part, I thought. It got a little long in the tooth by the end.

Ziyi Zhang looks really good with blue eyes, though.


Atropa - Dec 26, 2005 9:28:31 pm PST #9365 of 10002
The artist formerly associated with cupcakes.

I think I just saw a vapor trail in Seattle as Jilli shot to the nearest theater.

We still haven't seen Kong yet, so there's no way I can talk Pete into costume-drama silliness. But oh yes, I plan on seeing it.


§ ita § - Dec 26, 2005 9:48:37 pm PST #9366 of 10002
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I couldn't finish Bravo Two Zero. The torture scenes reminded me that I had less unpleasant things to look at...anywhere else.


Jessica - Dec 27, 2005 3:49:46 am PST #9367 of 10002
If I want to become a cloud of bats, does each bat need a separate vaccination?

Jess, that's a reasonable excuse, but

Hey I never said it was a good handwave...

It got a little long in the tooth by the end.

Yeah, the momentum kind of died after Gong Li left. And the final scene was just creepy -- it was played as a Big Romantic Scene, but all I heard was "Ever since I saw you as a ten year-old, I thought you would grow up to be really hot, and that I could buy you."


tommyrot - Dec 27, 2005 6:38:15 am PST #9368 of 10002
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

[link]

WASHINGTON - The documentary “Hoop Dreams” and footage of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake are among the 25 movies picked this year for the National Film Registry, a compilation of significant films being preserved by the Library of Congress.

Fictional films chosen by Librarian of Congress James H. Billington range from the Buster Keaton comedy, “The Cameraman,” to the Christmas classic “Miracle on 34th Street” to the 1982 teen comedy “Fast Times at Ridgemont High.”

FTaRH is a classic! Woo hoo! And timely too, considering Vincent Schiavelli's death.

“The films we choose are not necessarily the ’best’ American films ever made or the most famous, but they are films that continue to have cultural, historical or aesthetic significance,” Billington said.

Oh.


Kathy A - Dec 27, 2005 7:07:46 am PST #9369 of 10002
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

Wasn't the Zapruder film in the first batch of Registry films?