I saw the first full length trailer for Brokeback Mountain yesterday. I've GOT to get to the theatre to see this. If the trailer can bring out that kind of reaction, I'm stocking up on Kleenex for the film.
'Ariel'
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.
I guess I clocked things by Alma Jr, and never really had a hard time with the time--if the hairstyles had changed, more time had passed, please refer to the children for details.
I remembered Kate from Nip/Tuck, but had a hard time placing her. So I stopped fighting it and just enjoyed her face.
I saw Harold and Kumar last night and absolutely loved it. I was laughing my ass off through the whole thing.
"Bullets. My only weakness..."
Tucker: The Man and His Dream
Beautiful, beautiful film. Martin Landau is fantastic. Pretty pretty cars, clothes and buildings. Wonderful cinematography and stylization. And a Joe Jackson soundtrack. Joe-Bob says check it out.
Last night I saw The Bloody Brood. A 1959 movie in which Peter Falk is a heroin dealer posing as a beatnik who discovers that killing people is the ultimate kick.
Best quote: "Did he die, or was he murdered by life?"
I watched The Public Enemy, where Jimmy Cagney invented modern acting. Everybody around him has those flat, weirdly intense faces of silent movies, and talks a little too slowly for reality, and there's Jimmy at a mile a minute, waggling his eyebrows and chattering away (in a New York accent, despite his character spending his whole life in Chicago). He's just the most magnetic thing, you can't help but adore him despite his being a crook and basically a sociopath.
Jean Harlow was in the movie too, but I think she had not taken her stardom pills yet. Or anyway, she did nothing for me.
I think I'm one of the 12 people who saw The Brothers Grimm, and I agree it doesn't make a lot of sense. Still, I enjoyed the harem-scarem of it, and liked the subtext of casting the two brothers as people famous for playing their opposites. After a career of dumb himbo movies, it was the first hint (since confirmed) I'd had that Heath Ledger was not actually a dumb himbo.
The whole thing with Anne Hathaway's hair in Brokeback Mountain is, I've decided, a symbol of the main story: you take a perfectly pretty brunette, and via the torturous whims of culture, turn her into a godawful platinum hairdo. Anne, you don't have to conform, honey!! Brunettes won't all go to hell, and the direction you're going, you know you will end up with eyeliner tattooed on and monthly bleachings of your extremely brunette eyebrows. And then? You'll turn into Cher.
Tucker: The Man and His Dream
Beautiful, beautiful film. Martin Landau is fantastic. Pretty pretty cars, clothes and buildings. Wonderful cinematography and stylization. And a Joe Jackson soundtrack. Joe-Bob says check it out.
And (somewhat) takes place in my very own hometown of Ypsilanti, Michigan!
Last night I saw The Bloody Brood. A 1959 movie in which Peter Falk is a heroin dealer posing as a beatnik who discovers that killing people is the ultimate kick.
I saw this on a beatnik double feature at The Roxie. (The other movie was The Beatniks - though it was less beatnikish than The Bloody Brood.)
I watched The Public Enemy, where Jimmy Cagney invented modern acting. Everybody around him has those flat, weirdly intense faces of silent movies, and talks a little too slowly for reality, and there's Jimmy at a mile a minute, waggling his eyebrows and chattering away (in a New York accent, despite his character spending his whole life in Chicago). He's just the most magnetic thing, you can't help but adore him despite his being a crook and basically a sociopath.
Early Cagney is awesome to behold. He's one of those actors who shot to stardom pre-Code so a lot of folks really haven't seen the movies that made him an icon.
It was funny when Meadow Soprano ended up watching that one in her film class."Public Enemy", not the Falk dealer film.
I watched The Public Enemy,
Is that the one that ends with Cagney shouting "Top of the world, Ma!" just before the flaming fuel storage tank he's standing on explodes?
Seen that one. It was quite a performance.