frantically compiling list of celebrities to send between Jackman and Bale
Riley ,'Help'
Buffista Movies 5: Development Hell
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.
frantically compiling list of celebrities to send between Jackman and Bale
What do I have to do to count as a celebrity? I'm pretty sure the immolation is a fair tradeoff.
Re: Prestige. The casting that made Jilli perk up most was that Tesla is being played by David Bowie. His assistant is being played by Andy Serkis.
Ooh, Pete. That IS nice casting.
Tesla is being played by David Bowie. His assistant is being played by Andy Serkis.
eeeeeeeeee......
It's really late here, but I wanted to post before I went to bed that Inside Man is really, really good. It's got some issues, but it's a really neat twisty little film.
Ooh! I'm glad to hear that Inside Man is good. Every time I've seen the trailer I went away really wanting to see the film.
Anthony Lane made great fun of the movie, while also saying it was worth seeing. Lessee:
"...shows that Arthur Case has links with the Nazis. This cannot be true, for one reason: he is played by Christopher Plummer, and, excuse me, but Christopher Plummer does not make friends with Nazis. He sings at them! He plays guitar at them! In a daring, nun-assisted escape, he flees from them over the hills with an annoying child on his back! Come on."
This was in an essay about the plot- and meta-logic of the film, and in the end, Lane decided that the movie was best for its urban texture and charactersm and the logic could go screw.
Hope that fixes things.
...shows that Arthur Case has links with the Nazis.
This is actually a pretty major spoiler, fwiw.
Sorry about the spoilers. I figured, if it's in a New Yorker review, and doesn't say "Close your eyes, dear reader!" it must not actually be that big a deal.
I mean, it's not like they revealed that Broody Clive will spend the entire movie with his hoodie up and a mask over his face, right? He better not.