Of course, in the third film she worked on (A Midsummer Night's Dream in 1935) she played the fiercest character in the whole movie.
Haven't seen that version. Liked the recent version because of (1) Kevin Kline, (2) Rupert Everett not fully clothed, (3) Calista Flockhart beating herself up.
Stanley Tucci's Puck was fun, Michelle Pfeiffer's Titania was luminous, and Christian Bale waking naked in a field played a definite part in me staying til the end, but the 1935 version is just incredibly good all the way around.
Sneaky...well, I can't say "buggers" can I?
Brokeback Mountain retained its position at the top of the midweek box office for a second day in a row Wednesday although playing in just 682 theaters. The Oscar front-runner earned $740,000 -- $105,000 more than second-place Glory Road. The film is due to expand to 1,194 theaters this weekend -- nearly doubling the number of venues after slowly expanding over the past six weeks. Daily Variety said that the decision to accelerate the release pace was taken in order to take advantage of excitement over the film that was generated by the film's win at the Golden Globes and would likely expand even wider if it garners major Oscar nominations on Jan. 31.
Very crafty distribution strategy.
That's a lot like CTHD, isn't it?
Did it start that narrowly? I don't remember.
I'm never seen Judy Davis be anything less than fierce, comedy or drama. For example, she was amazing as George Sand in the frothy "Impromtu". Oh, wait. There's Adela Quested from "Passage to India", where the character gets overcome by hysteria, but I have to say I've never quite bought her in the role (despite liking her presence in the film very much) because Judy Davis gives out such aura of quiet intelligence and strength that Adela comes across never quite as fragile as she's supposed to be.
Of the younger generation, I'd say Toni Collett consistently comes off as forceful and strong, no matter which role she plays.
If you think Underworld: Evolution is crap, say, "It's crap." But saying that a werewolf/vampire movie is a retread of The Matrix just because the leading lady is in latex sounds stupid.
I'm hoping it's less "crap" and more "deliciously cheesy."
Yes, I'm going for Beckinsale in latex and I don't care who knows it.
Did it start that narrowly? I don't remember.
It started out in two cities and spread in waves. I remember being very, very bitter because you in LA saw it *months* before it reached Charlotte.
I remember being very, very bitter because you in LA saw it *months* before it reached Charlotte.
Hey, don't look at me. I was in Michigan. It's
them
you resent. And rightfully so.