George Clooney did a remake for TV a few years ago, which didn't hold my attention.
Oh yeah - wasn't that the live TV show?
'Conviction (1)'
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.
George Clooney did a remake for TV a few years ago, which didn't hold my attention.
Oh yeah - wasn't that the live TV show?
One more note about Once Upon A Time In The West: although the movie is about ~3 hours long, the script (by Leone, Bertolucci, and Dario Argento) was (notoriously) only 15 pages long.
George Clooney did a remake for TV a few years ago, which didn't hold my attention.
Oh yeah - wasn't that the live TV show?
I loved that version. And I was so glad to see the message available to Joe Sixpak...who probably didn't watch...but still.
t /anti-nuclear activist bias
Ha! I just sent that article to my nephew, as the final shot of The Searchers kicked off our multi-year fight about symbolism in art. (He maintains that I read too much into these things; I maintain that movies don't just happen by accident).
(Most movies, anyway).
He maintains that I read too much into these things
Yeah, see, when I first saw the movie when I was in Junior High (my dad was a big western fan, so I saw a lot of John Wayne movies growing up), even then I knew that final shot was saying a lot more than just what was on the surface of the scene. So I'm going with very much NOT accidental.
Joe and I watched "Lemony Snicket" yesterday and I really enjoyed it. At one point, I said (of Sunny), "I want that little girl." Joe replied, "We have that little girl."
At one point, I said (of Sunny), "I want that little girl." Joe replied, "We have that little girl."
As long as I get the older girl. I called dibs on her ages ago.
I should watch The Searchers so I know what the hell you guys are talking about.
This is funny given the recent conversation in here:
BENDIS: That’s cool. Allan will be very happy. Favorite movie of all time?
WHEDON: My favorite movie for a long time was a dead heat between “The Bad and the Beautiful” and “Once Upon a Time in the West.” But the upstart winner is “The Matrix.”
And just for kicks:
BENDIS: Yeah, I’m completely alone. And you know how I know I’m completely alone? Not on DVD yet. So what’s the last great movie you’ve seen?
WHEDON: Okay, I did see some unexpected greatness in “Kong.” Amidst the hoke and the bloat was some transcendent movie making. It was like the “The Legend of 1900”: a great, lean flick trapped in a three-hour fat suit. But no, I do have a recent great, and it”s not, I don’t think it’s coincidence that the last great movie I watched wasn’t a movie. I’m way late to the game, but I have really good excuses. But I just watched the miniseries opener of “Battlestar Galactica” and I loved the toes off that bitch. I’m not positive what that phrase means. But tension, drama, humanity, and—alien spaceships. I was pretty floored. That’s my call.
At one point, I said (of Sunny), "I want that little girl." Joe replied, "We have that little girl."
He's not wrong, y'know.
I have discovered that movie is much better with the sound off. Beautiful art direction and costumes.
I’m way late to the game, but I have really good excuses. But I just watched the miniseries opener of “Battlestar Galactica” and I loved the toes off that bitch.
Yay!