J. J. Abrams knows not of the canon.
Anya ,'Get It Done'
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.
Is there any canon on their first meeting?
I don't believe there is, movie and TV-wise, but Spock was stationed on the Enterprise before Kirk got command of it.
Wow, I've got that boxed set, and always heard that The 7th Victim is bleak, but that's a BOLD statement.
Lewton's theme (which they refer to several times in the box set documentary) is "Death is good." The Seventh Victim is the nihilistic ne plus ultra of Hollywood film. Very understated, and filled with existential dread.
God, I LOVED her in that,
Me too!
And I LOVE her zany short at the beginning.
Once again, Frank and I are as one in our movie taste. I TiVoed the movie just to save her zany short on my Cartoon Expressionism reel.
Once again, Frank and I are as one in our movie taste. I TiVoed the movie just to save her zany short on my Cartoon Expressionism reel.
What was it called...AFTERBIRTH OF A NOTION? NATION? Something like that.
My friend in college was also the type who might have started a documentary about lost shopping carts before realizing it was really, really...fucking boring.
I like to think that, given Guest's later improv proclivities, that he was also doing some of that here, and what we saw from JJL was close to her real personality (i.e. she usually likes playing the opposite of her personality). A boy can dream.
While I'm at it, there's an AU where either she or the Coens (SOMEONE!) dialed-down the Hepburn-isms in HUDSUCKER PROXY, because she had great energy and enthusiasm there, but was trying. Way. Way. Too. Hard.
My friend in college was also the type who might have started a documentary about lost shopping carts before realizing it was really, really...fucking boring.
Heh. I actually had a TA in college who was doing his thesis (for an MFA in film) on boredom. His lecture was, completely unironically, unbelievably boring.
(The lecture from the one doing his thesis on Asian women in American porn? Much less so.)
His lecture was, completely unironically, unbelievably boring.
I remember my high school English teacher arguing that Sinclair Lewis' Main Street was supposed to be boring, because it was about the stifling effects of middle American life.
We were unconvinced by this argument and by Main Street.
Yeah, but I'm fairly sure (even ignoring the books) that it's canon that Kirk was pretty young at Starfleet Academy, with the whole "youngest person to ever beat the Kobayashi Maru test". That was in one of the movies, right?
I know Kirk was the youngest Captain in Starfleet. But no one actually beat the Kobayashi Maru scenario. It was, by its nature, unbeatable. After several tries, Kirk cheated and reprogrammed the computer because he didn't believe in unwinnable scenarios.
To me the most amusing part of that story was Kirk reprogramming a computer.
Well, they were 23rd century computers... maybe he just had to sweet talk it to get it to change its own programming?
maybe he just had to sweet talk it to get it to change its own programming?
The computers did all have female voices.