Reviewer: Frankly, this movie made my ass hurt. I really shouldn't have had the chance to think that so frequently...it was a little slow, too.Ha.
River ,'Objects In Space'
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.
I really like this post off my flist about POTC 2 and various themes and motifs and what worked and didn't in the movie.
Reminded me of the escalation that happened in LoTR from the cave troll fight (perfect!) to Legolas taking down the Olyphaunt (animated overkill).
OK, I still can't read the whitefont on POTC2 (although The Flick Filosopher spoiled me for some stuff, damn her eyes), but this statement I can wholeheartedly agree with.
Remember when Legolas did that split-second "wait, how did he get up on that horse?" freaky Elf thing? That was kinda nifty.
Stupid boys with their "wouldn't it be cool if we did this?" t kicks oliphaunt
From P-Cow's link:
Keys! - organ keys, Gov.'s shackles, Eliz in jail
When Will was poking around Davy Jones' tentacles with the quill and stick, someone behind me whispered, "Watch the keys!" I couldn't figure out why the person had pluralized the key around Jones' neck until the tentacles hit the organ, and then I went "OH A MOTIF!"
So, keys and locks. Jones' key and chest, obviously. The organ keys on the Flying Dutchman. Elizabeth, Will, and Governer Swann in alternating shackles and jail cells. Each unlocked with keys -- Elizabeth doesn't break out of jail, Gov. Swann unlocks her door. The dog swimming with the jail keys. Elizabeth shackling Jack to the Black Pearl, which I think may be the one time in the movie that something is locked and not opened via key. Tia the Voodoo Woman unlocks Jack the Monkey's cage. I'm sure there's more.
I'm thinking the theme is freedom.
I'm thinking the theme is freedom.
For those who don't want to register, another bit from the BOM interview:
Box Office Mojo: What is the meaning of the series?
Ted Elliott: It's a study of what is a pirate. How free can you really be? What are those trade-offs? Jack kind of represents the ultimate free man—he really has no obligations to anybody, and, obviously, if you make an obligation to somebody, you're limiting your own freedom. But, if you're not willing to limit your own freedom, you can't have those relationships. If you look at Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest from that point of view, you kind of see what really leads to Jack's ultimate fate and why Elizabeth does what she does.
I saw Supes and liked it. One of my main thoughts about the climax was "That's a lot of water displacement, man."
I guess he'll just fly around the earth really fast when he feels better and undo any tsunami damage .
Had Meryl Streep Fest last night. We went to Prairie Home Companion and Devil Wears Prada. I enjoyed parts of PHC, but it felt like there was no movie there. It didn't have the usual Altman genius with a messy sprawl of characters who all belong in the same world and also define that world. Here the characters never coalesced and it felt as if they were in different movies.
Liked Prada. Streep was a perfect evil boss. The fashon stuff was fun, although the plot was awfully. predictable. Still, fun. And could Anne Hathaway be more beautiful? I don't think so. And may I add that Adrian Grenier has the most adorable little smile ever.