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'm pretty sure I would have remembered that, though I suppose it could have happened before I showed up. The main thing I remember was that the lead character was some extremely androgynous rock star who apparently piloted a giant warrior Mecha in his/her/its spare time.
Ah. I haven't seen that one, I'm afraid. Though, sadly, it almost sounds like it could be a legitimate anime. Re-Death pretty much just spoofs Evangelion, but it does splice in footage from other anime at points.
Hey, could someone recap the
letters-of-marque
plotline from PotC2 for me? I had a bit of trouble following it, especially at the beginning, when I didn't realize how important it would be.
HP:GoF was okay, not one I'll see again, probably, but one I enjoyed watching at the time. My favorite parts were all the teen angst & character moments, like Hermione and Ginny exchanging a look over Cedric, and Neville dancing (Neville is love!).
Interesting news: Stephen King's "1408" is being made into a movie starring John Cusack and Samuel Jackson. Just as good news? The screenwriters are the guys who collaborated on Ed Wood. [link]
Just came back from Pirates and am really glad I spoiled myself here since I think otherwise I would have missed a lot. I also severely overestimated the previews and, coming in at just 10 minutes past, I seem to have missed all the credits and initial set-up. I came in at the
coffins being dumped into the ocean.
Can someone tell me what I missed? Thanks.
ETA: Looks like I didn't overestimate the preview time, rather the cinema website had the wrong time listed. So it looks like I may indeed have missed 10 minutes or so. Annoyed now.
The total stranger two seats away from me at PotC2 started laughing with me at the Transformers preview. I said, "What's next, Thundercats?" There was a perfect beat, and we both said, "Hell, I'd watch that."
Should've gotten his number.
We got the WTFMARSROVER Transformer preview when we saw PotC, too. All I could do was snicker and mutter to The Boy, "You know, they *are* more than meets the eye." I heard someone behind me laugh when I said that.
Kate, the whole
letters of marque
plotline was basically lifted straight out of Casablanca --
the letters of transit that would allow 2 people safe passage out of Casablanca -- kind of a Get Out of Jail Free type thing
-- in PotC, the
letters were essentially meant to guarantee a commission in the Royal [military of some sort -- I don't have a bloody clue if it was Navy (which would make sense, huh?), or what] for the holder of the letters.
They were intended for
Jack, which would more or less be a *punishment* for him, to have to serve in the Royal [military]; Norrington,
however,
wanted the letters and the subsequent commission *because* he was a military dude and was all disgraced and shit, and even if he had to steal the letters and the still-beating heart of a fucked-up octopus-faced sea captain in order to get that commission,
well,
it still would have restored some of his honor
(at least in his eyes, as of this movie; we'll see if it holds true in the third one).
To sum up: Casablanca. With pirates. And rum.
We'll always have the Black Pearl.
The pirates wore grey, you wore blue.
Oh, wait. I got it a little screwy. The
letters of marque weren't a military commission;
they were, essentially, just like in Casablanca, a
guarantee of safe passage, of a sort -- that the holder of said letters would not be arrested.
Where the
military commission part comes in is that, in exchange for the letters of marque, Jack would have to accept a military commission,
which, like I said in the previous post, would be like
punishment for him.
And
Norrington went after the letters for essentially the same reasons, except that a military commission would be not a punishment for him, but a reward,
in his eyes. I'm assuming that he needed/wanted
the letters b/c they would boost his cred with the Crown?
Not sure on that.
Anyway, play it again, Davy Jones. (Which I realize is not *actually* the line that's in Casablanca, but since it's so associated with the movie, and since it fits so well with squidface, I'm standing by the misquote.)
A letter of marque is basically permission for a private citizen to capture people and/or goods of another country. In other words, a privateer. Similar to a pirate, but sanctioned by the government.