I posted my review of The Descent on LJ. Hie thee there forthwith, y'all, read and tell me what you think.
Edited for bad tagging, oops.
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 posted my review of The Descent on LJ. Hie thee there forthwith, y'all, read and tell me what you think.
Edited for bad tagging, oops.
Ha! I just got back from that! I'll go read.
Excellent review, Zenkitty! Here's mine. I linked to yours.
Thanks, P-C!
Woohoo! White Nights is coming out on DVD at the end of the month. Mikhail Baryshnikov and Gregory Hines dance, and Isabella Rossellini looks pretty!!
I just saw Inside Man. I remember there was a lot of love for the movie in this thread. It was good stuff. I'm a Spike Lee fan.
My relatives, however, have no blinking clue who he is. We were all baffled by his use of a popular Bollywood song at the beginning and end (I still don't understand why the hell he used it).
"It must be an Indian director," my aunt said.
"It's SPIKE LEE!" I cried.
"Famous action director," my uncle said.
"He's not an ACTION DIRECTOR!" I said. "Do the Right Thing?"
"Famous Asian director," my cousin said, and I threw a pillow at him. "What, his name is LEE!"
Le sigh.
DEADWOOD: Loved Action!Al what with the leap off the balcony to go to Alma's aid and, of course, stomping the everlovin' shit out of Hearst's lackey (or was he more of a toady?) before settling on a more permanent means of dealing with him. Plus a great one word command: "Wu". Heh.
Also, a recent TV Guide had a short interview with Robin Weigart, and a photo of her in non-Jane mode. Never would have recognized her in a million years. Apparently she enjoys poker in real life, and was talking about how poker-playing Deadwood fans in Vegas wouldn't recognize her, but after interacting with her would be all "Don't I know you from somewhere?"
She was also talking about looping dialogue for syndicated airings to come, and how awful it was having to replace profanity with things like, I kid you not, "cob-shucking". Which I may have to start using IRL because it made me laugh and laugh.
I finally watched Charlie and the Chocolate Factory over the weekend (on HBO), and I have to say that I thought Willy Wonka was much, much better. Yes, CatCF was more faithful to the original book, but WW had a better sense of the utter bizarreness of Willy Wonka, the man, and the creepy otherworldliness of his factory. Also, I thought that the actors were all better in the original, except for Johnny Depp, who was on the same level as Gene Wilder, just different. But, I did like the idea of making Mike Teevee a computer hacker/gamer and Violet Beaureguard an ultracompetitor (with a really creepy lookalike mom).
I think, because I saw it as a kid and just adored it beyond all reason, Willy Wonka is always going to be the one for me. There was a gentleness to Gene Wilder that I thought was missing from Johnny Depp's take on the characters, and true to the book or not, Depp's Wonka squicked me.
Plus, they took away my songs! "I want it NOOOOOOOWWWWWW!"
I still haven't seen Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. Hie me to Netflix, stat. I know I'm not watching Willie Wonka again any time soon. Last time I watched (as an adult) it creeped me out disproportionately. Especially the Oompa Loompas. On our walk back home we passed a group of little people, and that sealed the deal. It had that surreal acid-drop feeling.