Aww, I watched Homeward Bound like a bajillion times.
'Safe'
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.
Maybe I'll see SoaP tomorrow. I spent today rearranging furniture (heavy. ow). I was going to wait until a weekday, but since its boxoffice is low, I can at least throw in my fistful of dollars.
I'm not ready for World Trade Center yet.
I wanted to go see SoaP, but it didn't happen. I think I'll go with GF tomorrow. Since we couldn't achieve a group consensus we went to rent a flick instead and watched 8 Heads in a Duffle Bag. 2 of the 6 of us had seen it before. All of us laughed until we cried. I was pleased that it was as much fun as the first time.
Scary Movie 4 was also rented. We'll watch that tomorrow with the boys.
But I really am sad that I haven't seen SoaP yet.
That is why "Freedomland" is on my netflix queue rather than a theater choice...was pretty sure I'd cry.
I tried to watch Freedomland but got very confused and fell asleep. You might like it, though.
Snakes on a Plane was a surprisingly good, big-budget Sci-Fi Original Movie. Yes, it's better than Boa vs. Python and Pterodactyl. COMBINED.
We watched 11:14 last night, which I had never even heard of. Kind of a random cast, including Colin Hanks, Patrick Swayze, and Rachael Leigh Cook ("finer than frog's hair," according to one of the military guys here).
It was pretty decent. It's a nonlinear, like Memento or Mulholland Drive, and while it wasn't as good as either of those, it was fine. I hated it for the first 30 minutes or so, as there are really no sympathetic characters, but I'm a ho for nonlinear movies. And this one was technically proficient, with some really good editing too boot.
I'm not ready for World Trade Center yet.
I didn't think I was either, but the story focuses so much on the characters involved that the actual events almost get lost in the background. It is a truly remarkable story of guts, will and commaraderie. Even if you're not ready now, I do recommend seeing it, it's just a good story all around. It's probably the only Oliver Stone movie I've actually liked besides some of his very early ones. And I do have to give him credit for producing (but not, fortune smile on us, directing) The Joy Luck Club.
I've heard that SailAweigh and it keeps the film on my list. Just have to pick a day when I don't mind using a pile of tissues.
I'm trying to think of movies that have managed to make me cry. Brokeback Mountain was the most recent, with What Dreams May Come, Saving Private Ryan, Schindler's List, and, oddly, Wargames as the other post-childhood examples.
Oh, and A Fish Called Wanda and Ready to Rumble if you count laughing so hard that you tear up.
Schindler's List made me sob so hard I could barely get out of my seat to leave the theater. 40 Year Old Virgin made me and my sister laugh so hard we cried. I didn't expect to, either; "absurd premise funny" isn't our usual preference in movies. Though I guess it's not all that absurd... I did once know a woman who was 38 and a virgin.
Schlindler's List came out when I was pregnant so I avoided it. Still haven't seen it.
We considered A Fish Called Wanda last night before we selected 8 Heads in a Duffle Bag. I adore Wanda but I thought the boys would appreciate Heads more. Both give me the most satisfying belly laughs.