GLEET!!!
Bwah! That's COMM material. At least, I hope it's coffee...
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.
GLEET!!!
Bwah! That's COMM material. At least, I hope it's coffee...
Do all the wacky talkin' animal flicks share a particular song, such as "I Feel Good," "Walking on Sunshine," or "Hey Ya"?
This looks to be fun: The Totally Geek Guide to the Princess Bride, by Maryann Johnson, aka the Flick Filosopher.
Teacup Guy and I saw Little Miss Sunshine the other day and had a spoilery question: Is it realistic that the teenage boy would not know he was colorblind at the age of 16?
I could swear that I heard of someone who didn't find out until they were like 30. I may have heard this here.
I seems really unlikely, but we had a hand-wave that he knew he was colorblind, but not that it would screw his chances of becoming a pilot. I realize that doesn't exactly work with what happened in the movie.
SJ - Yes. My DH is colorblind and didn't find out until he was around that age. There is no reason for a colorblind person to assume there's something odd in the colors they see, because just like everyone else, "red" looks different from "yellow"--it's just that for them, both those colors look more like different versions of gray.
Really, Robin? Fascinating!
Incidentally, Little Miss Sunshine is excellent for people who are wondering what it would look like to spend two days driving about twenty minutes away from my parents' house.
Yes, Cowgirl, he found out in art class in high school, when they were painting portraits. The teacher praised his surrealistic color choices, which he thought were realistic.