Two steaming cups of chocolate goodness. Courtesy of whomever I swiped it from out of the cupboard.

Ben ,'The Killer In Me'


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.


Kathy A - Nov 13, 2006 7:38:24 am PST #5670 of 10001
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

I've never seen any Miyazaki films, but I'm thinking I should add some to my Netflix queue.

I seriously love 1776, and recommend getting the DVD, which has the extended director's cut including "Cool Conservative Men", and not the butchered-by-Jack-Warner theatrical release. I wish I had seen the concert version that was done locally a few years back that was gender-neutral casting (female John Adams, male Abigail), which I heard was just amazing!


Cashmere - Nov 13, 2006 7:39:51 am PST #5671 of 10001
Now tagless for your comfort.

Nausicaa is my favorite. GotF leaves me in a sobbing puddle. I can no longer watch it.


megan walker - Nov 13, 2006 7:41:22 am PST #5672 of 10001
"What kind of magical sunshine and lollipop world do you live in? Because you need to be medicated."-SFist

GotF leaves me in a sobbing puddle.

Everytime I see GotF, I go to a Harry Potter place.


Tom Scola - Nov 13, 2006 7:44:05 am PST #5673 of 10001
Remember that the frontier of the Rebellion is everywhere. And even the smallest act of insurrection pushes our lines forward.

While you're in lending mode, you wouldn't happen to have any current BSG episodes, would you?

No, sorry.


askye - Nov 13, 2006 7:45:00 am PST #5674 of 10001
Thrive to spite them

Spirited Away is the first movie of his I've seen. Howl's Moving Castle looked interesting and I meant to go see it but it didn't stay at the indie movie house long enough so I missed it. Which is why it's next on the list.

There were some things about Spirited Away that sort of confused me - I never really understood about No Face, like why he was eating all the creatures but the girl said the bathhouse made him "bad" (at least in the subtitles) so I accepted that. I thought maybe there was something that got lost in translation about the character.


Hayden - Nov 13, 2006 8:00:28 am PST #5675 of 10001
aka "The artist formerly known as Corwood Industries."

There was a line in the subtitled version that provided a semi-explanation (although not complete because it's all dream-logic), askye, but I've forgotten what it was. I remember it, though, because that was something that had always bugged me, and I couldn't understand why they wouldn't have translated it into the dubbed version.


askye - Nov 13, 2006 8:12:58 am PST #5676 of 10001
Thrive to spite them

I watched the Sub-version and the only thing was that one line. I was wondering if there was something that got left out between the spoken Japanese and the written subtitles or maybe it was some kind of cultural thing, that if you were Japanese you'd understand.


Volans - Nov 13, 2006 8:13:36 am PST #5677 of 10001
move out and draw fire

I think something did get a bit lost in the cultural shift, but I thought the deal was that he was a tabula rasa, until he ate the frog, and then he took on the personality of the frog...and everyone he ate at the bathhouse was "bad" or of weak, greedy, gluttinous character, so he kept getting more so, the more he ate.

Loved Spirited Away. Bought it on DVD as soon as it came out. However, I couldn't even finish Princess Mononucleosis, and I thought I would really like it. Howl's Moving Castle is in my queue.

We just watched The Cell. I skipped it back when it came out because everybody said it was awful, but I thought it was decent. I may have even kind of liked it.


Amy - Nov 13, 2006 8:15:27 am PST #5678 of 10001
Because books.

I may have even kind of liked it.

I liked it. It was gorgeous to look at, at least, in a freaky way. And I didn't mind Vincent D'Onofrio chewing the scenery.


Volans - Nov 13, 2006 8:22:36 am PST #5679 of 10001
move out and draw fire

I didn't mind Vincent D'Onofrio chewing the scenery

His physicality was great for the role. It's kind of retro-wrecked for me, though, since a friend said, "Oh, The Cell? Wasn't Philip Seymour Hoffman the bad guy in that?"