I found the massive time jumps really confusing, and it made it hard for me to follow the relationships and/or get any sense of them.
'Dirty Girls'
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.
Clive Owen is fucking fierce.
I kind of want the scene where he explodes at Roberts on an endless loop so I can watch it whenever I want.
I didn't hate it, but it seemed like it was written for actors to perform, not for audiences to watch.
Owen owns the film, no doubt. He played the Law role onstage, which is cool.
I kind of want the scene where he explodes at Roberts on an endless loop so I can watch it whenever I want.
Seriously! I have pulled the movie off OnDemand just to FF to that.
I didn't hate it, but it seemed like it was written for actors to perform, not for audiences to watch.
That's a good observation.
I really like that Damien Rice song. In fact, I'm listening to it right now, AIFG.
::swoops in for a quick hiss at J***a R*****s::
I really like that Damien Rice song. In fact, I'm listening to it right now, AIFG.
I actually didn't like it so much before when I listened to it following all the Damien Rice hype, but it was really well used in the movie. So now I like it a little more.
You all knew Errol Flynn was pretty awesome, right? I saw The Sea Hawk today, and reconfirmed that awesomeness.
He is so awesome that, between Captain Blood (1934) and this one (1940) somebody took him aside and taught him how to really fight with a sword instead of dance around with one. More's the pity he's not fighting Basil Rathbone, and thus we don't get nearly as many full-body shots. (The villain couldn't fight for shit, so they had to double him. It was done very artily, with shadows and stuff.)
Saw Casino Royale over the weekend, and oh, the Daniel Craig love. So. Big. I hope everyone who booed the idea of him playing Bond has been properly chastised now, because I think he was perfect. The new raw edge was more than yummy.
My only disconnect was knowing this was supposed to be Bond's promotion to 00 status, early in his career -- and then hearing the reference to 9/11. Somehow having seen all the other actors (except for George Lazenby, and really, who cares) as Bond isn't weird when accepting Craig, but the chronology element struck a weird note. Makes me wonder where they're going with the franchise -- starting over, as this was the first Bond novel? Are there unfilmed novels left?
I loved the way they humanized Bond in this one, and really moved away from the cartoon aspects of the earlier films. I loved those, way back (and still do love some of them), but as much as I enjoyed the eye candy of Brosnan (and Berry -- and Brosnan and Berry together), Goldeneye's Hotel of Ice! and Magic! Disappearing! Car! were a bit too silly for me. *This* Bond was real -- no gadgets beyond the technology any one of us could use, and a healthy dose of confidence and really big balls. (Although I suppose the Internet-heart rate-poison diagnosis thingie was a bit of a stretch.)
I didn't mind his relationship with Vesper, because I had in mind that this was early Bond -- a Bond who has a preference for married women and no complications, and who lets himself fall once and promptly gets burned. I liked seeing a Bond focused enough on redeeming himself with M and getting the job done that seduction wasn't the first thing on his mind, and I love that Vesper was supposed to be a smart girl, as opposed to pure cheesecake (even though I agree that the director seemed to assume we would believe this without much evidence). That said, her motives and the execution of the betrayal were kind of weak, despite the cool sinking building scene.
Excuse my enthusiastic rambling here. I haven't been to a movie aside from one for the kids in months and months, and I haven't loved a movie so much in a while. Pure entertainment. Awesome action! And scrumptious eye candy! Oh! I do agree that Eva Green looked odd in the casino scenes -- she looked much prettier in the scene at the hospital when Craig is in the wheelchair, and in then in Venice. In all that makeup, with the chunky jewelry and the dark dresses, on her fairly skinny if busty frame, she looked like a preteen girl playing dressup, and doing it badly.