Did The Third Man get mentioned in this context?
'Jaynestown'
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.
Emmett's watching A Series of Unfortunate Events and it is like an unceasing itch that everything is perfect. The production design is fantastic. The costumes are gorgeous. The look and feel, amazing. The children and and all the supporting actors are perfectly cast except... Jim Carrey. Who is not perfect.
But damn it looks great. And all of Violet's inventive escapes are perfectly put together and thought out. And the script is well made and Billy Connolly and Meryl Streep are great.
But...Jim Carrey.
And you just want to move into each and every set they show - that's how perfect they are. Even Olaf's ratty house has ratty gothic splendor.
And yet.
Sadly, I've still never seen Escape from New York.
But, but...you're missing Chef/Audrey II as the Duke of New York!
ITA with FKB's comments on the Carpenter score. And with Hec's comments on A Series of Unfortunate Casting Choices, Or Just the One, Really.
We're batting about .250. PotC 2 Friday night, which was not good. Pretty, in parts. Art Direction after my own heart, but it's always embarrassing when somebody bruckheimers all over the place like that.
Tonight, Monster House. What a pointless waste of celluloid. It's kind of a Stephen King story, is the best I can say about it. And great particle effects in the animation.
But...Jim Carrey.
Exactly. Even he would have been tolerable if there had been less of him and if he hadn't over-acted quite so much. Those were beautiful sets and it felt like he tried to eat all of them.
Not related to Carrey, but I have to give "Nashville" another shot when it is not so late that I am passing out. But it held my attention surprisingly well considering I'd like the music better if it were "Chicago" or "Detroit"
Emmett's watching A Series of Unfortunate Events and it is like an unceasing itch that everything is perfect.
Jim Carrey ruined that movie for me. And I really do mean ruined, because it should have been something I adored and wanted to watch over and over. But every time Jim Carrey was on screen, I started grinding my teeth. I'm still trying to decide if it's worth buying it on DVD and just watching it with the sound turned off.
Nashville's not my favorite Altman, but people have pretty varied reactions to it. The music isn't all that great, for one thing, although I don't think it was meant to show the contempt that the movie's detractors hear.
On a similar note, I watched A Prairie Home Companion last night, and liked it despite my general indifference-to-annoyance with Garrison Keillor.
I have Nashville on the DVR (thank you, TCM!), so maybe I will finally watch it one of these days. I was going to do it today, but I'm more in a War of the Worlds mood. No thinking!
The only movie that I'd consider improved by Jim Carrey's presence rather than lessened or completely ruined would be a Faces of Death sequel.
He was fine playing against type in Eternal Sunshine. But that's the only movie I've actually liked him in.