It was Carrey -- I checked, even!
You're right, though -- I never thought about how much he and RSL looked alike there for a while.
I saw Enduring Love this weekend, along with Laurel Canyon
Laurel Canyon really kind of bored me, but I watched it late one night in a bad mood.
I liked Carrey in
The Cable Guy.
Finally a role even slightly as creepy as I found his public persona.
Finally a role even slightly as creepy as I found his public persona.
Heh.
I didn't hate The Truman Show, and I enjoyed most of Bruce Almighty, but I will never willingly watch the abomination he and Ron Howard made of The Grinch.
::shudders::
Oh!
The Mask.
Probably the last time I liked Cameron Diaz too.
I loved Laurel Canyon. But that was just because I couldn't decide whether Frances McDormand or Christian Bale was hotter.
See, I can manage to watch Batman 3 by putting my thumb over Carrey, but it doesn't work with Unfortunate Events. Even with the sound off.
When you're too over-the-top to fit in a Joel Schumacher Batman movie, you might want to consider dialing it down a bit.
I'll be the odd one out and say I've loved Jim Carrey in almost everything I've seen him in.
I just watched
War of the Worlds,
and I was pretty impressed for most of it. I mean, sure, the characters are meaningless, but the effects were awesome, and sticking to Ray's POV was both interesting and maddening. It made it less like a bombastic sci-fi flick and made the audience feel like we were in the shit.
I thought most of the early action sequences were exceptionally well crafted, and the scene later on with
the eye roving through the basement
was awesome. I liked the pacing because it felt realistic, since we were following one man's journey.
Everyone complained about the ending, and I was surprised that
er, well, they actually just used the original ending, so...I really can't fault them for that, right? It's not Spielberg's fault the actual ending is so lame.
Overall, though, I think the movie captured the death and destruction and chaos and anarchy of an actual alien invasion.
The last 45 minutes of Nashville are my favourite Altman. For such a diffuse story beforehand, it comes together so solidly and with such a quick succession of gut punches that it's, ah... I can seem to find a way to finish this sentence. You can assemble something coherent and grammatically correct out 'wonderful' and 'surprising' if you so wish.
I just watched War of the Worlds, and I was pretty impressed for most of it.
Reminded me a lot of early Battlestar Galactica tonally.
Stranger than Fiction is one of my favorite movies ever. I want to see it again right now.