I watched part of a Barbie and Pegasus movie today. With really creepy CGI and, allegedly, 3-d effects. This is what happens when you let 3 and 4 year old girls choose the movie.
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.
So last night we were watching a little It's A Wonderful Life, and we were wondering out loud why no one has ever remade it. (I know there's been tons of similar stories, but no one seems to have done a direct re-make.) My theory was that no one thinks they can do justice to the original.
Then we wondered who we thought could be cast in a remake, and decided on Kevin Spacey (though I thought he would need to be younger) and Kristin Davis. There's gotta be someone else, though.
Kevin Spacey as George Bailey?
Maybe if George were an opium fiend.
My theory is that since every sitcom in television history has made an It's a Wonderful Life episode, filmmakers are so sick of seeing the plot that they can't bear the thought of helming a remake.
Oh, not just sitcoms. It seems to be a requirement for shows with enough whimsy, even if they're hour-longs. Grey's Anatomy is about due, I swear.
If GA did it, who would be George Bailey?
oops
Sadly, probably Whiny McSkinnypants. But it'd be great to see a happy Addison/McDreamy relationship somehow in her absence.
The upside of my toddler deciding that My Neighbor Totoro is the greatest movie ever is that I have seen it, and not the Teletubbies or Elmo, about 20 times over the last 4 days. The downside is that even I have my freakin' limits.
We're back, happy and tired, from our Christams Movie day. Very successful this year. We started with Happy Feet, which was charming and fun. Then Dreamgirls, which is mostly good and features two kick-ass performances in Jennifer Hudson and Eddie Murphy. The audience was totally digging it, and there was lots of applause after several numbers. Last movie was Children of Men, which blew me away and is going on my 10 best list for the year. A powerful, beautifully written script, not a bad performance in the huge cast, and so very very very well directed. Clive Owen is mesmerizing.
After moves, we all had dinner at Jerry's Deli, where we got to grill our friend who did props on Dreamgirls about the making of the film.