JG-L is very, very awesome. Thanks to good reviews here, I now very much want to see The Lookout.
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.
I didn't care for Brick. Loved JG-L in Mysterious Skin , though. That's a movie that'll break you.
Yeah, that movie broke me but good, and JG-L was pretty fantabulous.
I think I passed on Brick because Ehrenstein raved so much about Gordon-Levitt in it that I unfairly associated my distaste for the reviewer with the film itself.
Ooh, I'm gonna tell him you said that and ooh you're gonna be in so much trouble and ooh...donuts!
Sorry.
What was I saying?
For any of you who have seen the Huckabees hissy fit video (which has been quite the topic of discussion among those I know in the movie business(, here is a genius homage: [link]
Enjoy!
My sister sent me an article about a controversial movie featuring two black men in love with each other, and I was surprised (pleasantly so) to see this paragraph:
Rag Tag is Nwandu's interpretation of "slash", the underground genre of fan fiction on the internet in which fans - mainly women - invent and share fantasies about famous men having sex, from Captain Kirk and his colleagues to Pete Doherty and Carl Barat. As a straight woman, she sees nothing unusual in this. "I know people have been saying why, as a woman, are you writing stuff about men; but if you look into slash, a lot of the authors are housewives," she says. "There is something about male sexuality that fascinates women. I know I am not alone."
Sure, I might edit it a bit when it comes to defining slash, but still. Dude. It came up. In the Guardian movie section.
Guy Maddin's 15 minute short in collaboration with Isabella Rosselini, reflecting on her father Roberto. This is the kind of stuff I love by Maddin: visually beautiful, playful, silly, theoretical. And because it's Isabella Rosellini, this is also very heartfelt.
She's a good collaborator for him.
The sound sync is off but it's only a little distracting.
Recommended for any serious film fan.
Then there's also the pure comic genius of Maddin's Sissy Boy Slap Party.
I've got a feeling shrift might bookmark this one.
Henson is making The Doubtful Guest into a movie! [link]
After stopping by for my workout on the way home, I think I'm going to pop in my tape of Godspell to watch tonight if there's nothing else on. Gotta love Victor Garber in a huge frizzy 'fro! I still wonder how they did the outdoor scenes in NYC with absolutely no one in sight.