Marie Antoinette was my least favorite Sophia Coppola movie. Maybe I'm tired of Kirsten Dunst. I'd sure be glad if she wasn't in any more Spider-Man movies.
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.
It's sort of generally agreed that one shouldn't play God, but is teen sex really punishable by death? Is taking a school vacation in a crappy shack really punishable of rape by tree? Is being female enough "bad" to merit brutal torture? Movies currently make it more obvious why the characters are being punished, but the reasons are, to my mind, less useful as social lessons.
As I keep saying, it isn't about what people deserve. If a character runs into the street and gets hit by a car, that doesn't mean he deserved to die for failing to use a crosswalk. But that is why it happened.
Horror stories don't create fears; they reflect them. You can look at trends in horror movies and see what the cultural anxieties were. It's certainly not fair that sex puts your life at risk in the real world, but it's not surprising that having sex got people killed in a lot of 80s movies.
As I keep saying, it isn't about what people deserve. If a character runs into the street and gets hit by a car, that doesn't mean he deserved to die for failing to use a crosswalk. But that is why it happened.
Meet. Joe. Black.
I don't care for toture flicks because they make me horribly uncomfortable. I don't understand the attraction but the films make money and lots of people see them. I think they can be well made, well written and of high quality, I just try to avoid them if I can.
I was surprised how much I enjoyed Catch and Release. I gave the film a little slack for the first-time-filmmaker and I really enjoyed Kevin Smith (he's basically just playing himself) but Mom & Dad didn't know who he was and they found the film to be pretty good too. It covered some new cinematic ground for me which is rare these days.
I haven't discussed the movies Saw and Hostel, I don't watch those because I find them incredibly disturbing on many levels.
But what's on SCI FI right now at 7 pm EST? Saw. Granted it's a heavily edited version, I'm sure, and it had a disclaimer about disturbing content before hand. but really how can anyone think this is appropriate for 7 pm?
Huh. There's not really much in the way of graphic violence in the first Saw film from memory, but it's not a movie I'd ever place at 7pm on schedules. And I'm in the UK, and we have very liberal TV.
There's not really much in the way of graphic violence in the first Saw film from memory
Doesn't someone cut his own leg off?
Of course, it's not really sci-fi anyway, but they've spent the whole day showing the Hannibal Lecter movies.
Well there is dead body in a pool of blood from where he's shot himself in the head. That body is just lying there between them for the longest time.
I just flipped back over there and it's at a doctor's office so I don't know what else it is.
I'm watching Saw now. It's not as horrific as I'd expected. (At least, not yet.) It isn't merely torture and gore; it's a dark psychological thriller. With torture and gore. Not really my thing; I'm kinda watching from the hall.
I saw Waitress today. Cute, and it made me hungry for pie! So, I treated myself to a strawberry-rhubarb mini pie from Wild Oats.