Laura, DH says he doesn't remember there being an overwhelming amount of profanity in the film, but it's not something he's sensitive to, so take it with a grain of salt.
Also, I just noticed that iTunes has all 5 Academy-nominated live action shorts for $1.99 each (which makes it cheaper to download all 5 than to go see them at Cinema Village). But if you don't want to spend money seeing all of them, I was rooting for The Last Farm to win -- it's got the tightest storytelling and biggest emotional punch of the lot.
I hope they put up the animated shorts.
I saw
Night Watch
today. It was pretty cool, though I wasn't as impressed as I'd hoped to be. It's fairly predictable, since the plot is a mishmash of all your standard fantasy/horror tropes. The nice thing about the story, though, is that it builds on itself. There's no clear trajectory at the beginning, but each plot point leads to the next plot point, and so on. So even though things in the first half don't seem to be that relevant, they turn out to be important later on.
Really, though, the movie is so worth going to see just for the subtitles. They're the best fucking subtitles I've ever seen. Some are in blood. Sometimes the action on the screen obscures them. If a character's coughing out his words, the text flickers to mimic his speech. If a character's reading from a computer screen, they appear typed out letter by letter. They're very creative.
I saw
16 Blocks
and, although it was rather formulaic in the last 30 minutes, the rest of it was surprisingly good, I thought. Bruce Willis and Mos Def work well together and the film does a really great job of capturing what New York streets actually feel like.
Watched
Wallace & Grommit: Curse of the Were-Rabbit
last night. SO funny. Uneven, and basically a reworking of
A Close Shave,
but we had to pause and rewind a couple of times because we were laughing so hard.
The animation was amazing, too. I'm guessing they used a lot more CGI cleanup than in the past, but the set detail and character modelling was tremendous.
And why do I still say "rewind" even though it's a DVD?
Skipped 143 posts in order to have my ha'penn'orth wrt the casting of
Wuthering Heights:
Who is your ideal casting for it? Feel free to roam back in time since you don't think it's been done definitively.
Sean Bean
as Heathcliff. Granted he's fair rather than dark, but he's a real Yorkshireman, and he can do violent and passionate and tight lipped and working class and all that pretty damned well
and
he's strapping and sexay. And he can
act
(which I only realised with "They have a cave troll".) Can't think of anyone else who would give him a run for his money.
Although...aternatively, I could be sold on a mixed race actor - there's plenty of canonical basis for having Heathcliff be mixed race, and that would open up the field rather nicely.
Cathy, however, I'll have to ponder. But she should be sturdy, and not china-doll pretty, or model-looking. Sexy, yes, but not in anything approaching a conscious-of-it or fragile way.
Hmm.
Meanwhile, JohnSweden is me wrt Bond.
New Cars trailer: [link]
Grrr.... I'm getting broken object icons at both this and the X3 site. Maybe I need to update Quicktime. I'll try that and see if that works.
Meh. Didn't like it. Which... is totally par for the course for me and Pixar trailers, so I'll assume the movie will rock.