Apparently, John Travolta thinks that Hairspray is not a gay film. Has he seen it?!?
Methinks it would take a LOT of experience with denial to be able to make that statement about Hairspray. Wonder what he practiced on? blinks innocently...
'Potential'
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.
Apparently, John Travolta thinks that Hairspray is not a gay film. Has he seen it?!?
Methinks it would take a LOT of experience with denial to be able to make that statement about Hairspray. Wonder what he practiced on? blinks innocently...
Huh. I never knew that the first two Die Hard movies were based on books. The things you learn from Wikipedia. The third was partially based on another screenplay, and the fourth, as I noticed with amusement during the credits, was based on an article.
One of the metacritic User Reviews for transformers that I found especially poignant:
This movie was AWSOME, from the visual effects to the hot chicks.
I honestly can't decide if this is intended to be ironic or not.
That sounds like my kind of movie.
And I'm not being ironic! Mostly. I do enjoy both visual effects and hot chicks.
the fourth, as I noticed with amusement during the credits, was based on an article.
Another movie based on a magazine article? Pushing Tin. Which, while it did have some good things going for it, wanted to be three different movies, and never really decides which one it wants to be, and thus plays like three parts of three different, semi-unrelated movies.
It's like Speed ! Which is an elevator movie, a bus movie, and a subway movie, all in one!
HA!
Well, Pushing Tin seemed even less well connected than Speed. At least the three parts of Speed were all action movie.
The three parts of Pushing Tin seem really disjointed. Like, buddy comedy, romantic entanglement movie, and messed up guy gets his head cleared movie.
Kind of like the two halves of Life Is Beautiful ?
Top Ten Greatest Chicago Movies
I had to dash off a quick list before I peeked and it ended up so:
1. High Fidelity (the city is a character in the film)
2. The Blues Brothers
3. Ferris Beuller's Day Off
4. The Untouchables
5. Risky Business
6. What Women Want (see High Fidelity)
7. Chicago Cab (AKA Hellcab) (only recommended for hard core Chi-tonw fans)
8. Chicago (kinda has to make the list, huh?)
9. Adventures in Babysitting (great use of architecture ;)
and with my crystal ball I peer in to the future and know that one day:
10. The Time Traveler's Wife.
With the exception of number 10, which of course I haven't yet seen, I think the thing that ties these movies together is not that they are great films but that they are great Chicago films. If that makes any sense.
If anyone's keeping track I think the best Pittsburgh film is Innocent Blood.
If anyone's keeping track I think the best Pittsburgh film is Innocent Blood.
Uh...Night of the Living Dead?