Wesley: We were fighting on opposite sides, but it was the same war. Fred: but you hated her…didn't you? Wesley: It's not always about holding hands.

'Shells'


Buffista Movies 6: lies and videotape  

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.


Kathy A - Jul 10, 2007 9:24:37 am PDT #104 of 10000
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

The Flick Filosopher also likes Harry:

this may be the best straight-up horror movie of the year -- I was riveted by the sinister sophistication of it.

I like that she focuses on what I think is the most significant of Harry's issues:

As Harry gets older and more conflicted, and Radcliffe matures into a fine young actor upon whose shoulders falls the tricky task of giving expression to Harry’s wounded inner psyche -- which Radcliffe does very nicely here -- Harry’s isolation, even among his closest Hogwarts friends, is more poignant, and more disturbing, than ever.

The still she chooses to use for the review is something I'm both looking forward to seeing and expect to be absolutely wrecked by.


Ailleann - Jul 10, 2007 9:28:28 am PDT #105 of 10000
vanguard of the socialist Hollywood liberal homosexualist agenda

The still she chooses to use for the review is something I'm both looking forward to seeing and expect to be absolutely wrecked by.

Crap, I'm tearing up a little even now.

*makes grabby hands at movie*


Kathy A - Jul 10, 2007 9:40:17 am PDT #106 of 10000
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

I'm bummed because I'll have to wait until either Friday or Saturday to see it (gotta work at the bookstore Wednesday night, and am on call for the store Thursday night).

I also might have to wait until the evening of Saturday, the 21st, to read Deathly Hallows, which ticks me off, but it looks like they're going to put the most recent hires on to open Saturday since most of the long-time employees are the ones working Harry Potter night. Oh, well, at least if they do that it means I'll have Sunday off to finish reading it/reread my favorite parts, as I always do.


Kathy A - Jul 10, 2007 9:47:24 am PDT #107 of 10000
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

Roger Ebert's review of OotP is enough to make me want to thwap him on the head. He spend it whining "Where's the whimsy?" and "My hope, as we plow onward through "Potters" Nos. 6-7, is that the series will not grow darker still. Yet I suppose even at the beginning, with those cute little mail-owls, we knew the whimsy was too good to last."

He insists on reviewing the story he would prefer to have seen rather than the one he did see, just like he did for LotR. Drives me crazy!


Polter-Cow - Jul 10, 2007 9:54:07 am PDT #108 of 10000
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

LE SIGH. I love a lot of Ebert's reviews, but, geez, has he read the books? The series has been growing darker since BOOK TWO. And for many people, that's a good thing.

I'm seeing it tomorrow night. Going to get tickets tonight after work.


JZ - Jul 10, 2007 10:33:57 am PDT #109 of 10000
See? I gave everybody here an opportunity to tell me what a bad person I am and nobody did, because I fuckin' rule.

Wow, that review demonstrates an epic lack of cluefulness. I hope to God Ebert really has never read any of the books past Sorcerer's Stone, because if he has then there's truly no excuse. Where's the whimsy? Er, crushed beneath the boot of the writer since roughly the midpoint of Chamber of Secrets.

Also, this caption to the still accompanying the review:

"Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix" is filled with British actors solidly established long before Daniel Radcliffe (seated) landed the role of Harry.

irritates the fuck out of me. What, they should have cast an experienced RADA-trained Shakespearean actor of 11 in the role to match up with the rest of the cast? What the fuck does that even mean?

Clearly I'm in need of either lots more or lots less coffee. I really shouldn't be sitting here itching to slap an oldish man who's been recently ill. But, really, Ebert is too intelligent and too film-literate for this review. It's beneath him.


Kathy A - Jul 10, 2007 10:40:40 am PDT #110 of 10000
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

It isn't like Radcliffe had no acting experience whatsoever--he was the title character in David Copperfield, after all. And, like you said, where does an 11-year-old (not named Christian Bale) get Shakesperian experience at that age?


Frankenbuddha - Jul 10, 2007 10:42:34 am PDT #111 of 10000
"We are the Goon Squad and we're coming to town...Beep! Beep!" - David Bowie, "Fashion"

"Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix" is filled with British actors solidly established long before Daniel Radcliffe (seated) landed the role of Harry.

I wouldn't blame Ebert for a caption. The review, yes; the captions, no.

Wow, that review demonstrates an epic lack of cluefulness.

He does this often. I often get eyerolly reading him (much as I like lots of his writing, especially in his Great Movies books, and even in his two books of trashing reviews) because he seems to be deliberately and willfully not getting things at times.


Kathy A - Jul 10, 2007 11:38:38 am PDT #112 of 10000
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

Not only is the cinema near me showing HP5 at midnight on ten screens (eleven if you include the IMAX one), but they're having an additional showing on one screen and also the IMAX at 3:00 am!


Aims - Jul 10, 2007 11:42:01 am PDT #113 of 10000
Shit's all sorts of different now.

Waiting for word from my aunt if I can take my cousins to the midnight showing in ... less than EIGHT HOURS.