It may just be a RAM shortage, as it played smoothly on my work Mac but is likewise skippy here on the laptop.
I had to stop and have a laughing fit midway through my first viewing when the spinning decapitated head popped up in the center panel.
'Safe'
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 may just be a RAM shortage, as it played smoothly on my work Mac but is likewise skippy here on the laptop.
I had to stop and have a laughing fit midway through my first viewing when the spinning decapitated head popped up in the center panel.
I just saw Harry Potter 5 in IMAX this afternoon. It's the first time I've seen a theatrical film (not made for IMAX) in that format, and it was better than I thought it'd be. I'd heard stories about other films, such as the LotR movies, shown on the bigger screen and being fuzzy in the corners, etc., but this movie had no such problems. The 3D part at the end (starting with the kids on thestrals, heading for the Ministry, through to Harry packing for the summer) was quite cool, especially the chase through the Hall of Prophecy and the Dumbledore vs. Voldemort fight at the end (all those glass fragments look deadly when they're flying through the air).
I came home from my trip and Dennis had set aside a movie from his queue for me to watch, George and the Dragon. He said, "it's got James Purefoy, Michael Clarke Duncan, Patrick Swayze and Val Kilmer."
I thought, a cast like that and I never heard of it, "does it suck?"
He shook his head, laughing, "oh man it sucks so bad."
Still James Purefoy, swoony swoony and dragons, eh? How bad can it be?
Oh lordy. It Is Bad. I think they've got a Patrick Swayze bot. And for some reason James Purefoy isn't hot anymore. I wish he'd wash his face. But I can't turn it off.
Oh lordy. It Is Bad. I think they've got a Patrick Swayze bot. And for some reason James Purefoy isn't hot anymore. I wish he'd wash his face. But I can't turn it off.
Laga, George and the Dragon was/is one of those "so-bad-you-can't-look-away" movies I've seen on Sci-Fi. They just have a twisted special place in my heart. The truly sad part is that there is a discussion thread on IMDB where people were desperately trying to get copies.
I'm pretty sure I've seen Season 1 at least 8 or 9 times now.
I've seen it at least half that many times, and two of them were due directly to your influence. It's a fucking brilliant show.
Saw "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead." Oh my god, it was so brilliant. It was the best movie I have seen in a very long time. I love it like a lot.
Also saw "Say Anything," which has so much more resonance for me now than it did when I was a teenager, and the Emma Thompson version of "Sense and Sensibility," which was just lovely.
"The Mummy" definitely stands up to rewatch--it really was beautifully shot, for all that it was an action/horror flick. Also saw the 1995 version of "Sabrina," which was surprisingly lovely; I think I enjoy it more on a fundamental level than I do the 1955 version, though the Hepburn version will always hold a strong place in my heart, because it was my mother's favorite film.
And everyone who said "2046" was incomprehensible was entirely correct, but damn it was pretty, and the cinematography was totally worth not knowing what the hell was going on.
Hello, BigDuluth!
the 1995 version of "Sabrina," which was surprisingly lovely; I think I enjoy it more on a fundamental level than I do the 1955 version,
JZ would agree with you.
You should definitely check out some other Wong Kar Wei, especially Chungking Express.
the 1995 version of "Sabrina," which was surprisingly lovely; I think I enjoy it more on a fundamental level than I do the 1955 version,
My very favorite moment from that version: when Linus asks Sabrina about the meaning of her name, and she says that it's from a favorite poem (memfault: or possibly ballad, or story?) of her mother's, about a virgin and a water-nymph who saves her from a fate worse than death. "And Sabrina's the virgin?" Linus says. And formerly shy Sabrina meets his eyes squarely and raises her chin and says calmly, "Sabrina's the savior."
I so badly need to see Sense and Sensibility again; it's been two or three years at least.
I love the end of Sense and Sensibility, when Elinor finds out that the Hugh Grant character is not married, as she'd been led to believe, and the stalwart rock of the family just falls apart, blubbering in front of him, and her mother and sisters flee outside to spy through the window.
Plus, fainting sheep.