Older actor = Gielgud. Wish I could have seen him perform.
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.
The first live Shakespeare I ever saw was the one I was in, Romeo and Juliet in junior year of high school (I was the Apothecary). The only other time I've seen a complete play done live was Macbeth at Barat College in Lake Forest (now closed, unfortunately), which always had live Shakespeare outdoors during the summer.
I really should head over to Navy Pier and see the Shakespeare Rep sometime.
Y'all are giving me chills, quoting Henry V.
Will kinda does that from time to time.
And then he'll strip his arm and show his scars
And say "These wounds I had on Crispin's Day."
Or words to that effect. Love that speech, so very deeply. And Aims should totally watch Slings & Arrows, especially the first season -- it should make Hamlet considerably more accessible. Plus, pretty pretty Paul Gross. Plus, hell, you're an actor: you'll recognize so very many of the people (not as in "recognize the actors" but "There's the easily-confused but sweet older man who always has trouble with his lines who there's one of in every single theater company in all the Americas! Hey, that's the overentitled but undertalented ingenue who knows someone on the board of directors! Holy mackerel, it's the pretty boy who turns out to be a decent actor! Look, it's Bitter Prickly Woman -- I did a show with her umpteen years ago, and, bless Paul Gross, he's giving her the smackdown she so richly deserves that my own weak-ass director never dared give her!"). So, so much fun.
Nutty! Please go see Dream before it goes away! One of my best friends from college is playing Snug the Joiner, and he is made of awesome. Also, I know that tacklehugging is not so much your style, but feel free to deliver some sort of friendly assault on his person on my behalf if you stick around afterwards.
ION, the Dark Is Rising trailer I saw today bugged me mainly because 95% of the dialogue and voice-over sounded like it'd been lifted verbatim from every other episode of S1-2 Buffy, with pronoun shifts. I don't know how many trailers are out there, but the one I saw could not possibly have been more Buffy without actually making Will a blonde 16-year-old girl.
I'd been vaguely not-ill-disposed toward it until then (still not likely to see it, but not ill disposed), but the more-Buffy-than-Buffyness of it grated like anything.
But the actual movie, once the irritating trailers were over? That one about the kid with the scar and his friends and Alan Rickman's painful childhood memories and the kitten plates and their awful owner and crazy Helena Bonham-Carter? Loved it.
Yes, I loved that one too, JZ.
I've never read The Dark is Rising, so I don't know where to put the recrimination marks.
Bev, you're kidding! Oh, I think you'd adore it. Though you should probably wait until after the movie.
"They have called this day...the 11 of March!" A classic take on the speech from dueSouth: [link]
Slipped through the cracks, yep. But since there's a small child who's already half in love with the thing from the trailer, I can just about guarantee I'll be seeing it. So I'll read after.
I really want to see The Water Horse, too. Sort of Roan Inish-esque. (See how I avoided that, there?)
I didn't make it to any of the movies I was thinking about seeing earlier in the week, but I did get to the Simpsons Movie this afternoon.
Awesome.
A couple of surprises, Danny Elfman did NOT do the music and Gary Burritt was the Negative Cutter. I was sure either there wouldn't be one or it would be Teresa Repola Mohammed.
Just to add to the not-movie Shakespeare talk, while I was working for the Shakespeare in the Park in Fort Worth, TX part of our costume crew were in a production of Midsummer's that was performed by a total of 5 actors. Everyone was doubled, tripled and quadrupled parts and it only got confusing in the last scene when one of the actors had to play two of his parts who were speaking directly to each other. Otherwise it was one of the best productions I'd ever seen!
and I liked Branagh's Hamlet.