Along with Repo Man
Comcast has this OnDemand. I read the description. I had no idea it involved aliens. I think I will be giving it a look.
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.
Along with Repo Man
Comcast has this OnDemand. I read the description. I had no idea it involved aliens. I think I will be giving it a look.
Neil's Faerie Market in Books of Magic predates all those uses of the concept.
Fritz Leiber's "Bazaar of the Bizarre" predates that. As does Goblin Market. It's not so much a stealable idea as a trope.
Comcast has this OnDemand. I read the description. I had no idea it involved aliens. I think I will be giving it a look.
Eagerly awaits reaction...
It's not so much a stealable idea as a trope.
Which is why I was all "that looks like... well, of course del Toro and Gaiman think along parallel lines." Until I remembered that Gaiman actually worked on the movie.
I have purchased tickets to a 12:37am showing of Dark Knight next week. That was almost sold out, and everything else is going *fast*.
E was told by the publicist that we should arrive an hour ahead of time for the screening (Tues night) and that they would be confiscating cell phones. (And also that they'd stopped accepting RSVPs for guests, so it was a good thing he responded early!)
I'm quite certain I've never been this excited to see a movie, and I waited half my life to see Lord of the Rings turned into a live-action film.
I'm more excited about Dark Knight. Straight up.
Neil Gaiman has a few photos from the set of Hellboy II up on his blog.
I'm more excited about Dark Knight. Straight up.
It looks *better*. Straight up.
(and I say that as a huge LOTR-movie fan, just to be clear)
The few reviews I've read have done NOTHING to reduce my expectations for TDK. My only regret is that it's not feasible for me to catch it at a midnight show like I did Burton's first Batman.