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.
FYI, Danny Boyle didn't have a whole lot to do with the sequel.
I forgot to clarify that I can't blame him for the script.
I did like that, actually. That we learned about the characters through their actions and reactions rather than getting any real exposition about them. It was neat.
I almost feel like it should have been a longer movie, so that we could have been given just a titch more "show, not tell" for the characters. If only for Corazon's character, because I didn't fully comprehend her reaction and change until I saw the special features. I didn't gather that she was really tied up in the garden in a spiritual, earth-loving sense. That the loss of the
garden
was more than just a means of survival, but something very important to her personally.
And then to have her being the one to suggest
that they kill three of the crewmembers, the impact isn't quite there,
because I didn't know her well enough.
I forgot to clarify that I can't blame him for the script.
I'm not sure what you
can
blame him for, though.
I didn't gather that she was really tied up in the garden in a spiritual, earth-loving sense. That the loss of the garden was more than just a means of survival, but something very important to her personally.
I didn't really get that in the beginning, but
her reaction to its destruction certainly spoke to that.
I forgot to clarify that I can't blame him for the script.
When it comes to who's responsible for the story, script, execution, overall concept and end product, I am very confused, because I know there's so many players, not including studio influence. I'm never sure just how much control director's have over all the players there are and the direction that movie goes in. I mean, between the producers, cinematographers, DP, studio, how much control does a director actually have? Which kinda pisses me off, in that there are possible/probable outside influences as to how as story is told, and how that factors in to whom I can blame when I don't like it. It's so much easier to complain when it's not a collaboration of fuck-ups.
Well, on 28 Weeks, Danny Boyle only had a producer credit, and it may have just been an executive producer credit, which can, in effect, mean I've washed my hands of it; do what you like - the name is B-O-Y-L-E for the check. Or a more involved participation, but I never got that feeling.
my bad, when I was looking at his (Danny Boyle's) credits, they had Weeks under his director-ship, as opposed to when I look up the movie itself, which lists Fresnadillo as director.
I never could figure out what her role on the ship was
Nearish the end it becomes more clear that her role is that of illogical, unreasonable, and yet totally understandable, compassion. The voice of the one for the sake of the many, even when the stakes are high.
eta
third time around, the transition at the end didn't seem so glaring, if it ever did (I'd have to do a search to recollect my initial reaction). Skiffy Monster Movie of the Week seems a bit harsh.
Eh, no matter the critique, this movie will be a guilty (or not so guilty) pleasure of mine. That, despite it's flaws, I *want* to like it, and I'm willing to do what it takes to enjoy it. As opposed to LotR, where I really did want to like it, and even though the special features made me appreciate it more, I still ended up hating all three movies. Passionately. Also,
Narnia sucked balls.
I just watched
Repo Man.
That is a strange, strange movie. And it reminded me of
Dude, Where's My Car?
in the sense that all the alien stuff was sort of going on in the background while the main characters were having their own plot.
You know what movie I consider a cult classic, is of marginal quality, but I can't look away when it comes on tv? The Wraith Damn, that is quite a movie.
For some reason, I always think of the Wraith when I think of Repo Man.
For some reason, I always think of the Wraith when I think of Repo Man.
runs to add
The Wraith
to my netflix queue. I always think of
Liquid Sky
in the same context as
Repo Man.
eta: awwww "The Wraith has been added to the Saved section of your DVD Queue.
This movie's availability date is unknown"
Laga,
it shows up on AMC or TBS like all the time, so just look for it in zap2it.
BTW The Wraith has not a lot to do with Repo Man it is my weird psyche coming to the fore, just so you aren't disappointed.