I don't know why I find Seth Rogen so sexy, maybe it's his voice... which is a little disturbing since my boss sounds very similar.
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.
There is one person watching High School Musical 3 at 7:45. I'm kinda curious who would come watch it alone on a Sunday night.
I did watch 1 and 2 and found them to be great fun. I liked 2 better because the setting is so much prettier and for the perfect moment during Zach Efron's soliloquy song on the golf course where he's all dressed in black and he actually picks up two handfulls of sand and lets it sift through his fingers. Priceless!
I was okay with Mulholland Drive, but I felt like it was essentially the same as Lost Highway, and I liked that more. Not because it was any saner or more accessible, but it was much creepier. I don't think anybody can give me the serious heebie-jeebies like Lynch.
I can still freak my brother out by making a squeaky squeaky noise around poultry.
I'm with Strega. Lost Highway was much, much creepier.
You know, I saw Pineapple Express. It left me with conflicting desires to a: slap all of them, hard, except maybe the James Franco character, who wouldn't get slapped quite as hard, because he reminded me of old college buddies; b: write essays about masculinity as portrayed in the movie; and c: find where they keep the deranged threesome slash for it.
I think I hated the movie. Maybe. I'm not sure.
You know, I saw Pineapple Express. It left me with conflicting desires to a: slap all of them, hard, except maybe the James Franco character, who wouldn't get slapped quite as hard, because he reminded me of old college buddies; b: write essays about masculinity as portrayed in the movie; and c: find where they keep the deranged threesome slash for it.
I love how Plei's brain works.
I missed Pineapple Express, but I really wanted to see it because the director mentioned Tango & Cash as one of the primary inspirations.
I hated MD. Thought it was pretentious and self-indulgent, even if it does have some achingly powerful moments.
This is exactly how I felt about it. A lot of it felt like showoffy film school stuff to me.
I saw Happy Go Lucky on Saturday night. I loved it! But I can see how it wouldn't appeal to everyone. The couple sitting next to me walked out.
Frank, that is hilarious. One of the things I told my long-suffering work friend was that it was the most overtly homoerotic/homoaffectionate film I had ever seen, narrowly eclipsing Tango & Cash. Which I had made him watch last summer.
I always wonder how conscious the makers/cast of Tango & Cash were about that. Then I remember they put Kurt Russell in a dress.
Of course, the movie is ten times funnier if Stallone wasn't in on the joke...