The masseuse with anger issues! Emmett and I love him.
Especially that brief moment when he's exhausted and just "pants" and droops. Then goes right back to beating the crap out of things. Loved it!
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 masseuse with anger issues! Emmett and I love him.
Especially that brief moment when he's exhausted and just "pants" and droops. Then goes right back to beating the crap out of things. Loved it!
Especially that brief moment when he's exhausted and just "pants" and droops. Then goes right back to beating the crap out of things. Loved it!
Seriously, they should have done a short about him.
While I like Wal*E, I adore the short that came with it. Presto is possibly my favorite Pixar movie ever.
With that said, we watched the documentary on Pixar that is part of the Wal*E bonus features, which is fascinating and left us with an urge to watch Toy Story again. (The documentary, in the stuff about Toy Story 2, had a snippet about "Jesse's Song" and everyone's emotional reaction to it. I, predictably, started sniffling.)
ION, oooh, Blu-ray of The Lost Boys. Yes, it does look better. My gothy heart is full of glee and clichés!
I adore the short that came with it. Presto is possibly my favorite Pixar movie ever.
It's definitely my favorite Pixar short.
I read Bambi at some point in elementary school, and I only remember a few bits but isn't there a deer that's caught & tamed, and then used as a lure by hunters ? So, yeah, the movie's got nothing on it.
But I think a lot of children's fiction section at the library could have been called "horrible traumas inflicted on animals." The fact that the animals can't control what happens to them is, I suspect, a large part of the appeal for kids.
I read the original Bambi novel and was taken aback at how strongly anti-hunting it was.
But that was as nothing compared to reading the sequel to 101 Dalmations, The Starlight Barking.
The Starlight Barking.
That book was rather trippy, wasn't it? I'm glad to hear that someone else has read it, because it was just so bizarre that at one point I wondered if I'd simply dreamed about it.
I just googled, and I think I may have found the hidden source of my recurring 101 Dalmations nightmares that I had as a child...
But I think a lot of children's fiction section at the library could have been called "horrible traumas inflicted on animals."
Where The Red Fern Grows. Old Yeller.
The Yearling