Ooh, I would frame that minimalist poster. That's gorgeous.
Book ,'Serenity'
Buffista Movies 7: Brides for 7 Samurai
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.
Michael Phillips of the Tribune uses the release of Step Up 3D to take a look at 3D musicals, dating back to the '50s.
The artist was selling prints, but last I looked they're gone. Probably got a C&D.
And now something NOT Inception-related!
Xposting here and Other Media: Casting sides come out for Runaways movie. Show early signs of fail. [link]
Opinion please. Would the use of the word "cheesy" offend Escape from New York fans in the following?
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I think that x can best be understood through analogy to a cheesy 1981 John Carpenter film.
Escape from New York was set in a future New York City (in distant 1988!) which had been turned into a giant maximum security prison. Reactions to its cartoon violence, cynicism, B-movie sensibility and badly concealed idealism vary from love to hate to mockery.
I don't know if John Carpenter's films are considered cheesy.
Yes he did genre movies and some b-movies, but he's most often been compared to Howard Hawks as a guy who mastered many genres and did it exceedingly well.
I mean, hell, Wm. Gibson cites Escape From New York as one of his influences on Neuromancer.
Escape From New York is cheesy in the best way. I adore that movie, and Snake Plissken, and the whole gutted, decayed Manhattan-as-prison thing. We own it, actually.
Yeah I meant cheesy in the way Amy said. But I'm not sure cheesy is the right word. Now that I think about it EFNY is authentically B-movie. Can something authentic be cheesy? It seems like inauthenticy is part of the definition of cheesy not only in denotation but connotation.
There are a lot of cheesy b-movies, authentic or not.
I'm trying to think of what defines cheesiness to me.
It has something to with pandering within the genre. Sometimes that can be good cheese. Melodrama that's way over the top. Gratuitous violence and sex.
But I think Carpenter has more restraint than that.