Clearly, people in your neighborhood are too polite if they waited two hours to do more than shush the jackass, JZ.
Signed, someone who once got in a loud argument with a rude woman who was talking through Van Helsing. Which I had already seen before.
The woman to my right answered a call during CSL, and the woman to my left pulled her phone out to look at the glowing screen. My "seriously?" was of little avail.
Part of me wants to be a xenopsychologist and examine all these romcoms, and I felt I was doing really well with CSL, but the turn they took towards
soulmates
made me irritated. I'm looking at romcoms as wish fulfillment. Is that something people really want to be true? It's so depressing.
Is that something people really want to be true?
I think people want to believe that falling in love will change their life and solve their problems. That maybe the reason they haven't fallen in love is because there's ONE person for them and they just have to find them.
Crazy Stupid Love is the second movie I've been to where they've shown the theatre I was watching the movie in.
I liked CSL a fair amount, but mostly because: Fuck YEAH Ryan Gosling. I mean, seriously. He gives me the Feelings.
I can't work out how they didn't cheat with the
English teacher
reveal. Did we just not
see her face
during the book "discussion".
I suppose the movie took a pretty adult look at how complicated loving someone can be, and the things you will do even while you're still in love, but the actual love philosophy skeeved me so much.
Ryan Gosling was great, though. I don't usually find him attractive (Hey-resy, I know) but he could certainly get me out of the bar and out of my panties in that persona.
And that
Dirty Dancing
move would totally work on me, if he could physically manage it.
I assume the Chris Evans movie will give me some sort of feelings. I wonder if, you know, she gets together with Chris at the end? I mean, what would be the odds?
Yeah, they never
showed the teacher, which I actually noticed at the time.
I have some nitpicks here and there, aside from that.
Ack, my isp is acting flakey so the post I posted last night is gone!
I saw "Captain America" and enjoyed it muchly! Very well done. I loved Stan Lee's cameo, the inclusion of Stark, Sr. and I thought the performances were good all around. It had a great look and feel that I really appreciated. The ending credits were especially cool.
My only quibble, and it's not a big one is that I know Bucky's death is canon, but I wished we'd had more time with the character to give is loss more impact.
I love the mix of humor and seriousness. Good job.