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.
Spoilers on a well-trafficked sci fi blog: expired window for The Others, yay or nay?
Like, if I say "Don't tell me how [movie x] ends!" I think it's just polite to skip the whole resurrection part of the New Testament in response to me, but if a movie came out 10+years ago, I don't think expecting people to warn you before they discuss the end of it is reasonable on a movie discussion site.
Disagree?
and I really wish he'd cast deliberately against type, or even slightly for it.
She was already cast before he came on the project, though, right? Wasn't Iron Man 2 shooting before he got The Avengers?
Yeah, probably. I doubt he got much leeway in casting period, to be honest.
I just wish for more casting of even vaguely reasonable women. I swear the shot in IM2 where she loosed her hair appeared very "Okay, gotta hide my face now!" She was no use for any vaguely convincing transitions.
Almost anyone's going to pale in comparison now that I've seen Hayley Atwell as a Marvel action heroine. If she struck a single false note in Captain America I must have blinked and missed it.
I think Gina Carano could have made a great turn as a woman who kills with her thighs. Her triangle was a high point of Haywire. And it's not like it's a thespian turn, with the size of Black Widow's role. She'd have been serviceable at the acting and brilliant at the action. Which I think is better than what we got, in total.
I liked Chronicle. I'd never seen a found footage movie before, so I don't know how they normally handle the conceit. This was done pretty well, I think. Over 90% of the footage made sense with the parameters they'd set up.
It's been a while since I watched Akira, but I don't think you can have a passing familiarity with it and not get a Tetsuo vibe, really. It's very there.
I think it did a good job of painting teenaged boys as a vicious nasty but somehow not inherently flawed lot. A fair amount of nastiness there in general.
Fun, and I only had to look away to preserve my head a few times (although most of the audio felt too loud).
Seems like the perfect movie to have something after the end credits, but there's nothing there, FYI.
I'd never seen a found footage movie before, so I don't know how they normally handle the conceit
Usually one of the characters has the camera most of the time and you rarely see him or her, or sometimes the characters trade camera duties. All very handheld. The
Paranormal Activity
movies add security footage. With
[REC],
it's a TV cameraman. In
[REC] 2,
some of the SWAT team members have cameras in their helmets.
I'm really interested to see the movie because a lot of the trailer shots look like they cheat a bit (and I think one of the reviews said they do kind of cheat, hence the other 10%).
I don't think they were cheating in any of the trailer shots. There were a couple scenes where I thought that one of the characters being filmed would have flipped their nut if they knew they were being filmed, and I couldn't work out why they wouldn't know, and one where I was sure the person holding the camera would have stopped. Oh, and one where they explained just why it was still found footage, but it was a bullshit excuse.
Only once (not any of those times) do I clearly remember going "Wait, where is the camera now, and who's in control?" which seems to be pretty good numbers.
Saw Haywire and Sherlock Holmes last night. Husband liked Haywire, I found it really boring for the parts that did not have fighting. I wanted more fighting.
Sherlock was ridiculous and fun, although it took me about ten minutes to shake off the specter of Cumbermuffin and Freeman.
I watched
Drive
last night, and, damn, you guys weren't kidding about the violence. I agree that it's very stylish, and I dug it, but I felt the characters (especially the female characters) were underdeveloped. The soundtrack was great, though, and the movie is exquisitely shot.
It was so weird to see Christina Hendricks act scared, though. Also:
geez, what a waste of Christina Hendricks.
Also, I just watched the trailer again, and I'm glad I didn't remember it strongly because it gives practically everything away, damn.