Bravo is going to adapt "Heathers" as a scripted series (or "Heathers: The Next Generation" from the sound of it): [link]
Yeah, that's gonna go well.
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Bravo is going to adapt "Heathers" as a scripted series (or "Heathers: The Next Generation" from the sound of it): [link]
Yeah, that's gonna go well.
Although, it would be sort of awesome if they got Winona Ryder to play the mom. She isn't doing much, is she?
From what I understand, the producers of Starship Troopers thought they were making a serious movie, but Verhoeven decided it was a satire. I don't know how many of the actors were in on the joke. NPH probably was.
Starship Troopers wasn't quite as blatant as Robocop about being a satire, but it definitely had a similar vibe.
I don't know how many of the actors were in on the joke. NPH probably was.
Yeah, I have trouble believing he might have failed to notice that he was playing Doogie Hitler at the time it was happening.
Denise Richards and Casper Van Dien, on the other hand...
Slate is doing Sneakers week in honor the movie's 20th anniversary. [link]
Thanks for posting that, by the way, Kalshane. I am loving the discussion goin on (and Stephen Tobolowsky's reminiscing about the shoot). That is one of my favorite underrated movies.
Verhoeven seems to enjoy fucking around with his actors.
I definitely thought Starship Troopers (the movie) was satire. It wasn't very good but it was definitely satire.
The book...no, I don't think so. Not mostly, anyway. But unlike some of Heinlein's later books, there are places where I think Heinlein knows he's stretching. Basically, I don't think he was 100% nutso when he wrote that one, just getting there. Kind of like Ayn Rand with We the Living, which is actually a pretty straightforward anti-Russian-style-communism book, with a much more reasonable and moderate take on pro-capitalism/libertarianism than she eventually worked up to.
Double fuck!
Fucking Lasseter.
Same thing happened with Chris Sanders (Lilo and Stitch).
Selick shouldn't have left Laika.