Just saw a commerical for Fasterer and Furiouser 6, and it's kind of funny how those movies have evolved into these kind of buddy heist things, a la Ocean's 11.
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.
That ad made that movie look like something I might enjoy.
I think I'm going to catch it on TNT or F/X.
I saw SLP, and loved it. I agree with Gris's interpretation of it. I thought it was just painfully real enough that it didn't seem like your average rom com. Maybe it is just that I know people like that, especially the parents of the protagonist, and I know houses that look like theirs on the inside. Yes, the end was cheesy, but I still loved it.
Just saw a commerical for Fasterer and Furiouser 6, and it's kind of funny how those movies have evolved into these kind of buddy heist things, a la Ocean's 11.
Ooh, yay, I will have to find it. The fifth one was so good.
Found it. Looks awesome. I'm there.
Finally saw Lincoln. Damn lot of good acting in that. I didn't even really see DDL in there until after the amendment passed and he got to smile a bit more widely.
Lots of "Oh, it's THAT guy!" for sure. I felt a little bad for Lee Pace. He gets this prominent role in a prestige Spielberg move, probably destined for nominations, but his role is as the chief orator against the amendment. I swear he had the look of "What is this going to get me typed as?" but I'm sure that was just my imagination. On the other hand it was wonderful to see Walton Goggins have a definitively heroic moment, even if it was a small one.
Like so many people have been saying, the proto-lobbyists led by Spader were awesome!
And I have to agree with something I read Samuel L. Jackson tweeted - the movie should have ended at the shot with Lincoln leaving for the Ford Theater. Spielberg just couldn't stop himself from going for a more sentimental ending, sadly.
I don't know enough about the facts to understand what is a spoiler in a biopic of Lincoln. Who was the first actor playing, and what did they do?
Was Spielberg's trademark shooting star in the movie?
It would be spoilery in the first case for a small character arc and for the second it would be what the movie did and did not cover.
Was Spielberg's trademark shooting star in the movie?
Thankfully, not I noticed. But who knows.
It would be spoilery in the first case for a small character arc
But is it something that happened for real to a real person?
Ha ha. I did not know that was Spielberg's trademark.