Julie'll be in her bunk.
'Potential'
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.
It's more about Ellison as a person than his work
So I'll dislike him even more?
I would suppose so. While the movie itself isn't overtly critical, it's upfront about how much there is to dislike about him. Much as he is.
Oh, Charlie Martin Smith! In The Untouchables. And oh! Starman! My favorite of his though was Never Cry Wolf, though there's Farley Mowat to thank for the source material. Still--CMS!
Starman! There's a soundtrack I need to find.
He really blew the delivery of the big speech to the judge at the end of the film, when he says (IIRC), "I have become what I have beheld, and I am content to have done so." That was a key statement for Elliot Ness, and he buried it in the midst of the rest of the monologue.
Costner really only had one good speech in him. Thank God he made it to Susan Sarandon!
Costner really only had one good speech in him. Thank God he made it to Susan Sarandon!
I concur. Wholeheartedly.
Oh my.
Speaking of Point Break. The director has a new movie out this weekend, The Hurt Locker, set in Iraq. From the NYT Review: [link]
There is more friction between James and Sanborn: competition, incomprehension, but also a brand of masculine love similar to the passion between Keanu Reeves and Patrick Swayze in “Point Break.” In one scene Mr. Mackie and Mr. Renner trade stomach punches in a ritualistic display of affectionate aggression that looks as if it will end in either sex or murder, and Ms. Bigelow’s insight is that the tense comradeship of soldiers rests, often tenuously, on barely suppressed erotic and homicidal impulses.
Clues about moviemaker Michael Bay's decision to leave the Transformers world behind have been revealed in a leaked email to Paramount studio bosses.
[...]
He said, "After the three and a half years I've spent making these movies, I feel like I've had enough of the Transformers world. I need to do something totally divergent, something without any explosions."