Buffista Movies 7: Brides for 7 Samurai
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You know who has a great look for Wonder Woman that I don't remember having seen mentioned before? Alicia Coppola. She is old(er than me), but she consistently plays hardass characters (just saw her in Suits going up against Harvey, and she's intimidating on NCIS) although I don't remember seeing her do much action.
But I'd totally model Wondie's face off hers, and hair to a degree, and since I'm still working out what "olive skin" really means in this world of variable monitors, it seems she seems...regional?
Also I love her, back from soap opera days. The people I fall for then I really fall for (Jensen, call me!).
You know who has a great look for Wonder Woman that I don't remember having seen mentioned before? Alicia Coppola.
Oh, man, I love her! She was awesome in Jericho, and I just really like the look of her face, and of course the freckles.
Although I'd call her classic black Irish, rather than olive-skinned: you don't get freckles like that with olive skin, IMO.
Freckles are trivial to erase--I will come out as saying that most European distinctions don't bother me much if the general looks can be matched with trivial and standard makeup, especially when Amazons were of multiple races, and Wondie's skin was painted the same colour as all the other white people.
As far as I can tell she's Italian. I don't know how olive they're supposed to be.
Info on freckles as relates to skin tone: Freckles.
Also, a map of the world by skin tone: Skin tone.
You'll note that the line between very light skin and the next tone up (which isn't even considered "olive" toned) bifurcates Italy, not quite in half. Northern Italy tends towards much fairer hair, due to the migration of Germanic and Celtic tribes from the times of the Roman Republic on.
Not quite comparable, I lived in Spain for three years and I saw a huge variation in skin tone and hair color from Nordic blonde to darker tones that most folks would have characterized as classic Mediterranean olive skin (often attributed negatively as belonging to "gitanos" or gypsies.) The majority seemed to fall somewhere in between. The ideal, from what I could tell, was relatively pale skin with straight, dark hair. Eye color didn't seem to factor in much. The person I can think of with the most "classic" Spanish looks is Penelope Cruz.
So I finally saw X-Men yesterday. The post-credit sequence showed
Apocalypse building a Great Pyramid which would have been c. 2500 BCE, and behind him were the four horsemen, but domesticated horses weren't introduced to Egypt until much later, c. 2000 BCE.
Totally bogus!
Scola to the makers of X-men, "Your arguments are invalid!"
I'm probably one of the more freckle-faced posters here, so it's not like I don't think anyone can catch it. And I know the ideal is to cover them up (not that I've ever worn foundation), so I don't think a freckled actress gets in the way of much.
Oh, me, neither. It was just once the subject of freckles came up, first I wondered "how common" and then "how come freckles". I had freckles just about everywhere as a kid, face, arms, even my knees. These days, you can only kind of see them on my arms.
This is kind of totally awesome: every superhero movie, in one four-minute take:
[link]
Cary Elwes (why does his face seesaw in puffiness so? I hope it's not health problems, like liver or something--it doesn't look really like weight gain) has written a book about filming The Princess Bride.
Excerpt:
Later, when they were just chatting, they were talking about American television. "I said, 'I love Bill Cosby,' and Rob said, 'You do?' 'Sure I do! I grew up on Fat Albert. In fact, I remember this ..." And then Elwes did a spot-on impression of Cosby's "Hey, hey, hey!" "And Rob said, later on, that was the key, that was the turning point. Had I not done a Fat Albert impersonation, I would probably not be sitting in front of you here today.
II hear if Wallace Shawn wrote one it would be vitriol.