I watched Evil Dead with my mom, thinking it was going to be funny like Army of Darkness. We turned it off after a woman got raped by a tree.
THAT'S ONE OF THE BEST PARTS!
Okay, not for watching with your mother. But frankly, even though Army of Darkness was funny, it's not something I'd suggest watching with your mother.
And yes, the original
Evil Dead
was much subtler in its humor that the sequels.
When he left the theater, he drove home and called me to tell me that it was my generation's responsibility to make sure stories like Brandon Teena's ("and that poor kid who got left on the fence post in Wyoming...")were remembered and honored and that we "eradicated that hatred off of the Earth."
I'm now in love with your grandfather, javachik.
javachik's grandpa made me cry! He sounds like a lovely man.
Thanks Sophia and Sean. I need to write a long entry into LJ about him, and when I do, I'll share the link.
Watching The Piano at the theater with my mom was my most uncomfortable movie experience.
Though a former co-worker of mine snuck out with her brother to see Fritz the Cat as teenagers, and once there spotted their parents in the audience. I think that experience tops mine in humiliation potential.
I rented Fired Up this week and found it a surprisingly enjoyable watch. Even if Eric Christian Olsen is the least convincing high school student since Amy Sedaris.
I'm enjoying finally having a DVD player again and watched
Nobel Son
and
Rachel Getting Married
this weekend.
I enjoyed
Nobel Son
more than it deserves, probably because of the caper element, but the writing was pretty good and the cast was great.
Note: the opening scene is not for the squeamish. Between that and the cutesy intros of everyone, I almost turned it off.
Rachel Getting Married
was well done for what it was (i.e., one of those slice-of-depressing/dysfunctional-life films with no real plot or point). Anne Hathaway did a good job with it though.
As an antidote to the doom and gloom, I watched
Charade.
I took my mom to see the musical version of
Hairspray
which she hadn't heard of, and really did enjoy immensely.
Afterwards, she asked me what role John Travolta played in it.
I think my most uncomfortable movie watching experience was seeing "Exit to Eden" with my parents. (I was either in grad school or not long out of it, so I should have known better)
Dirty Dancing with my dad was...fairly uncomfortable.
Dirty Dancing with my dad was...fairly uncomfortable.
Let's never remove the above sentence from context....