Those are fightin' words.
I wanted to like it, really I did.
Seekrit message to SuziQ: I'm ignoring you.
As are Jess and Juliana I'm sure.
Buffy ,'Lessons'
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.
Those are fightin' words.
I wanted to like it, really I did.
Seekrit message to SuziQ: I'm ignoring you.
As are Jess and Juliana I'm sure.
I think the answer is clear: there need to be a TON of vids: using the pretty, and saving us from the rest of it. Sadly, that skillset is still on my "to be developed" list.
Response to megan (Jess and Juliana): All the more Keanu for you. I'm being generous. You should thank me.
runs in, gathers the Keanu, runs back out
runs in, gathers the Keanu, runs back out
HEY!
I think you meant to say, "WHOA!"
I've spotted Keanu twice out and about in LA, once at Marix drinking margaritas (that'd be both of us), once at a Flaming Lips concert. That makes him my personal most-likely-to-see movie star in LA, but at 2 sightings, that makes me a big ol' fuddy dud who isn't very likely to see movie stars out and about in LA.
A friend of mine once described the Coppola Dracula as "the Three Stooges and Van Helsing meet Dracula." I enjoy the pretty, and I'm happy to have it on the tv in the background while I'm focusing on something else. But it's not my platonic ideal of a Dracula movie. I'm not sure I've seen that yet. Has anyone heard anything about Dracula Untold? It seems like it might be interesting or it might take itself so seriously that I'll be stifling giggles throughout. It's hard for me to tell from the trailer.
When I was about 13, the Frank Langella Dracula came pretty close to my ideal. Not so much anymore, though.
Coppola's Dracula is just insane eye candy, for me. I like to look at it, and it's almost better with the sound off (although I did like a lot of the music used).
When I was about 13, the Frank Langella Dracula came pretty close to my ideal. Not so much anymore, though.
That was me, too. Although now I remember nothing at all about the movie except the picture of Langella slounging in a fancy chair that was on my bedroom wall for a while.