This is a time of celebration, so sit still and be quiet.

Snyder ,'Chosen'


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.


le nubian - Mar 09, 2009 4:01:53 pm PDT #359 of 30000
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

why did they put the picture of Laurie on the Comedian's nightstand? Just leaving that out or having her picture out of focus, or having Rorschach pick up the picture and set it down again without revealing the picture's image, would have at least put some mystery in all of it.

BTW - for individuals who read the book? Comedian tried to rape Laurie's mom, right? Then X years later, she willingly slept with the asshole? Why?


Miracleman - Mar 09, 2009 4:21:02 pm PDT #360 of 30000
No, I don't think I will - me, quoting Captain Steve Rogers, to all of 2020

le nub:

The Comedian being Laurie's father is a *BIG* reveal in the comic that they totally punked in the movie. Having her picture there was one major fuckup...way to spoil it, Snyder.

It's really well done in the graphic novel. There are tiny tiny pieces sprinkled throughout that don't seem to point to anything in particular and don't even attract notice until Laurie pieces them together on Mars (without, might I add, Dr. Manhattan's horseshit "See as I see" crap which is not in the novel).

As to your second question:

Sally answers the question like this: "...shouted at him, he looked *surprised*, couldn't imagine why I'd bear a grudge. See, it's different for him, and I just couldn't sustain it, the anger..."

"First off, he was *there*, right? Plus, he was *gentle*. You know what gentleness *means* in a guy like that? Even a glimmer of it?"

Later, to Laurie:

"Oh, Laurel, I'm so sorry. Wh-what must you think? It...it was just an afternoon, in summer. He stopped by...

"I tried to be angry, but...I mean, I never wanted you to know. I should have told you, but...I don't know, I just felt ashamed, I felt stupid, and..."

So, to me it was a bad decision, one of those bad relationship moves that people make and they feel fucking stupid about afterward, but it happened and there you go. Sally Jupiter was never shown to be the most together person as it was. Her reasoning for dressing up and fighting crime, her apparently loveless marriage...I don't know, it rang true to me in that way that people doing fucked up things that don't make sense sometimes does.


billytea - Mar 09, 2009 4:33:33 pm PDT #361 of 30000
You were a wrong baby who grew up wrong. The wrong kind of wrong. It's better you hear it from a friend.

The commentary on "Strictly Ballroom" is really good, but Baz thinks far too highly of himself and wears a listener out with all of his talking.

Wallybee and I have just started watching through the Red Curtain trilogy. (I've seen them before, Wallybee hasn't.) Will have to check the commentary.


Juliebird - Mar 09, 2009 4:54:15 pm PDT #362 of 30000
I am the fly who dreams of the spider

One thing I really liked, and mayhaps is the same thing that others have mentioned liking, was when Archie pulls up at the last moment and crashes into the top edge of the cliffs and suddenly the perspective is upside-down.

Now that was innovative and fresh, exciting, original, and a bit foreshadowing of things to come.


le nubian - Mar 09, 2009 5:19:43 pm PDT #363 of 30000
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

I have never heard it called the "Red Curtain Trilogy."

Strictly Ballroom is my absolute favorite.


Matt the Bruins fan - Mar 09, 2009 5:33:17 pm PDT #364 of 30000
"I remember when they eventually introduced that drug kingpin who murdered people and smuggled drugs inside snakes and I was like 'Finally. A normal person.'” —RahvinDragand

I caught Beetlejuice over the weekend too, though I sadly missed the Day-O dinner party.

I'd forgotten how scorchingly hot Alec Baldwin was back at the start of his career.


§ ita § - Mar 09, 2009 5:35:22 pm PDT #365 of 30000
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Saw Watchmen. I think the movie greatly suffers by being made released 2009, although the CGI of today definitely helped it. But we're in a post XMen 3 world, a post Ang Lee's Hulk world. The superhero sensibility just isn't what it was when the comic came out, and I think that if Snyder were film-capable of what Moore & Gibbons accomplished in comics, well, he wouldn't be just Zack Snyder, would he?

Does that make sense? I think that in a post Watchmen world, rereading Watchmen holds up well because it's that good, even though the ground can't be unbroken again. Zack Snyder is not the man to break that ground with the superhero movie genre.

I'm sure being post X3 with a six foot + Wolverine is why we had so much ninja skills in Watchmen--why put on a silly suit if you're not physically capable far and beyond normal people?


billytea - Mar 09, 2009 5:35:36 pm PDT #366 of 30000
You were a wrong baby who grew up wrong. The wrong kind of wrong. It's better you hear it from a friend.

I have never heard it called the "Red Curtain Trilogy."

I bought the films as a boxed set by that name. Not sure if it's marketed thus in America.


Laga - Mar 09, 2009 5:40:13 pm PDT #367 of 30000
You should know I'm a big deal in the Resistance.

it is.


Frankenbuddha - Mar 09, 2009 5:41:09 pm PDT #368 of 30000
"We are the Goon Squad and we're coming to town...Beep! Beep!" - David Bowie, "Fashion"

I decided that it was Ozy's hair...

For me it was that and the occasional pursed mouth - just a little too Church Lady-ish.