It's a real burden being right so often.

Mal ,'Bushwhacked'


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.


Aims - Mar 10, 2009 6:24:23 am PDT #389 of 30000
Shit's all sorts of different now.

Sophia Brooks - Mar 10, 2009 6:30:07 am PDT #390 of 30000
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

Nothing to see here....


Jessica - Mar 10, 2009 7:33:32 am PDT #391 of 30000
If I want to become a cloud of bats, does each bat need a separate vaccination?

DH's magazine is giving away 5 copies of Watching The Watchmen - you can enter the drawing here:

[link]


Tom Scola - Mar 10, 2009 8:01:14 am PDT #392 of 30000
Mr. Scola’s wardrobe by Botany 500

Mass Watchmen Walkouts?


Ailleann - Mar 10, 2009 8:09:34 am PDT #393 of 30000
vanguard of the socialist Hollywood liberal homosexualist agenda

I wonder how many people went into it expecting a superhero movie, which it is... so not.

I think one pair of people a couple rows in front of me walked out at the Hallelujah scene.


Jessica - Mar 10, 2009 8:10:40 am PDT #394 of 30000
If I want to become a cloud of bats, does each bat need a separate vaccination?

I think one pair of people a couple rows in front of me walked out at the

Ha! I wanted to hide behind the metaphorical couch during that scene, but I've never walked out of a movie in a theatre. (I've given up on DVDs halfway through, but that's a different kind of experience.)


amych - Mar 10, 2009 8:22:29 am PDT #395 of 30000
Now let us crush something soft and watch it fountain blood. That is a girlish thing to want to do, yes?

I wouldn't have walked -- it was the biggest laugh of the movie...


DavidS - Mar 10, 2009 8:28:06 am PDT #396 of 30000
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

AV Club has a thoughtful side-by-side comparison of the book vs. movie.


DavidS - Mar 10, 2009 8:42:47 am PDT #397 of 30000
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Heh. Patton Oswalt tells you what to watch.

(He's got good taste: BSG, FNL, Burn Notice, Dollhouse....)

You've got to respect the specificity of his comparisons:

Or Sunday night, for that matter? This Sunday is the Season 2 premiere of BREAKING BAD, the best show you weren't watching last year. Bryan Cranston won a much-deserved Emmy, and that was for a truncated, 7-episode first season. How did you guys miss a show about a trampled, neglected genius, who turns his skill at chemistry into a fledgling meth empire, all the while battling cancer -- a cancer which, when undergoing chemotherapy, turns Cranston into a bald, black-clad arch-villain? And, of course, he's forced into an alliance with (as his dopey, meth-head partner puts it) "a psychotic clown" drug dealer named Tuco. Lex Luthor and The Joker, roaming the New Mexico desert, with no World's FInest in sight. The 6th episode of Season One -- "Crazy Handful of Nothin'", is one of the best hours of TV I've ever seen -- up there with "Every Mother's Son" and "The Subway" from HOMICIDE, "Old Cases" from THE WIRE, and "The Pine Barrens" from The Sopranos. BREAKING BAD is compromised villains who create their own false good, played out in a forest of food clubs, strip malls and bland, sinister architecture. A must-see.

I actually prefer the "College" episode of Sopranos but "Pine Barrens" is a worthy little mini-movie in its own right.


tommyrot - Mar 10, 2009 8:45:28 am PDT #398 of 30000
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

AV Club has a thoughtful side-by-side comparison of the book vs. movie.

I pretty much agree with everything she says. Except she concludes the book and movie are somewhat different, but perhaps equally good - I'd rank the book much higher than the movie.