In one of my favorite scenes ever
YES! Oh, so much yes.
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In one of my favorite scenes ever
YES! Oh, so much yes.
I read a review elsewhere of Jennifer's Body and put it in my queue when it comes out on DVD.
Also the comments on the Rotten Tomatoes post make me ill.
Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans.
I thought this movie was a joke and the trailer I saw months ago was a mashup from a fan put on youtube. My, how I was wrong. After seeing this trailer, I am firmly in the "do not want to see under any circumstances, not even on a plane."
We saw A Serious Man last night. Very interesting black comic take on the sufferings of Job and doing what's "right". I would say it's 1st class Coen brothers in terms of theme and second class in terms of execution. Still makes it better than 99% of what's out there. Anyone else see it?
Anyone else see it?
No, but it's getting some real hostile reviews.
I've already seen both "self hating jew" and "condescending and misanthropic."
No, but it's getting some real hostile reviews.
Really? It got a really good review in EW.
"condescending and misanthropic."
The Coen's have been getting that one their entire career. I'm not sure they'd take that as an insult. "Self-loathing" however is a new one. They are pretty much equal opportunity abusers when it comes to the ethnic/religious backgrounds, IMO.
It's the same thing that Philip Roth got after Portnoy's Complaint. There's a lot of cultural enforcement about ethnic identities within a community.
Half Blood Prince has worked its way to the rep houses, and Emmett and I saw it at the Red Vic on Haight Street. It's my fourth time and it's grown on me. Jim Broadbent's performance is just so masterful - comic and tragic. If you just shift your focus slightly around, it's a very interesting and dark story about Horace Slughorn. I think you could take (the non-magical portions of) the plot and performance, translate them to Germany before and after the war and you'd have a Pulitzer Prize winning play.
I love "Portnoy" I probably read it before I should have, though. It probably gave me wrong impressions. But I think its most lasting impact on me(besides strengthening my resolve to never, ever, eat liver) is the way that it's written, in terms of finding the freaky in ordinary stuff, and the way that you can hear the people's voices. But obviously, I'm speaking as someone outside Judaism. Philip Roth probably gave me my thing for Brainy Jewish Guys, even though I mostly use what I learned from him writing Munch fanfiction more than my own stuff(I don't know how Roth himself would feel about this, but I never accept the compliments without acknowledging him as an influence.)