Has anyone seen "The Cove?" It is about the politics (and history) of dolphin slaughter.
I'm watching it now and it isn't graphic at all (so far) and I'm about 20-30 minutes and I am horrified - only by the statistics presented by the people on screen. What a crime this is. I just can't get over it.
So, I'm caught up with the filmed version of the Twilight series although I have yet to read the books.
Watched
Twilight
on bluray Thursday night: yeah, it didn't get me. I wasn't that taken with either Bella or Edward and I found both the bad vampire makeup and the weird color/lighting v. distracting. I mean, was it necessary for the whites of Bella's eyes and her teeth to appear blue/green? Shouldn't there have been more contrast between her normal living friends and the vampires? I also felt like the move from attraction to being desperately in love wasn't shown very well. But I liked Charlie and was interested in Carlisle's back story. The special effects kind of sucked too - the sparkliness was particularly bad and I thought that there was pacing or possibly blocking issues that made the whole film seem very static. Edward in particular seemed more like a series of photo stills than you know, a moving, undead creature.
On
New Moon
Loved Jacob and the werewolves, still don't get the Edward attraction. I'm told that when Bella went into her depression that in the book you know that her family tried all sorts of things to get her out of the funk but the movie (for some reason) chose to not show that. Liked the little glimpse of Carlisle's backstory we saw - want more. Thought that the Italian law vamps were fun, enjoyed Edward's sister. I think that the makeup and special effects were much, much better. It does seem very weird to me that Carlisle and family would go along with something that would break their centuries - possibly millenia old treaty with the Native American people in the area. I guess everything really is about Bella and Edward.
We saw an afternoon show on Friday and my 40-something friends and myself were the youngest people in the theatre. Hilarious.
I liked
Grindhouse
as well, and I saw
Catwoman
on a plane, and, yes, it really was that bad. And remember that I'm the guy who likes everything. Oh wait! I also saw
Battlefield Earth,
and...I
didn't
think it was that bad! So that just goes to show how bad
Catwoman
is.
So what are your least favorite movie viewing experience ever?
Mine are:
Funny Car Summer (horribly, horribly boring 70s documentary we saw in a theater)
The Goonies
Last Tango in Paris
I saw parts of Catwoman on late night TV. Yeah it really was that bad. Trying to think how the heck you would make a good Catwoman movie. I mean the concept so invites cheese.
I saw The Road last night. It was incredibly, unendingly bleak, but well and passionately made, which goes along way in my book. Viggo was amazing as always, and the actor who played the little boy was impressive.
Trying to think how the heck you would make a good Catwoman movie.
Step 1: Don't cast Halle Berry...
There are good Catwoman stories in the comics. The Batman concept is hella cheesy and it provided good fodder.
I have purged most of my negative moviegoing experiences. I walked out on
Scanners
because I could think of somewhere else to be. I watched all of
Borat
and
Transformers
merely because I was with company. I especially would have walked out on
Borat.
It just bored me.
I disliked What Lies Beneath a lot. Hated Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans.