I'm in for that one.
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.
I'm pretty sure that I don't HAVE to see Clash of the Titans.
I'm pretty sure I do. I think that might let you off the hook.
The only 2 movies on that list I'm excited about are Inception & Paul.
After that, I will of course see Harry Potter, but after the fuck up that is the previous movie, I'm not very excited about it.
I've seen 2 trailers for "The Wolfman" and I think that movie is going to suck. "Clash of the Titans" looks worse and worse and most of the rest of the movies listed are complete turnoffs.
I'm interested, but worried, about "Alice in Wonderland."
I loved the last HP movie, though it left out enough that I'm worried about the next one. But it was so funny! Lavender was awesome!
I enjoyed HBP as well. (Particularly Malfoy's goth-mod suit.) Emmett and I are just starting to listen to it on audiobook so I'm curious to see what they left out.
This is sort of related to our earlier conversation, but earlier today I told someone that I thought a certain detective show kind of had political messages and she sort of treated me like I was insane because a party wasn't named in it. But I think that if you make a statement about society in something, that's kind of political...it's not like I said there are subliminal messages encouraging people toward collective farming. But does there have to be before something has political undertones?
Everything has a subtext. Once you take a point of view about something then the presumptions behind that perspective inform the work.
Most detective shows are going to have a somewhat conservative bent. The Wire does not, as it fully lays out the social circumstances behind the criminals' decisions.
We were talking about "The Rockford Files", which is pretty anti-establishment for a detective series.ETA: Well, it's good to know that I'm not crazy for thinking "political" does not equal "voting record" because of course that's not in there, but plenty of other stuff about privacy and civil liberties definitely is...Chase, in particular, seemed to want to include it.
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Undead
Have you heard anything about it besides that description?
Nope. That's pretty much the only blurb Rue Morgue Magazine has had about it.
We saw Avatar today. Wow, that was pretty. Very pretty. And a decently entertaining James Cameron movie. Sure, you can play "spot the stock characters" ( Hey look, it's Vasquez! Hi Vasquez! I bet you're going to die in the third act ... oh look, I'm right. ), but it was fun. And the plot and dialog didn't make me want to stick my fingers in my ears and hum, which is better than I expected.
I have to say, Michele Rodriguez surprised me in Avatar. She wasn't the angry, hotheaded, spicy Latina I've come to expect of all her roles.