I realize a lot of them aired during SPN reruns on TNT, so.
And on first run SPN on the CW. Way to go to break out, guys.
All of you non-Chris-Evans-knowers have earwormed me hard with
that song
from
The Losers.
It almost hurts.
He's very genre, what with the Captain America appearances coming up, as well as
Scott Pilgrim.
So y'all may never see him in anything, if that's not how your tastes run. But he's incredibly charming, and not a little bit cute. And built all to hell.
I fell for Idris Elba some other way...I'm not sure how or why I do that.
Ultraviolet
?
You should totally see Sunshine, and I think you should see Push. I haven't seen it myself, yet, but have heard good things about it. It's on my list as a good superheroish flick.
I really liked
Push.
I recommend it as well. And
Sunshine
is definitely worth checking out.
Although I think I'm with you, ita; I think of Chris Evans as more famous than he is. The people I saw
The Losers
with had never heard of him.
All of you non-Chris-Evans-knowers have earwormed me hard with that song from The Losers. It almost hurts.
Well, now you've got it in
my
head.
I feel like I have a sense of who Chris Evans is, but he's not a draw for me at all. Anyway, I guess I need to run out to see The Losers ASAP.
Ultraviolet ?
Now that I look at his resume, that has to be it. It's the only thing I'd have seen him in with multiple appearances. And it was amazing.
I managed to fall for other actors without being able to put a finger on an appearance--I was like that with Adam Beach, for instance. But that paid off.
eta:
I guess I need to run out to see The Losers ASAP.
Yeah, you should hurry.
I realize a lot of them aired during SPN reruns on TNT, so.
And on first run SPN on the CW. Way to go to break out, guys.
Also during Lost.
Ultraviolet was great, ita.
And it really left me impressed with the quality(Perfect, or practically) of Elba's American accent. Because he doesn't *even* talk like that, but I can barely tell.
Plus, you know a man is hot when you catch yourself thinking "Eh, what's a little heroin,"
Now that I look at his resume, that has to be it. It's the only thing I'd have seen him in with multiple appearances. And it was amazing.
Totally amazing. Such a perfect 6 episodes.
The only thing I know Chris Evans for is the Human Torch, but he did look good in the trailers.
Rare 70s horror film, Brotherhood of Satan, gets a screening on TCM this Friday:
Vintage '70s Ameri-horror-cana at its most grubbily disturbing, Bernard McEveety’s The Brotherhood of Satan (1971) was intended for adult audiences but invariably wormed its way down the film distribution chain to unsuspecting kiddie matinees, where its depiction of a physical world turned inside out by Devil worship warped a generation of impressionable young minds. The film’s first and second acts seem indebted to John Sturges’ Bad Day at Black Rock (1955) and Roman Polanski’s Rosemary’s Baby (1968), respectively, but the subplot of soul transference by which members of a senior citizen Satan cult plan to shoehorn their corrupt souls into the fresh bodies of young children bears a Luciferian likeness to The Mephisto Waltz (1971), released earlier in the year. Offsetting its Gothic blandishments with a dusty desert milieu, Brotherhood kicked off a mini-vogue for shockers utilizing the American Southwest as a crucible for the war between Good and Evil, among them Enter the Devil (1972), Race with the Devil (1975) and The Devil’s Rain (1975).
Top to tails, The Brotherhood of Satan gets better mileage out of its smaller moments (God fearing folk asphyxiating in their Barcaloungers, a small town ice house filling up with the recent dead, an infernal birthday party complete with black-frosted red velvet cake) than it does in its big setpieces but those bits add up to a palpable atmosphere of dread and disgust. In his August 7, 1971 New York Times review, Roger Greenspun praised the film’s “uncomplicated acceptance of its supernature,” which he felt was “the essence of fantasy moviemaking” and noted “some wonderfully spooky scenes…in which nothing quite happens and which are the most terrifying moments in The Brotherhood of Satan.”
Race with the Devil
70's paranoid cinema (yes - everyone IS out to get you) at it's most drive-in friendly, with the bonus distracting casting of Loretta Switt (along with Warren Oates and Peter Fonda).