I suppose that will be AFTER she's given birth, I hope?
Mal ,'Out Of Gas'
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.
Apparently it's a rumour, and one started by a poster here.
Kevin "Buffy and Angel 1: BUFFYNANGLE4EVA!!!!!1!" Apr 12, 2009 11:09:17 pm PDT
The Onion reports on Michael Bay's new movie: [link]
Uh-oh. Is LSD gonna become trendy?
The Ultimate Trip: "Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test" Heads to the Big Screen
The onscreen version of Tom Wolfe's literary cult hit The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test is primed to hit theaters by 2010. When published in 1968, the book shattered cultural perceptions of the peaceful, passive hippie zeitgeist by introducing the Merry Pranksters, author Ken Kesey's roving gonzo army of LSD-fueled pioneers who tripped about the country, mixing it up with rowdy Oregonians, Bay Area hippies, Hollywood rockers, Hell's Angels and a flurry of left-handed characters that launched the psychedelic movement into mainstream America and ushered in the Grateful Dead.
Over the years, footage and audio of the Oregon-based Merry Pranksters have surfaced, but was little more than ragged, disjointed documentation of the group tripping and weirding out. Except for Neal Cassady's endless speed-jacked rap, there was little narrative. Now, director Gus Van Sant, an Oregon native, is helming the book's adaptation to the big screen with Milk and Big Love writer Dustin Lance Black. Milk's director of photography Harris Savides is also committed to the film.
Huh. There's going to be a sequel to Nanny McPhee.
Is this a new trailer for HP and the HBP?
Mods to Moongirls: mid sixties spy girl style.
Life was so much simpler in the 1960s. You could tell who all the bad guys were by their Nehru jackets.
Tom, that's actually still true today.
Wait. I think I made an incorrect Venn diagram.
Not all bad guys wear Nehru jackets; however, everyone wearing a Nehru jacket is a bad guy.
There. That's what I mean.
Not all bad guys wear Nehru jackets; however, everyone wearing a Nehru jacket is a bad guy.
Does that include Nehru himself?