You horse people know you're the only ones who have the slightest clue, right? The rest of us just go "horsie!"
Ha, yeah, that's what I was thinking too. I can't tell the difference at all.
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.
You horse people know you're the only ones who have the slightest clue, right? The rest of us just go "horsie!"
Ha, yeah, that's what I was thinking too. I can't tell the difference at all.
I remember being so bothered at the end of Cold Mountain when I thought the flowers on the table were a clever indicator for the season, and then it turns out that it was all backwards (Goldenrod in the spring: WRONG!) and they didn't have the convenient excuse of modern florists.
Bays have black points. The foal they show in the trailer has black points. Secretariat was a bright-ass chestnut. Think the color of Christina Hendrick's hair. All over.
Anthony Hopkins doesn't look a damned thing like Richard Nixon.
I don't know what points are.
Anthony Hopkins doesn't look a damned thing like Richard Nixon.
Yeah, yeah, but they'd gone to such lengths to cast the horses playing the main part, to get the look right... and then to just toss it away with the younger version???
(Anthony Hopkins also doesn't look a damned thing like Wentworth Miller, which is a more direct comparison, I suppose.)
You horse people know you're the only ones who have the slightest clue, right? The rest of us just go "horsie!"
I mistook a percheron for a palamino tonight. In my defense, it was a *picture,* not a real horse. A picture on an iPhone. Of just the horse's head. And it's a light color, and the picture was taken inside the barn under the lights, so it looked like a palamino.
Until I saw a picture of the whole horse. D'oh. That thing could eat a palamino and have room for dessert.
I have had hours long arguments over the properties of fictional physics, so I'm not throwing stones.
You plant people know you're the only ones who have the slightest clue, right? The rest of us just go "flower!"
Having just checked myself following Wikipedia links, I find that there's at least one painting depicting a horse with blanket-Appaloosa markings in 1727 in Austria (even though the breed itself didn't exist at the time). There were leopard-spotted horses all over the world since forever, but I thought the Nez Perce tribe created the blanket pattern. So, I was wrong. And - you don't care. Never mind. Just wanted to set the record straight. Carry on. Movies, is it?