DH watched Role Models last night and I caught the last five minutes--which is really sort of worth is. Paul Rudd is still cute.
Anya ,'Dirty Girls'
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 liked Role Models much more than I expected too. It's got Paul Rudd AND is geek-friendly.
I loved Match Point. It had this lovely cold-blooded elegance I don't recall seeing in any other Woody Allen flick.
Went to see The Soloist over the weekend. Hmmm. Robert Downey Jr. and Jamie Foxx both give excellent performances, and movie tries pretty hard not to put a pat answer to the issue in question, but I don't think it quite worked. It's mawkish at parts and gritty at others, and the pacing is all over the place. The supporting performers are terrific though -- I really liked Catherine Keener as Downey Jr.'s ex/boss, and Nelsan Ellis as David, the guy who runs the homeless shelter. (I couldn't figure out for the longest time as to where I'd seen Ellis before, then on the drive home, I realized he played Lafayette from True Blood! Almost didn't recognize him without all the swanning.)
I enjoyed Match Point but would not call it Great Art. I would call it Surprisingly Good For A Woody Allen Movie Made In The Last 15 Years.
That's my take on it.
I am with Jessica and Hec on Match Point. I liked it. I'm glad I saw it. I don't ever need to see it again. I am also with Jessica on Role Models. I enjoyed it immensely and recommend it. I think I liked it more than I Love You, Man and Adventureland in terms of Movies Made With All Those Apatow Types In The Last Year. (Did Zack and Miri Make a Porno come out in the last year? Because I liked it a lot, too. Though I'm not sure it's fair to put it in that category just for Rogen, since Smith has been making movies since long before Apatow hit the scene.)
Gradually catching up after taking a week off work and not checking the board during that time....
I'd like to nominate The Jane Austen Book Club for Most Buffista Moment in a Movie, Ever. The movie follows the lives of six people who form a book club devoted entirely to Jane Austen's works. The Moment involves the male member of the club who contrasts an Austen plot to a Star Wars movie.
Marc Blucas also has a smallish role, but that doesn't make the movie particularly Buffista.
I liked the film, except that I was a bit disgruntled they aged everybody down by about a decade. And Hugh Dancy's character was supposed to have been an average-looking guy in his early 40's, not a curly-mopped, merry-eyed crumpet with a biker's body (which... OK, I didn't mind as much because Dancy was ADORABLE. It didn't hurt that the first words out of his mouth was "... are you here for the Buffy convention?")
"... are you here for the Buffy convention?"
I'd forgotten that bit. Which shouldn't have been forgotten, if only because of the "invisible" vampires.
I'll post this here, since the exhibit is mostly movie-based: Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry has the world premiere of the new Harry Potter traveling exhibit opening now, running through September!
The article is written by a complete fangirl, and she makes it sound very cool. Although I don't know if it's $18 cool (cost of the exhibit), but the exhibit's gift shop sounds like it might be worth it--it's designed like Diagon Alley.