My god...he's gonna do the whole speech.

Buffy ,'Chosen'


Buffista Movies Across the 8th Dimension!

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.


Tom Scola - Aug 28, 2016 2:21:35 pm PDT #237 of 3455
Mr. Scola’s wardrobe by Botany 500

The only 3D movies in my entire life that were worth it:


Jessica - Aug 28, 2016 3:06:43 pm PDT #238 of 3455
If I want to become a cloud of bats, does each bat need a separate vaccination?

I can also heartily pass on the endorsement of one 9 year-old and one 5 year-old, who were enraptured from the opening scene and demanded to stay through the end credits too (which are also beautifully animated). I think I was more affected by the dark moments than the kids were.


Burrell - Aug 28, 2016 3:28:29 pm PDT #239 of 3455
Why did Darth Vader cross the road? To get to the Dark Side!

Agree completely about Kubo. I am recommending it to anyone who will listen. I adored it. Also Monkey is everything


Vonnie K - Aug 28, 2016 4:13:22 pm PDT #240 of 3455
Kiss me, my girl, before I'm sick.

I saw Hell or High Water this afternoon, which is a terrific little film with great performances, about a pair of brothers driven to bank robbery out of desperation and Jeff Bridges as the Texas Ranger after them. Chris Pine plays the more level-headed of the brothers, which left me going, "CHRIS PINE, WHO KNEW." I mean, I find him very charming as Kirk in Star Trek movies but I didn't think he had this kind of interior performance in him. And Bridges was of course fabulous.

It reminded me quite a bit of Cohen Brothers' No Country for Old Men, which is the highest compliment I could give.


Matt the Bruins fan - Aug 28, 2016 4:40:04 pm PDT #241 of 3455
"I remember when they eventually introduced that drug kingpin who murdered people and smuggled drugs inside snakes and I was like 'Finally. A normal person.'” —RahvinDragand

I also saw Kubo and the Two Strings today, and it was as awesome as I've come to expect from Laika Studios. Alas, in 2-D because the only 3-D showing in my city starts at 10pm and I'd like to be awake at work tomorrow.


Zenkitty - Aug 28, 2016 4:50:40 pm PDT #242 of 3455
Every now and then, I think I might actually be a little odd.

I'm going to go see Star Trek Beyond tomorrow night. I didn't know Kubo was doing badly! I'll try to see it this week lest it disappear.

I just watched It Follows. Nice creepy movie.


DavidS - Aug 28, 2016 8:00:22 pm PDT #243 of 3455
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

I don't know how much longer it's going to be in theaters, so I'm urging everyone to run as fast as possible to see Kubo and the Two Strings. This is an amazing beautiful heartbreaking piece of art, and because life is cruel and unfair it is failing utterly at the box office.

I really want to see it!


SailAweigh - Aug 29, 2016 2:47:06 am PDT #244 of 3455
Nana korobi, ya oki. (Fall down seven times, stand up eight.) ~Yuzuru Hanyu/Japanese proverb

Vonnie, I just saw Hell or High Water yesterday. I loved it! I think Chris Pine is one of the most overlooked actors, today. His performance is so nuanced. While your eyes may be completely drawn at times to Ben Foster and his antics, it lingers completely on Pine. Nothing is overstated, but you feel and see the desperation in him at the most personal levels. Kudos to Jeff Bridges, too. While the character is similar to others he's played, the oortrayal of the ranger is another one that is understated desperation at where his life is going. My friend and I sat in stunned silence at the end of the movie, when everyone else was leaving. The ushers had come in and started cleaning by the time we left, then we got out to the parking lot and hashed it out for another 10 minutes, discussing ethics and where the ending left the characters to move on to from there.

It's also one of the best written and produced movies I've seen in a while. It uses the scenery to great effect. You absolutely feel the desolation in their lives as it's expressed in the harsh land around them. The dialogue is spare and every sentence has meaning. My movie partner and I were raving about how it's one of those rare movies that shows more than it tells. I absolutely loved the scene where they're burying that first car, like there is a huge hole in their lives and they're burying their past in their future.

It's also one of the most suspenseful movies I've seen in a long time; my heart was pounding through the majority of the movie. The only thing that kept it from exploding was the little touches of humor that never took away from the building tension, but just made the following moments so heartbreaking and eventually showed the deepest fears and hopes of each character.

I thought the movie was going to pull a Butch and Sundance, or a Thelma and Louise, with the brothers going out in a blaze of glory, together to the end, but the ending was so much more. These two who stuck together through thick or thin, knowing there was only one way out and that was in the way they'd lived their own lives up to the point they joined forces. When Tanner told Toby they were taking two cars for the last heist, it still didn't really dawn on me what Tanner intended. But it's so in character: they went separate ways at an earlier time, and they could only end following that same pattern.

Suspenseful and heartbreaking; I just can't stop thinking about it. I didn't even think it would be "my kind" of movie, I'm not frequently drawn to character study films--Silver Linings Playbook did nothing for me, I couldn't even finish it--but this one, damn, I'm glad I went to see it.

When I asked my friend to go to it, I told him it was sort of a western-style mystery; he glommed onto the "western-style" and thought it was going to be some kind of cowboy movie, because he hadn't seen the previews. Boy, was he surprised! But he ended up loving it even more than if it had been. Really, everyone should go see this.


Vonnie K - Aug 29, 2016 10:52:52 am PDT #245 of 3455
Kiss me, my girl, before I'm sick.

I thought it particularly brilliant the way it draws out our sympathy for the Howard brothers. For a large part of it, the movie is a condemnation of the broken system that reduced them to this circumstances. We go along with them, wishing they'd come out of this ahead, knowing they won't, and we root for them -- until we can't. In my theater, there was an audible gasp among the audience when Alberto got shot.

I was kinda shocked to learn that the director was a Brit. The place where the drama was unfolding (West Texas and part of Oklahoma) felt like as big a character as the humans.

discussing ethics and where the ending left the characters to move on to from there.

Yeah. I wasn't sure what kind of ending we were in for. What we did get was perfect.


SailAweigh - Aug 29, 2016 11:19:02 am PDT #246 of 3455
Nana korobi, ya oki. (Fall down seven times, stand up eight.) ~Yuzuru Hanyu/Japanese proverb

I was kinda shocked to learn that the director was a Brit.

I did not know that! He really had a great read on this script, then.

The place where the drama was unfolding (West Texas and part of Oklahoma) felt like as big a character as the humans.

Yes, you felt like they were fighting the land as much as they were fighting for it. It wasn't just the fact that they were fighting for their own property, but that they were fighting the vagaries of what the land both gave and took away.