There are these energy shields to protect in fights. And that is the interpenetration of the energy shield idea.
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.
I can only assume the Dune purists were less than impressed with that interpretation...
Y'know, I don't think I've ever actually run across a Dune purist.
Oh, I have. I don't think that particular thing made it into any complaints that I heard, though. I mean, there was so much else!
Enough else that holographic refrigerator boxes didn't make the cut? Wow.
I once saw a cartoon - in the autumn - showing a sandworm parked outside a Starbucks with the caption, "the pumpkin spice must flow."
I don't think that particular thing made it into any complaints that I heard, though. I mean, there was so much else!
And to be fair, at the time the movie was released the reaction would have been more "WOW DIGITAL EFFECTS EXIST!" and less "WOW these digital effects are garbage."
TCM is scheduling movies this month around the theme of Asian Americans in classic Hollywood: [link]
The only movies I'd seen out of that list are Love Is a Many Splendored Thing (which does not really count as it has Jennifer Jones playing a Eurasian, le sigh) and Flower Drum Song, which I am a little leery about revisiting after all these years. Not that I remember much else other than "I Enjoy Being A Girl." Anyway, on a lark, I checked out The Crimson Kimono, a breezy 90 minute Sam Fuller thriller set in LA, featuring a love triangle involving a white girl who is a key witness to a murder and a pair of detective partners, one of whom is portrayed by the Japanese American actor James Shigeta. And it is honestly a little shocking how progressive the movie is for the times (1959). Not to mention how James Shigeta is HOT LIKE BURNING, with that sensitive face and the lovely voice, plus charisma to burn. He plays a supporting character in Flower Drum Song, but this is a much better showcase for him. It's available on Watch TCM app for streaming until tomorrow if you have cable.
On Criterion Channel, I finally got around to seeing the two Kelly Reichardt films I've been meaning to check out. Really loved Wendy and Lucy, and still trying to wrap my head around Meek's Cutoff, especially that ending. Michelle Williams is such an impressive actress. Who knew all those years ago when we met her as Jen Linley on Dawson's Creek?
Being Of An Age to have seen Gwen Verdon in her heyday years, I have a basis for comparison and was very impressed with Williams in Fosse/Verdon, the TV miniseries. Not an impersonation, but mannerisms, expression, voice, body language. She's definitely impressive.
ETA: Shigeta was one of my seekrit Hollywood boyfriends in my yout'. Everything you said about him, Vonnie. Yes.
A bit off topic, but I always had a soft spot for Jack Soo.