a transcript of Sean Astin's appearance on The View
Thanks! That was a nice interview.
Kaylee ,'Shindig'
Frodo: Please, what does it always mean, this... this "Aragorn"? Elrond: That's his name. Aragorn, son of Arathorn. Aragorn: I like "Strider." Elrond: We named the *dog* "Strider".
A discussion of Lord of the Rings - The Return of the King. If you're a pervy hobbit fancier, this is the place for you.
a transcript of Sean Astin's appearance on The View
Thanks! That was a nice interview.
There's another interesting Sean Astin interview in Rolling Stone.
Back in 2000 my brother sent me a bit about a game where you substitute "pants" for a word in a quote from Star Wars. Definitely coffee on the monitor stuff.
"Use the pants, Luke!" "I used to bulls-eye womp-rats in my pants back home." "A tremor in the pants. The last time I felt this was in the presence of my old master."
Points were given for knowing the speakers and re-constructing the original quote. Wish I had a place to post the whole thing, but it's long.
My welcome message when I turn on my phone is "Not idly do the pants of Lorien fall."
If only...
"They run as if the very pants of their masters were behind them."
"There is some evil here, that gives them pants, and yet sets its will against our own.
This is too funny!
Some award noms just came out: Chicago Film Critics nominations include eight for RotK, with both Sean Astin and Andy Serkis getting Best Supporting Actor nominations (!), and the Visual Effects Society announced their nominations, and RotK got a lot (I didn't count them all), including Sean Astin for Outstanding Performance in an Effects Film, and notice that the RotK nom for Outstanding Character Animation includes Andy Serkis with the techies!
The SAG nominations are being announced tomorrow morning (6:20 am PST, broadcast on the E! channel)--if Sean Astin gets a nom here, there's a good chance that he might snag an Oscar nom as well (Oscar ballots are due this Saturday, and noms are announced on Jan. 27th).
I did not get to see Andy Serkis. By the time we got there, a thousand people were ahead of us in the line, there wasn't anywhere large enough to do the reading, and contractually he was only able to sign movie-related stuff (of which there was none: the manager got 200 copies of the Gollum book from another store, and by the time the clerk got back to our section of the line to inform us of this, the books were gone).
There's another interesting Sean Astin interview in Rolling Stone.
Thanks, Kathy. That was good stuff too.
Amy, that bites! I'm thinking that Chicago might have had a similar situation if he hadn't cancelled.
John, I love that interview in RS. I thought this was funny:
When Astin was sixteen, he decided he wanted a real job. Over the vehement objections of his mother, he spent three months as a movie usher in L.A.'s Westwood district. He loved the work, even putting the butter in the popcorn machine. "I was making $8.25 an hour, and they withheld the tax," he says. "Those checks were more meaningful to me than the $50,000 or the $100,000 that had gone into the bank for acting work, because I understood exactly what I did for it."
On the job, Astin had to wear a blue polyester jacket and a name tag that read Patrick (his middle name). One night, Corey Feldman, his Goonies co-star, arrived with a large posse for the premiere of his new movie, Lost Boys. As Feldman stepped up to the concession stand, Astin was sweeping up the popcorn under his feet. When Feldman saw him, his jaw just dropped. "Sean?" he asked. Not believing his eyes, he flipped up his sunglasses. "What happened?"
Even funnier if Astin manages to snag an Oscar nom.