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Actually, I have a hard time playing those kind of games. There is something about the angle movements that make me very dizzy and sick. I love to watch my husband play though, which, in his opinion, makes me the perfect wife for a hardcore gamer. There was Silent Hill and another game that I used to request he played but the second escapes me. Something about a Vampire that was betrayed by his clan, but was resurrected for revenge.
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Was it Legacy of Kain: Soul Reaver?
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"It's over you head now. Time to get some professional help." - My fortune cookie from lunch Ned Wright's Cosmology Tutorial Usenet Physics FAQ |
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I remembered because I also spent a good amount of time watching someone else play the game
The imagery was definitely appealing. And the plot was quite engaging too.
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"It's over you head now. Time to get some professional help." - My fortune cookie from lunch Ned Wright's Cosmology Tutorial Usenet Physics FAQ |
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Hwæt! We Gardena in geardagum, þeodcyninga, þrym gefrunon, hu ða æþelingas ellen fremedon. |
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I just watched movies two days in a row that got ranked in my journal at a nine, and I'm wondering if anyone else saw/liked either. I watched Dead Man, with Johnny Depp and a bunch of other people, yesterday. I understand quite a lot of people didn't like it, including Roger Ebert, who gave it a star and a half and said he didn't know what it was about. The other was this year's Best Original Song winner, Once, today's film.
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Gillian "Now everyone was giving her that kind of look UFOlogists get when they suddenly say, 'Hey, if you shade your eyes you can see it is just a flock of geese after all.'" "You can't erase icing." "I can't believe it doesn't work! I found it on the internet, man!" |
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I used to feel the same way about Diane Lane. I couldn't understand how she could get so many parts in movies and be such a bad actress.
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The only way of finding the limits of the possible is by going beyond them into the impossible. Arthur C. Clarke The Brain Science Podcast |
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David Cronenberg:The Fly, Dead Ringers and A History Of Violence. Frankenheimer's are great for the techniques used in film making. Example, from the Ronin commentary track, he discusses cut-shots while giving the nod to Hitchcock as the master of the technique. The use of natural lighting, during daytime shots during fall/winter in Europe. Car chase scenes, how he learned so much while filming Grand Prix, that many of those techniques used then, still applied present day. Facial expressions of the actors were genuine, as they were in car, at speed, with stunt drivers. Cronenberg's are much the same, he discuss techniques used and are informative in general (IMHO). toejam: I meant to tape Bleu, Blanc and Rouge last year, but forgot. CBC aired the three of them on consecutive late nights. I'll keep an eye out for re-airings.
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" The universe is running away I heard it on the news just the other day There's this new stuff called dark energy We can't measure and we can't see..." - from Jimmy Buffett's What if the hokey pokey is all it really is about? |
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The screenwriters' commentary for Night at the Museum is hillarious.
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I want to go back to the moon. I don't care which rocket you use, whichever one you pick, I'll like it, I swear. "If you think the LHC will create black holes, you might as well believe Hobbits are at the bottom of your garden."- Dr. Mike Inglis Rovers forever! - ToSeek |
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I started seriously watching films less than a year ago. I tend to use IMDb more than Rotten Tomatoes, although it does have its disadvantages. I've been writing occasional reviews too, but they're very much a work in progress. Usually, I have trouble writing about a movie unless I have a strong or unique reaction to it.
The only two films I've given 1/10s to so far are Captain Calamity (1936) and Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women (1968), which are fortunately forgotten by most people today. Thats not to say I haven't hated other movies... usually I'm able to find at least some merit in them, but these two are an absolute waste of time. |
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Our local CBC station (no, I'm not in Canada, but I'm close enough that our cable company gives us a CBC channel) doesn't play movies late at night much anymore. It's disappointing. I caught The African Queen once. They used to play them every afternoon, I think at one. I caught Gaslight that way.
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Gillian "Now everyone was giving her that kind of look UFOlogists get when they suddenly say, 'Hey, if you shade your eyes you can see it is just a flock of geese after all.'" "You can't erase icing." "I can't believe it doesn't work! I found it on the internet, man!" |
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If anyone hasn't seen this one I insist you make time...a few less episodes of South Park won't kill you. If not for the superb spirit of the story or even the goose-bump inducing eloquence of Rod Serling's screenplay, then for Frederic March in a powerful and moving career-capping performance. They don't make 'em like that anymore. Another commentary track I would recommend is actually one on two different dvds(!) On both Criterion's A NIGHT TO REMEMBER dvd and the recent special multidisc edition of Cameron's TITANIC, Ken Marschall and Don Lynch contribute a collaborative track that just snaps with sincere appreciation and a never ending stream of historical tibdits. As experts in the history of the disaster(both technically and culturally) the two offer a perspective not seen in commentary tracks often enough. Ebert's(notably KANE) and Bogdonavich's tracks are probably the closest comparisons. Additionally, in an antidote sort of way, their lack of Hollywood professional persona goes miles in making the track much more appealing. It's like sitting around watching a Titanic film with two buddies...who just happen to be Titanic experts. Never haughty or pedantic, the track is a vital contribution in two cases where the filmmakers where aspiring to a more historically sincere depiction than the average film. (Note: Says this observer...Whopper beat the Big Mac. And by Whopper, I mean A NIGHT TO REMEMBER. And by Big Mac, I mean TITANIC.)
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random youtube observation #83: Nana Mouskouri without glasses is like peanut butter without jelly, like yin without yang, spic without span... |
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Let's revive this thread for another go.
I was channel surfing last night and came across Turner Channel Movies and Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds. I have always liked that movie and decided to watch the first few minutes. And wound up watching the whole thing. Warning. Spoilers. This time, I paid more attention to the actors and direction than to the plot. I was especially interested in Tippi Hedren, the cool blonde that Hitch is said to have preferred. She did a great job of capturing and displaying the character, especially with her expressions in the later scenes. I also noticed that most of the minor characters were also well developed. Each one was a definite individual, not just someone moving through the scene. Even the motorist who did nothing more than down a Scotch and leave had texture and dimension. And the photography! Hitch used many long, wide angle, lingering shots, where today we'd get tight closeups or bouncy, handheld shots, and with quick cuts. In one scene, the woman rushed out of a farmhouse after finding her friend dead. This was done in fairly close shots. But then, we get a wide angle view of her leaving in her truck, the truck racing down the road with dust billowing behind. The camera didn't move, only the truck speeding from one side of the screen to the other. This expressed her panic much better than closeups of her screaming. And the last scene, where they leave the house and drive away, with birds roosting everywhere... on the porch, in the trees, on the ground... surprised me. The camera angle is from the front door, and I remember thinking that Hitch should have used a wide shot to show how menacing the birds were. Then I realized it was a wide shot, but framed by those menacing birds, giving it a claustrophobia that increased the feeling of menace. Two hours well spent.
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Never attribute to malice what can be adequately explained by ignorance or stupidity. Isaac Asimov |
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Hmm. I've always quite liked The Birds, but after reading that I am really rather keen to see it again.
Perhaps not so artistic, but one of the things I liked about Dawn of the Dead - both versions - was the sense of widespreadness, if there is such a word. In the original, we get to see an awful lot of ordinary people who are dealing with the problem (or failing to) in their own way. We get some great longshots in the remake, and a sense of a many stories hinted at. |
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I watched part of that showing too. Afterward I looked up some online articles and learned some interesting things I hadn't noticed about The Birds.
For one thing, it broke with the Hitchcockian tradition of strong male leads with generally lesser female roles. In The Birds, the male lead was the weaker character; it was the three main female roles that were the focus. Another unusual thing: it had no musical score. The only music in the movie was when characters sang or brief snippets of music were heard on the radio. Of course, the really unique feature was the ambiguous, open ending. In keeping with that, there was no "The End" superimposed over the final frames.
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Relight the Firefly! "It is quite clear that Occam's razor does not sharpen in your pyramid." (Nicolas) "Still, a man hears what he wants to hear and disregards the rest." (Paul Simon) |
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If you want menacing, suspenseful cinematography, look no further than Orson Welles' "The Third Man."
Warning. MAJOR spoilers below. The chase scene is especially good for this. (See Youtube video here) The crooked camera angles, the use of shadow, the lack of music during the action, the claustrophobic, Escheresque maze of tunnels running off into infinity, the fingers through the grate. Perfect.
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Quaeso quousque humi defixa tua mens erit? Nonne aspicis, quae in templa veneris? |
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Would you believe I still haven't seen The Birds? I checked it out of the library nearly two years ago. Their copy was scratched. They have not replaced it; now, the library system has no copy.
I wrote the other night about how much better Return to Oz is than The Wizard of Oz. It's one of the reviews I've written in full awareness of how angry it's going to make people. Hence my Goonies review, which was essentially one long apology!
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Gillian "Now everyone was giving her that kind of look UFOlogists get when they suddenly say, 'Hey, if you shade your eyes you can see it is just a flock of geese after all.'" "You can't erase icing." "I can't believe it doesn't work! I found it on the internet, man!" |
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Even the worst films have a few special frames. They're usually the last ones and, when run through a projector, read "THE END". Meanwhile, give me anything Hitchcock directed.
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Happened to me with the Charlie's Angles sequel (part 2). Couldn't take it longer than 20 minutes. 5 minutes later, my wife walked out, too ![]() ![]() I was also tempted during 300, but I had an XXL bucket of popcorn to help me get through ![]() |
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Man, 300. That was on Cinemax recently -- I don't subscribe, but they were having one of those free weekends. I tried to watch 300 but couldn't take it for more than a couple minutes. They call that dialog?
I'd rather watch some old Charlton Heston viking movie than that thing... and I hate Charlton Heston.
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Relight the Firefly! "It is quite clear that Occam's razor does not sharpen in your pyramid." (Nicolas) "Still, a man hears what he wants to hear and disregards the rest." (Paul Simon) |
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My favorite scene in The Birds is when Tippi's sitting outside the school smoking a cigarette and the birds begin to congregate on the playground equipment behind her. ::shudder::
I must say that I'm not a big fan of the bit where they're watching the fire traveling along the spilled gas, though...
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SeanF "Ask to understand, but don't challenge unless you have the knowledge."--NEOWatcher The contents of this post are ©2009 by SeanF and may not be copied or retransmitted in any form without the express written consent of SeanF |
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I really don't think many can compete with Charlton Heston's presence though...apples and oranges. |
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She is waiting for the children to finish their sing-along so she can take Cathy home. As she waits, she lights a cigarette. The children finish... then start another verse... and another... and another. You can read her frustration growing and almost hear her thoughts, "Oh, good God. Another verse?! Doesn't this %^$# song ever end!?" Another is at the end, where they are walking her out of the house to the car. She's practically catatonic with the classic "thousand yard stare." As they reach the door, she sees the birds. She pauses, takes half a step back. Her eyes come alive, her head tilts down, and she says quite firmly, "No. No-o-o-o-oo," not in panic but with a tone that conveys, "If you think I'm going out there, you're crazy."
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Never attribute to malice what can be adequately explained by ignorance or stupidity. Isaac Asimov |
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I think Hitchcock might have wanted to have Grace Kelly for the part, but she had become otherwise occupied so he needed to find a new blonde.
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Cum catapultae proscribeantur tum soli proscripti catapultas habeant. |
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The worst movie I ever saw was Quintet starring Paul Newman. It's almost certainly the worst thing he ever did in his life. He could club baby seals and it wouldn't be as bad as Quintet. High school traffic safety movies were better. Army training films were better. It was that bad.
I often like somewhat quirky movies where the writers show some actual creativity so that means I enjoy very few movies anymore. Some of the animated movies are the best. Being a grandfather, I get to enjoy them again with my grandkids. "Bug's Life", the original "Shrek", and "The Incredibles" are some of my favorites. I enjoyed "Secondhand Lions" because I liked the characters, "Finding Forrester" because the writing and acting were terrific, and "Tender Mercies" because it represents a side of life in America that seldom gets shown. IMO, "Apollo 13" was probably the best space movie ever made. |
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