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Author Message
13 new of 229 responses total.
flem
response 217 of 229: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 01:01 UTC 2000

Oh, what a mental image!  :)
gull
response 218 of 229: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 01:54 UTC 2000

Re #210:  The only thing that bugged me about the whales is that the CG
whales and the hand-drawn eyes made a really spooky and wrong-looking
combination.
tpryan
response 219 of 229: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 03:40 UTC 2000

        Friend in Florida's review of Mission to Mars:  Long and boring.
Tried to be 2001 without the aid of Krubrick or Clarke.
mcnally
response 220 of 229: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 04:37 UTC 2000

  My sister, my brother, and I went to see "The Cider House Rules" tonight.

  Basically, I liked it but think that it's a pretty sad year for movies
  when this is a strong contender for a "best picture" Oscar..  It was a
  decent movie and no doubt a better-than-average novel adaptation, but a
  year and a half from now I suspect I'll barely remember it..
gypsi
response 221 of 229: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 05:54 UTC 2000

Anney and I watched _Detroit Rock City_ tonight.  We laughed and 
laughed.  I'm not a huge Kiss fan, but it had some *great* classic 
songs all the way through it.  Hell, even "Convoy" made it.  =)  There 
were some priceless scenes and some fairly good humor.  B+
bdh3
response 222 of 229: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 08:35 UTC 2000

_Mission To Mars_ - Nice special effects except for the martian.  Poor
science. 1) a martian rover 'bot roaming over sun baked mud is a nice
scene, but there hasn't been rain on mars for awhile.  2) If you have
three humans on one end of a rope with another human on the other end
that is spooling out some speed and apply tension on it you will
accomplish two things, you will reduce the speed of the one human on the
other end, and you will bring the three humans at the other closer to
the one human.  Its called 'inertia'. 3) If you are going to film a
weightless dance sequence, consider there are three dimensions.

All in all, a nice flick, but one better seen at the cheaper matinee
price I think.  Also, quite a sendup to Kubrick's 2001 but not as well
done.

Other minor quibbles (warning: potential spoilers):




1)If you are going to have depressurization of a 'shirtsleeve'
environment, everybody gets pressurized first thing, even if you have to
get a spare helmet.  2) an orbital insertion 'burn' means the main
engines point towards the current direction of flight, not aft.  You
don't speed up to enter an orbit if you are at risk of skipping past
(because you are going too fast).  3) A 'temporary' structure at mars
surface suitable for human 'shirtsleeve' environment is going to be
rather rigid, not a tent billowing in wind gusts.  4)  You are not going
to recognize 'human' DNA -vs- a pig -vs- an e-coli bacterium -vs- an
'alien' on an atomic level (MM's) as audio even broadcast over FM on a
laptop screen. 5) Presumably an advanced enough science to ensure the
function of a device for millenia would be able to prevent it being
burried by dust.  6) A holigraphic image that holds hands - gimme a
break.

1a) Quite a few continuity gaffs.  2a)  Major star appears only in
flashback or 'video' - one has to wonder what the original screenplay or
even film was like.

Enough said.  About on par with the best of original TV Star Trek and
current spin offs, but hardly that great for a full length feature.
See it on the cheap showings or wait for the video. 
drewmike
response 223 of 229: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 17:25 UTC 2000

Oh, now, Richard. Shatner doesn't drown *himself*. You know that.
drew
response 224 of 229: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 19:32 UTC 2000

Re #222:
    I've been saying your minor quibble #2 about space movies and TV shows
for years.
bru
response 225 of 229: Mark Unseen   Mar 17 18:24 UTC 2000

What he didn't say about "FREE ENTERPRISE"  is that Shatner is attempting to
rap Shakespeares julius Ceasar...

They showed part of it on the Tonight show last night while interviewing
Shatner.  They also discussed his TV commercials where he sings the oldies
for Priceline.com...
otaking
response 226 of 229: Mark Unseen   Mar 17 22:16 UTC 2000

After seeing Shatner on the Tonight show, I really want to see FREE
ENTERPRISE. SHakespeare set to rap was just hilarious.
otter
response 227 of 229: Mark Unseen   Mar 21 05:18 UTC 2000

Ya oughta hear him read _Lucy in the Sky_...
aruba
response 228 of 229: Mark Unseen   Mar 27 08:20 UTC 2000

I can attest that having once heard William Shatner sing Luciy in the Sky
with Diamonds, you will never forget it.
otter
response 229 of 229: Mark Unseen   Apr 2 12:54 UTC 2000

Oh, no no no. This is not singing. It is a dramatic reading of the 
lyrics. I first heard it in 1973; don't know how old it was then. It's 
from an album he did consisting entirely of dramatic readings of popular 
song lyrics. I seem to remember that it also contains "Hey, Mister 
Tambourine Man". <<shudder>>
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