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Author Message
25 new of 323 responses total.
mooncat
response 23 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 26 18:35 UTC 2000

Saw Tombstone recently.  I love that movie, especially Val Kilmer.

Also, Hotel New Hampshire (Rob Lowe, Beau Bridges, Jodie Foster, Seth 
Green)- very... odd, but good. :)
remmers
response 24 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 26 20:08 UTC 2000

Re #21:  Scary movies don't usually scare me anymore, but _It_ had
a few satisfying chills in it.  I was hardly a child when I saw it,
either.
jerryr
response 25 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 26 20:50 UTC 2000

the only thing that scares me in a movie anymore (after all hitchcock is long
demised) is the cheap trick some directors use - that of the sudden loud
noise.  i haven't liked sudden loud noises since uncle sam's canoe club.
birdy
response 26 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 26 21:15 UTC 2000

Yes...startling people is often more effective than scaring them.  =)
krj
response 27 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 26 21:49 UTC 2000

Something I watched a few weeks ago on videotape was THE EMPEROR AND THE 
ASSASSIN, a Chinese historical epic which I'd meant to catch at the 
Michigan last winter.   Supposedly the most expensive film ever
made in China, and the director says he was influenced by Akira Kurosawa.
So it's not surprising that superficially it looks like the great 1980s
Kurosawa epics KAGEMUSHA and RAN.  But I found myself getting lost at 
several points in the plot, which is about the first Emperor to unify
all of China approximately 2000 years ago.  
 
Slightly tough viewing, and rather violent, but worth watching if 
you're into Asian historical epics.
mary
response 28 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 26 23:37 UTC 2000

Go for it, Scott!  I'm a junkie for that genre.
edina
response 29 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 27 03:49 UTC 2000

Saw Almost Famous - a definite must see, in my opinion.

Saw High Fidelity - loved it - love John Cusack - loved Lili Taylor - loved
Tim Robbins.

Saw Mission to Mars - could have been great - but sadly it wasn't.  Was kinda
intrigued when a major character bit it.
albaugh
response 30 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 27 04:30 UTC 2000

Are you referring to the made-for-TV movie/miniseries "IT" based on the novel
by Stephen King?  If so, then yeah, the movie was OK on scare.  But I enjoyed
the book much more on that account, having read it first.
birdy
response 31 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 27 12:26 UTC 2000

Oh definitely...the movie was nothing like the book...  but it was scary
enough.  =)  The book was even better, of course.  I still can't put my hand
near a drain.
ashke
response 32 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 27 14:21 UTC 2000

I never could, oo icky.
Finished my Lethal Weapon binge.  Umm...  Good.  And watched Red Corner with
Bai Ling and Richard Gere.  I like that movie.  A lot.  Rather even handed,
I think.  Besides, it is nice to see Bai Ling ACT rather than be a token
almost nudie chick.  She's a good actress, like to see her talent, and not
her body more (no offense to anyone who's the opposite however)
birdy
response 33 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 27 15:15 UTC 2000

Well, it's so silly that I was trying to get a spoon out of the garbage
disposal the other day.  I was rooting around with my hand down the drain for a
few seconds when I gave up.  Anne asked why, and I said, "I can't put my hand
down there for more than a couple seconds before thinking that damn clown is
going to grab it."  She thought it was funny, but I was deadly serious.  =)  I
HATE clowns.
ashke
response 34 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 27 15:19 UTC 2000

Heh.  I'm always worried the appliances are going to come to life and cut off
my hand in the disposal...  I'd rather sacrifice a spoon than me!
birdy
response 35 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 27 18:01 UTC 2000

Well, the spoon can do damage, so I have to get it out of there...need to find
my flashlight and put on gauntlets so the clown doesn't bite me.  ;-)
mooncat
response 36 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 27 18:51 UTC 2000

<snickers>
edina
response 37 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 28 02:02 UTC 2000

I am sometimes terrified that while going to the bathroom in the middle of
the night, a rat will come out of the toilet and bite me, so irrational fear
holders, Unite!
gelinas
response 38 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 28 04:47 UTC 2000

I still insist on closing closet doors before going to bed.
bru
response 39 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 28 12:48 UTC 2000

I'm afraid of the Gore/Lieberman ticket winning and then coming to take away
my rights!  Oh, wait, you wanted irrational fears...
mary
response 40 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 28 13:39 UTC 2000

Lieberman's idea of Free Speech is not as inclusive as mine.
I suspect Gore has similar beliefs but is bright enough to 
send Lieberman out with the message.  Coward. ;-)
mooncat
response 41 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 28 14:02 UTC 2000

<grins> I refuse to go to sleep with the closet door shut... If it's 
open then bad things won't be congregating behind the closed door.  And 
I can't sleep if any of my limbs are dangling over the side of the bed.
birdy
response 42 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 28 14:40 UTC 2000

Closet door has to be shut.  I have nightmares if it isn't.  I consider that a
direct correlation.  ;-)

I agree about sleeping with limbs hanging over the edge...  I also have
problems sitting on the edge of the bed since I know something will grab my
legs.

This is what happens when you start reading Stephen King at the age of ten.  =)
ashke
response 43 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 28 15:30 UTC 2000

I don't know when my happened, and I didn't read king until I was 14, but I
used to think that Tarzan, Frankenstien, and Dracula lived under my bed and
would grab me and drag me under.  I know exacly where that came from.  He's
living in Chicago now.  Evil brothers...
jerryr
response 44 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 28 18:13 UTC 2000

my parents didn't allow a nite light.  the few times a light was left on it
created shadows that were much more frightening to me than totall darkness.

when littlefang was a toddler he was worried about monsters until i told him
that monsters had a major weakness...they were no match for his father.  i
told him that if any monsters showed up he should warn them that his father
would kick their butts.  he never had a problem after that little chat.
tod
response 45 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 28 18:16 UTC 2000

I was wondering why your parents were using a lava lamp as a night
light in the first place.
*snort*
mooncat
response 46 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 28 18:21 UTC 2000

I haven't read much Stephen King, however I was a huge fan of horror 
movies when I was little.  My sister and I used to sit and watch the 
'Saturday Afternoon Shockers' when I was about 10 or so.

Heh, I never had a night light in my room, but my door was usually open 
and there was a light left on in the bathroom (so we could all find our 
way there) that only kinda made it in to my room.  For the most part if 
I awoke with a bad dream I went to my parents' room... <grins> Save for 
the time I was convinced there was a dog at the foot of the ladder (I 
was in the top bunk of a bunk bed) who wanted to eat me... so I 
screamed for Mama...
jerryr
response 47 of 323: Mark Unseen   Sep 28 18:28 UTC 2000

re: #45  heh, by the time lava lamps showed up my parents were so far beyond
being hippies i cannot find the words to describe it.

anne reminded me that my dad bought a round disk that plugged directly into
an outlet and it emitted this faint blue light.  in otherwise total darkness
it provided enuff light to find the bathroom w/o turning on a light.  i
remember to this day his telling me it only cost 2 cents a year to operate
LOL
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