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25 new of 278 responses total.
mcnally
response 40 of 278: Mark Unseen   Mar 29 17:52 UTC 2004

This response has been erased.

edina
response 41 of 278: Mark Unseen   Mar 29 19:45 UTC 2004

"Love, Actually" is a great film.  

I saw "Jersey Girl" yesterday.  Went in with low expectations after the
reviews and ended up enjoying it a great deal.  Carlin is awesome, Raquel
Castro is a total find and Affleck is, well Affleck.  Jason Lee and Matt Damon
have cameos, as does Will Smith and there is a good deal of humor.  
twenex
response 42 of 278: Mark Unseen   Mar 29 20:10 UTC 2004

Re: #38: I don't know, are they?

I can see this morphing into a discussion that should be in aggro. I HOPE it
doesn't morph into a bitching match.
parcel
response 43 of 278: Mark Unseen   Mar 29 20:21 UTC 2004

Re. 38: you can't say that about French film.w.
furs
response 44 of 278: Mark Unseen   Mar 29 20:53 UTC 2004

Taking Lives pretty much sucked.  It was way contrived, and there were 
a ton of plot holes.  There was a little suspense, but I spent most of 
the movie trying to figure out how they had pieced things together so 
easily and why certain things happened for not apparent reason other 
than to starttle me.
scott
response 45 of 278: Mark Unseen   Mar 29 22:51 UTC 2004

Finally saw "Lost in Translation" (on DVD) a couple days ago.  Great movie!
Slow moving, but interesting.
parcel
response 46 of 278: Mark Unseen   Mar 29 23:05 UTC 2004

allo, scott
mcnally
response 47 of 278: Mark Unseen   Mar 29 23:25 UTC 2004

  I also rented "Lost in Translation" this weekend and saw it for the
  first time.  I very much enjoyed it and thought it did a great job
  of demonstrating just how strange and disorienting it can be to be
  alone in a strange place.  Cathy, however, found it slow and unengaging
  and had to battle against sleep.  I agree that it wasn't what I'd call
  energetic or even plot-driven but I quite enjoyed it for what it was..
parcel
response 48 of 278: Mark Unseen   Mar 29 23:30 UTC 2004

allo, mcnally
richard
response 49 of 278: Mark Unseen   Mar 30 03:44 UTC 2004

DOGVILLE--  Saw this over the weekend.  It is danish director Lars Von 
Trier's (director of "Breaking the Waves") answer to Mel Gibson's "The 
Passion of the Christ"  Except instead of Jerusalem, the town is in the 
American midwest in the 1930's, and the Christ figure is played not by 
Jim Caviezel, but by Nicole Kidman.  She plays this young girl with a 
heart of gold who is on the run from the mob, and ends up hiding out in 
the small all american town of Dogville.  There she befriends a John 
Boy Walton type played by Paul Bettany (who was the doctor in Master 
and Commander)  Except Bettany isn't just a John Boy Walton in this 
movie, he's Judas of course.  Bettany's character convinces Kidman to 
stay in Dogville and give of her life, heart and time to the 
townspeople, who need her help even though they are too proud to 
actually admit it.

Kidman spends her days going around the small town, meeting and helping 
each of the townspeople, and saving each in their own way, giving each 
what they are missing in their lives.  She believes in these poor 
people even when they're beaten down by life and really don't believe 
in themselves.  Kidman becomes part of this small town and dedicates 
her life to helping these people.  All is well until the cops come 
looking for Kidman, and tell the townspeople she's suspected of 
something.  In this telling, the cops and the mafia are analagous to 
the Romans, and the townspeople are of course the Jews.   The story 
takes the predicted dark turn where we find out the townspeople aren't 
nearly so nice and wholesome as they seem at first.

The movie comes down to the choices Kidman makes, how she feels about 
the town, and what will happen in the end when she finally assumes the 
power from her "father", revealed as we suspect all along of course to 
be the chosen one, and must pass judgement on these people.  

Von Trier takes a dark, cynical view of the world, and the name of the 
town, "Dogville" seems to indicate that at least at times he sees most 
people as no better than dogs.

This is unlike any movie you've ever seen.  It is 3+ hours long and 
broken into nine chapters, with voice over narration by John Hurt (in 
style, it is patterned after the play "Our Town"), and takes place 
entirely on a soundstage, with the town, the roads, the trees and much 
of everything else drawn conceptually in chalk lines on the floor.  
Don't let that turn you off, you get used to it after a while, and Von 
Trier takes this approach on purpose I think to underscore the idea 
that this is about the characters, the people, and only the people are 
real.

"Dogville" is a bit long, but its a great film, completely engrossing.  
Nicole Kidman gives a great star performance and is in virtually every 
frame of the movie.  I give her credit for agreeing to be in somethign 
this controversial and experimental.  In addition to Bettany, the film 
also has terrific performances from Ben Gazzara, Blair Brown, Chloe 
Sevigny and others as the townspeople, and also an old favorite of mine 
James Caan who plays a pivotal role at the end.  

Some of you won't like this movie, and Von Trier has been accused by 
some of being anti-american.  But I think "Dogville" is a fine, pointed 
commentary on the state of life in modern society.  I highly recommend 
this movie.

(Oh and be sure to stay for the end credits, the montage shown during 
the closing credits is pretty powerful, showing pictures of actual 
early twentieth century townspeople, such as are depicted in the movie, 
being cruel to each other.  The montage is done to David Bowie's 
song "Young Americans".  Okay its a bit much but if you see this movie, 
you'll agree that the montage makes a hell of an epilogue to it)

albaugh
response 50 of 278: Mark Unseen   Mar 30 17:52 UTC 2004

A subtlety from "Cats & Dogs" - One of the leading dogs, after something bad
happened, uttered "Son of my mother!"  :-)
twenex
response 51 of 278: Mark Unseen   Mar 30 17:55 UTC 2004

Heh. Interestingly, one of the (many) words for "son of a bitch" in Spanish
is "hijo de tu madre" - "son of your mother " ("but who is your father"?
implied)
tpryan
response 52 of 278: Mark Unseen   Apr 6 16:30 UTC 2004

        I'm having some Banquet Lassagana for lunch.
gregb
response 53 of 278: Mark Unseen   Apr 7 16:13 UTC 2004

If it's anything like their chicken, you have my sympathies.

Watched Holloywood Homicide yesterday.  Can't say I was impressed.  The 
pacing was, IMO, way off.  The first hour everything moved very slow, 
while the second things were constantly GO GO GO!

Norally, I like comedies with Harrison Ford, but this one really missed 
the mark.  The jokes and one-liners seemed contrived and forced--and 
there wasn't much of them to begin with (which, in retrospect, was a 
good thing).  It seemed like this was a drama trying to be a comedy and 
didn't know how.
mcnally
response 54 of 278: Mark Unseen   Apr 7 16:25 UTC 2004

  re #53:  "Hollywood Homicide" was terrible.  Harrison Ford must've
  owed somebody a really big favor..
scott
response 55 of 278: Mark Unseen   Apr 7 16:32 UTC 2004

Rented "Underworld" yesterday.  It lives up to its reviews; lots of action,
a somewhat overburdened plot device, and forgettable acting.
anderyn
response 56 of 278: Mark Unseen   Apr 7 17:55 UTC 2004

I ejoyed "Hollywood Homicide" at the theater last year. It wasn't my favorite
movie, but it was fun enough for a matinee. I thought the best line was about
the donut, though the duelling cell phones during the interrogations were cute
too. (I may have a higher tolerance for the jokes since I rarely go to "funny"
movies and they may have been fresher for me in that respect.)
tod
response 57 of 278: Mark Unseen   Apr 7 19:21 UTC 2004

This response has been erased.

edina
response 58 of 278: Mark Unseen   Apr 7 19:31 UTC 2004

Yes, my little anal dwelling but monkey?
tod
response 59 of 278: Mark Unseen   Apr 7 19:32 UTC 2004

This response has been erased.

twenex
response 60 of 278: Mark Unseen   Apr 7 19:41 UTC 2004

I enjoyed Bruce Almighty. Haven't seen the film "Gandhi".
tod
response 61 of 278: Mark Unseen   Apr 7 19:48 UTC 2004

This response has been erased.

novomit
response 62 of 278: Mark Unseen   Apr 8 12:46 UTC 2004

Ben Kingsley = Overrated.
gregb
response 63 of 278: Mark Unseen   Apr 8 16:13 UTC 2004

Bruce Almighty was great.  Picked up the DVD a few months ago.  Ever 
since Carry's been doing less wild comedies, like "Liar Liar," "The 
Truman Show," etc., he's gained more respect in my book.  My fav line 
in BA is when God tells him he's dead...

   Bruce: "Really?!"
   God:  "Naw, I'm just messing with'ya."
twenex
response 64 of 278: Mark Unseen   Apr 8 20:30 UTC 2004

<Bruce walks past a girl wearing a skirt and turns round and blows a huge wind
in her dirextion, blowing up said skirt and showing her panties>

"He saw it and it was GOOD!"

rotfl.
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