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| Author |
Message |
| 25 new of 144 responses total. |
tod
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response 56 of 144:
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Apr 14 18:09 UTC 2004 |
This response has been erased.
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jor
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response 57 of 144:
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Apr 14 19:52 UTC 2004 |
I like Local Hero.
I like to hear aboot the high energy prootons.
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richard
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response 58 of 144:
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Apr 16 02:46 UTC 2004 |
I love "Local Hero", its one of my favorites. Burt Lancaster was wonderful
in this, as he was in another movie he also did towards the end of his life,
"Field of Dreams", where he played the Doctor who always wished he'd made it
as a baseball player.
btw, I have linked this to the Movies conference. Yes, Agora has a Movies
conference. Check it out.
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richard
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response 59 of 144:
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Apr 16 02:46 UTC 2004 |
er typo, I meant Grex has a movies conference
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remmers
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response 60 of 144:
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Apr 16 12:44 UTC 2004 |
Re #52: "The Big Lebowski" is great, but it's not underappreciated.
"Hudsucker Proxy" is.
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gregb
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response 61 of 144:
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Apr 21 15:42 UTC 2004 |
Why would anyone want to watch movie about the hoola hoop? Was it a
documentary?
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remmers
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response 62 of 144:
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Apr 21 17:17 UTC 2004 |
Nope, not a documentary. I think I mentioned that it was a fictionalized
account.
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mcnally
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response 63 of 144:
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Apr 21 19:12 UTC 2004 |
I agree with remmers -- I think "The Hudsucker Proxy" is underappreciated
and is one of the Coen Brothers' better movies.
re #61:
> Why would anyone want to watch movie about the hoola hoop?
> Was it a documentary?
The story's not really *about* the hula-hoop, it's more about the rise
and fall and rise again of a dense-but-lovable dupe.
It's done in the style of a Hollywood screwball comedy from the height
of the Capra / Sturges era and works well as an homage.. Actually, it's
a lot of fun.
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tsty
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response 64 of 144:
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Apr 27 09:49 UTC 2004 |
had the ooprtunity to view the substitute and it's derivations over
the weekend.
event though the first was best, the sequence/followons were pretty
good.
thought a lot about 'to sir, with love'
there is that quality in the first 'substitute' but it devolves slightly
to contemporary h.s. cultures adn gang junk. not bad, mind you, just
a more modern/current content.
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tod
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response 65 of 144:
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Apr 27 15:20 UTC 2004 |
This response has been erased.
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mcnally
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response 66 of 144:
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Apr 27 18:40 UTC 2004 |
Wouldn't that be a lulu?
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jor
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response 67 of 144:
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Apr 27 18:52 UTC 2004 |
Crayons --> Perfume
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jor
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response 68 of 144:
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Apr 27 20:27 UTC 2004 |
born 1948, Glasgow, as, get this . .
Marie MacDonald McLaughlin Lawrie
*Who*, *knew*?
I guess with a name like that,
'Lulu' does seem a handy shortcut.
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twenex
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response 69 of 144:
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Apr 27 20:28 UTC 2004 |
Who knew? I knew not.
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trance
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response 70 of 144:
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May 5 21:24 UTC 2004 |
GOOD MOVIES: mosquito coast, real genius, pirates of silicon valley,a
beautiful mind
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remmers
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response 71 of 144:
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May 6 12:38 UTC 2004 |
If it hasn't been mentioned so far - another underappreciated Coen
brothers film is their early gem, "Murphy's Crossing", a beautifully
photographed period piece about Irish gangsters. Oh, those *hats*...
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gregb
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response 72 of 144:
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May 6 14:19 UTC 2004 |
Re. 70: If half of how Steve Jobs was portrayed in the movie was true,
I'd never want to work at Apple. I remember the scene where Jobs is
asking one of his minions...er, employees, "How's it going?" The
slave...er, employee responds, "Good sir. I've been at it almost 70
hours now" while shaking from too much caffine, or worse.
I remember seeing the actor who played jobs at one of Apples big todos,
again playing jobs. After a couple minutes the real Steve came on stage
saying, "No no, your doing it all wrong..." and showed the actor how it
was done. That was pretty cool.
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twenex
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response 73 of 144:
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May 6 14:21 UTC 2004 |
Steve Jobs seems to be one of those people that some people love to hate, and
others love to love. I know Andy Hertzfeld, former employee at Apple and later
part of the team at Eazel that created Nautilus, said that when Jobs left
Apple the company lost its soul. Given the new-found confidence and
profitability at Apple, I'd say there is a good chance he was spot on.
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mcnally
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response 74 of 144:
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May 6 16:19 UTC 2004 |
Or it could just be that they got saddled with John Sculley at that point..
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twenex
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response 75 of 144:
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May 6 16:27 UTC 2004 |
<twenex grins>
Yes, but between Scully and Jobs, the Revenge there were also Markkula and
Gil Amelio. And maybe someone else, so....
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jor
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response 76 of 144:
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May 7 01:56 UTC 2004 |
Unreal. I was in a class with Hertzfeld
in 1978, 'advanced topics in operating systems'.
Thing is, the prof gave me a copy of his paper on
'distributed computing', an early network
effort. It was an example of a better paper.
I *think* I still have it.
"Miller's Crossing"? or "Murphy's War"?
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twenex
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response 77 of 144:
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May 7 23:51 UTC 2004 |
That's cool, jor.
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remmers
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response 78 of 144:
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May 8 01:25 UTC 2004 |
Re #76 re #71: Oops, got the title wrong. It's "Miller's Crossing".
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richard
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response 79 of 144:
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May 14 00:27 UTC 2004 |
JESUS OF MONTREAL-- This is another movie from a few years ago that came
and went under the radar. It was made up in Quebec, and is about a
theater group in Montreal that does a Passion Play, and the play becomes
more and more real. The guy who plays the guy who plays Jesus really
starts to get into the part. I found this to be a quite moving movie,
about the power of belief. Its on video, I'd recommend it as a rental.
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twenex
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response 80 of 144:
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May 14 00:58 UTC 2004 |
That's interesting. The BBC did something a couple of years back (for tv),
which although I didn't watch it seemed based on the same sort of idea. I
wonder if it's a case of independent invention, or if one was based on the
other.
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