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25 new of 146 responses total.
tpryan
response 67 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 10 22:33 UTC 1998

re 65,66:       Pinochio becomes a real boy.
krj
response 68 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 11 00:04 UTC 1998

Gripes with CLOSE ENCOUNTERS: SPECIAL EDITION -- 
Spielberg cut the long sequence where Richard Dreyfus wakes up one 
morning and starts collecting the material for his living-room sized 
model of Devil's Mountain.  That was a sequence which got an *ovation*
in the movie theatre opening weekend.

Speilberg also decided that he had to add some extra footage showing the 
interior of the Mother Ship; in the original film, the camera never 
went inside that ship.
 
What's commonly shown on TV now is a blend of both versions.
remmers
response 69 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 11 12:23 UTC 1998

Dreyfus' building of the Devil's Tower model was one of the highlights
of "Close Encounters" for me, so I'd miss it too.
scott
response 70 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 14 15:58 UTC 1998

"Six String Samurai" (1998)

Really cool film.  The setup (told in Star Wars scroll):

"In 1957 the Russians dropped the bomb and took over America.  The only free
place left was Lost Vegas.  40 years later, King Elvis has died."

FRom there is the story of a "samurai" and his quest to get to Lost Vegas to
try and become the new King.  (A samurai in this future has to be both a good
swordsman and also play a mean guitar).  Our hero, a Buddy Holly type, fights
various Mad Max style desert characters while protecting a tagalong kid.

Very funny, very cool.  Plays again next Friday and Saturday at the Michigan,
midnite.
omni
response 71 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 14 17:46 UTC 1998

  The Stand 
    Based on the book, and the teleplay was written by Stephen King, this
was an 8 (count 'em) 8 hour miniseries which told the story of a post
superflu world and it's struggle between good and evil. 
    Unlike most other Stephen King productions, this one was suprisingly
good. Gary Sinise, Rob Lowe, and Molly Ringwald were oustanding, as were Ray
Walston and Miguel Ferrer. Steve wrote himself a nice little part, since
he was the producer as well, and he acts just about as good as he writes.
All in all, it was very interesting, and the last hour is perhaps the
most gripping I've seen in a while. 3 stars.
drew
response 72 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 15 00:04 UTC 1998

_The Stand_ reminded me of a 1971 movie called _Omega Man_.
katie
response 73 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 15 20:42 UTC 1998

I recently very much enjoyed both Pleasantville and Meet Joe Black. The AA
News gave Meet Joe Black only 1 star. Must be the male reviewer has a sour
grapes problem.
bruin
response 74 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 15 20:54 UTC 1998

BTW, the _Ann Arbor News_ also gives a "turkey" rating to the worst of the
worst films playing in town.
omni
response 75 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 16 06:47 UTC 1998

  Newsweek trashed "Meet Joe Black". They recommended "Death takes a Holiday"
with Frederic March. At least it's a better way to spend $7.
katie
response 76 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 16 13:55 UTC 1998

Never saw th original. But I considered my $7 well spent. Have you seen the
remake, omni?
jep
response 77 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 16 14:07 UTC 1998

The Stand was possibly my favorite Stephen King book, out of the 7 or 8 
or so that I've read.  There wasn't much chance I was going to watch an 
8 hour miniseries on TV, even had I known about it, but I kind of wish I 
could have.
omni
response 78 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 16 15:38 UTC 1998

  Nope.
gregb
response 79 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 16 17:09 UTC 1998

Re. _The Stand_:  I watched/recorded it when it originally aired on network
TV (ABC, I think) a couple years ago.  For anyone who's seen both, were there
any alterations/additions/deletions this time 'round?  I saw a scene in a
commercial that I didn't recognize.
katie
response 80 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 16 21:04 UTC 1998

(Then how do you know whether your $7 would be better-spent on the original?)
qui1
response 81 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 04:20 UTC 1998

I saw "Belly" recently.  DMX, Method Man, T-Boz, etc, etc. :)  It rocked, if
you're into the whole
"thuggish-ruggish-let's-sell-drugs-and-shoot-people-and-screw-everyone-over"
kinda movie. ;)  For real, it offered an interesting insight... 
omni
response 82 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 09:08 UTC 1998

  Not that I judge books (or films) by thier cover, but I know that Freddy
March never made a bad movie, same goes for Edgar G. Robinson and Gary Cooper.
Brad Pitt, on the other hand, remains open for discussion.
  Leonard Maltin, who is my guide in these matters, tells me that "Death takes
a Holiday" is 3 1/2 stars. Newsweek said that "Meet Joe Black" was a dog.
I tend to share that opinion. (No, I have not heard Maltin on the subject).
mary
response 83 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 13:05 UTC 1998

Jim is very devoted to Newsweek.  He reads every issue cover to
cover, sometimes twice.
katie
response 84 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 14:16 UTC 1998

Seems you should ask Leonard fro his opinion, then.
omni
response 85 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 15:40 UTC 1998

Mary, your making me sound like an idiot, which I am not. I subscribe
and I do read it very carefully. As for believing everything that's 
printed in it, I don't think so. 
gregb
response 86 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 16:38 UTC 1998

Re. 82:  I never listen to critics.  If a flick looks interesting, I'll give
it a view.  What qualifications do these guys have to tell us what to see/not
see?  They're not actors, directors, producers, etc.  There's no training to
be a critic, no guidelines...nuttin'.
hhsrat
response 87 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 19 01:36 UTC 1998

Chris Potter, the lead critic for the Ann Arbor News, judging from his 
reviews, hates everything.  He is even more critical of theatre 
productions than movies.
eieio
response 88 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 19 06:13 UTC 1998

What Potter likes:
Brynn O'Malley
Kathy Marrero
Kandy Harris
Bronwen Rae (do we sense a pattern?)
skin on stage
implied homosexual undertones
 
What Potter does not like:
sudden very loud noises
blatant sexual content (of any affiliation)
wearing a belt
or underwear
 
(Thus, Erik does not like sitting near Potter in an audience, in case he drops
his pen. And he ALWAYS drops his pen. I'm so serious about this one. When he
leans down to retrieve his apparently irreplaceable Bic, the acoustics of the
room change.)
senna
response 89 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 19 07:45 UTC 1998

I read Newsweek.  Not every article, but I do stick my nose in it every week
for a decent amount of time.  
mary
response 90 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 19 13:04 UTC 1998

Me too.
remmers
response 91 of 146: Mark Unseen   Nov 19 15:48 UTC 1998

Re resp:88 - I don't know who those people you listed are, so I can't 
sense a pattern.
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