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24 new of 112 responses total.
rcurl
response 89 of 112: Mark Unseen   Aug 25 18:03 UTC 2003

OPEN RANGE - I don't think I've intentionally gone to see an oater in
a theatre in years, usually getting my fill from the box. But I will
say the lack of ad interruptions, and the vastness of the scenic panoramas,
do add to the theatre experience. Otherwise, this is a pretty standard
one of its genre, with the twist that the usual good guys are the bad guys
and vica versa. While overall I enjoyed it for what it was, I did get
the feeling that they filmed several endings and then used bits of all of
them. The female lead was also kind of wooden, but the villains were
adequately snarly and villainous. The moral I got from the tale was, always
befriend the man with the dog.
tod
response 90 of 112: Mark Unseen   Aug 25 18:27 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

rcurl
response 91 of 112: Mark Unseen   Aug 25 20:08 UTC 2003

Something like that would fit Costner's role. 
tod
response 92 of 112: Mark Unseen   Aug 25 20:20 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

mcnally
response 93 of 112: Mark Unseen   Aug 25 20:46 UTC 2003

  Make it a double-feature with a film where Arlond Schwarzenegger, 
  Jean-Claude Van Damme, and Stephen Seagal struggle to get in touch 
  with theirinner feelings and you'll have a truly dreadful evening..
scott
response 94 of 112: Mark Unseen   Aug 26 01:45 UTC 2003

Perhaps a movie where Lee Marvin kills them all?
pvn
response 95 of 112: Mark Unseen   Aug 26 06:07 UTC 2003

Is he still alive?
scott
response 96 of 112: Mark Unseen   Aug 26 12:34 UTC 2003

(blustering) Well, Lee's a pretty tough guy...
remmers
response 97 of 112: Mark Unseen   Aug 26 12:44 UTC 2003

Lee Marvin:  1924-1987
katie
response 98 of 112: Mark Unseen   Aug 26 18:42 UTC 2003

I thoroughly enjoyed "Pirates of the Caribbean." And I understood the
dialogue and the plot better the second time around.

My friend and I were the only people left in the theatre when the
(lengthy) credits finished and the movie continued on for a minute
or so.
mary
response 99 of 112: Mark Unseen   Aug 26 21:57 UTC 2003

I like when that happens.
rcurl
response 100 of 112: Mark Unseen   Aug 26 23:00 UTC 2003

I meant to mention in #88, re OPEN RANGE, that there were only five (5)
at the 9:45 p.m. showing last Saturday at Madstone. An attendant said it was
because everyone was in SEABISCUIT. I still thought it was pretty strange.
jaklumen
response 101 of 112: Mark Unseen   Aug 27 04:50 UTC 2003

resp:99 Me, too.  I feel rewarded for my quirk.
edina
response 102 of 112: Mark Unseen   Sep 9 18:02 UTC 2003

I saw "Finding Nemo" last week.  I really liked it.  Ellen DeGeneres is
hysterical.

I've also watched more rented movies than I can begin to list.  Here's ones
that stick out:

"Bowling for Columbine" - Kind of all over the place, but I loved it.

"Solaris" - The only thing remarkable about this movie was Clooney's ass. 
And I assure you, for $4, there wasn't enough of it.

"Big Eden" - Great movie about relationships.
mynxcat
response 103 of 112: Mark Unseen   Sep 9 19:24 UTC 2003

regarding Solaris, I paid full price to see it at the theater when it came
out. I left soon after the ass sighting, and tried to console myself on money
wasted.
remmers
response 104 of 112: Mark Unseen   Sep 9 22:50 UTC 2003

Being who I am, I didn't even find *that* aspect of "Solaris"
worthwhile.  The movie was a major disappointment from a director
I normally like.
scott
response 105 of 112: Mark Unseen   Sep 9 23:06 UTC 2003

I didn't even bother to see that version - the Russian version would be pretty
hard to top.
richard
response 106 of 112: Mark Unseen   Sep 12 02:05 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

richard
response 107 of 112: Mark Unseen   Sep 12 02:12 UTC 2003

I got the new deluxe DVD last week of Sergio Leone's classic, "Once 
Upon A Time in America"  The best thing about the DVD, although it has 
plenty of extras, is that it has Leone's original European cut of the 
movie, which is nearly four hours long.  This is the cut that never 
showed in the U.S. The U.S. distributors thought it was too long, they 
fired Leone, and hired an outside editor to slash the movie to under 2 
1/2 hours.  In the process, the studio's editor re-arranged all the 
scenes in chronological order and removed the script's "flashback" 
basis.  This basically ruined the movie.  The uncut version would have 
won the Academy Award that year, but the cut up version screwed up the 
order of the scenes, took out key scenes, and left the whole thing a 
mess.  Leone refused to have anything to do with the version that 
played in the U.S. (this is all detailed in a terrific docuemntary on 
the second disc)  Leone was able to re-edit and release a longer 
version, over three hours, where he restored his intended sequencing.  
But even then he wasn't allowed to simply release the entire movie in 
the U.S. The European version, Leone's original version-- nearly fours--
with all scenes restored, was never released theatrically in the U.S.  
That is the version on this DVD.

The flashback sequencing is crucial to this story.  Robert DeNiro is a
jewish gangster, who is now much older and is reliving his past, and
coming to terms with his past, and the loss of his friendship with  his
est friend, played by James Woods.  It really is a great movie, one of 
the best of its genre ever in fact.  Well worth having in DVD in its
letterboxed, original form.  Has a great musical score too.




mynxcat
response 108 of 112: Mark Unseen   Sep 12 13:48 UTC 2003

I finally got my hands on "chalte Chalte" a typical bollywood movie. I had
heard that it was about husband-wife friction, but the  first half dealt with
the soppy romance before the couple gets married (this wouldn't be Bollywood
if it weren't for the romance and song-dance routines)

When it actually came to the married life of the couple, that really hit home.
I'm not married but living with my fiance, and I see a lot of us in that
couple. The arguments were real, the fights were the kind of fights we had.
The make-ups were like us. I think that part of the movie was well made. Then
it ended in the typical soppy Hindi-movie style. Pity.
remmers
response 109 of 112: Mark Unseen   Sep 22 13:42 UTC 2003

Skip "Cold Creek Manor".  Solid cast (Dennis Quaid, Sharon Stone,
Juliet Lewis, Christopher Plummer) doesn't even begin to save this
plodding, predictable, paint-by-numbers thriller.  Director Mike
Figgis has made some fine, risk-taking movies ("Leaving Las Vegas",
"Timecode"), but in this one he risks nothing except possibly his
professional reputation.  What a disappointment.
lynne
response 110 of 112: Mark Unseen   Sep 22 14:35 UTC 2003

Saw a sneak preview of Underworld last week.  It was a nice idea, but I was
very disappointed with the last half hour or hour of the movie--found myself
rooting against the good guy, for the bad guy.  I was glad it was a free
sneak preview and I hadn't paid actual money to see it.  Go see this only
if you have a stalkeresque relationship to Kate Beckinsale and want to spend
two hours watching her run around in formfitted leather and rubber suits
(admittedly, she looks very nice in them).
Last night I went to the campus showing of "Nowhere in Africa"--a German film
shot in Afrika, in German and Swahili with English subtitles.  I was very 
glad that they subtitled rather than dubbing--it added a great deal to listen,
for my non-German-speaking friend as well as myself.  Excellent movie.  Go
see it if you get the chance.
jaklumen
response 111 of 112: Mark Unseen   Sep 23 03:25 UTC 2003

I'm considering seeing "Underworld" just for the eye candy and to find 
out what had White Wolf in such a huff... but then I'm a Camarilla 
member and a music video junkie.  *shrug*  This might be the movie I 
consider a waste of my money-- who knows.

(that's if I find a babysitter)
edina
response 112 of 112: Mark Unseen   Sep 23 17:55 UTC 2003

I was totally rooting for the bad guy (Lucien) at the end.
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