Just saw Michael Clayton earlier, very good.
Watched Closer last night great show
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Just saw Michael Clayton earlier, very good.
Check out my new sports blog http://www.action81.com
Saw Crash, Juno and Bee Movie() in the past few days. All good, Crash & Juno especially.
Life without Rovers, it makes no sense...it's a heartache...nothing but a fools game. S.R.F.C.
A big point about the ending is that you makes you think.
It's not gift wrapped.
I'll be having another look at it soon.
I've bought the book on the back of the movie. I read the Road (same author) and found it boring so fingers crossed that it turns out decent.
Watched the Kingdom on Saturday and have to say it's very average.
Wathced "The Pursuit of Happyness" last night. Will Smith starred and I think directed. Very touching story best performance i've ever seen Will Smith give. I didnt think he had it in him.
Last edited by centre mid; 18/02/2008 at 1:42 PM. Reason: spelling
His writing style didn't appeal to me. Very very descriptive in outlining the landscape. I don't want 6 pages telling me how the dust settles on the vegetation. I know there was just him and the kid and you can't just fill the page with dialogue but it lacked something. I know it's praised to high heavens but I really struggled with it. It may be just his writing style but I just couldn't get stuck into it.
Fingers crossed I get to see There Will Be Blood this weekend - from the sound of things it's a masterpiece.
Has anyone seen Into The Wild yet? I have read the book, excellent, and Im very curious how it is portrayed on the big screen.
" I'll go right up to here,
it can't possibly hurt.
All they will find is my
beer and my shirt."
Great film, great book and soundtrack is fab too. Love Eddie Vedder's voice!
Never send a monkey to do a mans job
Did anybody see an okeyish humorous French Film on Film 4 some months ago called
Romuald et Juliette with Daniel Autiel?
Where he is the CEO of a yoghurt company, he appoints one director to be his VP, who turns out to be the spitting image of John Delaney, who unwittingly poisons a production batch and elopes with Daniel's wife.
The resemblance was uncanny.
I'm a fan of the classic 50's westerns. Shane was on Sky movies last night.
I have mixed feelings about it. Van Hefflin (my mother's hero, so I guess he could have been my father) and Jack Palace were class but if ever a wife needed some bitch slapping it was Van's wife, she whined on and on and on and the least said about the son the better.
I still rate the 3:10 to Yuma 1957 as the best out of the 50´s, especially with the acting, casting, direction, understated psychologically gripping plot and realistic.
Shane is the one that could do with a remake.
picked up a great bargain in Virgin megastore in blanch yesterday "the little black book of movies" for €9, it's a couple of thousand pages of the pivotal film's, people and Scenes from world cinema, it's done in chronological order by Decade and has some fantastic movie stills in it, would recomend for any movie buff
"there will be blood" is an epic. a masterpiece. it's not flawless by any stretch but it's got incredible, elemental power. the movie works as an obvious narrative on the surface but it kept me awake last night for 2 hours going over every interlocking layer. there is heavy symbolism, mind-blowing imagery, and it says something about both the movie and the viewer that i just didn't get it when i saw it. it stayed with me and revealed itself like a puzzle-box in the days after. it's a work of art. johnny greenwood from radiohead does the soundtrack which is also excellent. fantastic film, day lewis is the best i've seen him. i didn't know hollowood made movies like this any more, p. anderson is a genius.
zombie/thread killer..
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