Glens Falls (NY) Online Book Discussion Group discussion
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Movies, DVDs, and Theater
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What MOVIES or DVDs have you watched? (PART FIVE - 2012) (ongoing thread)

I watched Big Miracle last night http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1430615/, it was good but disturbing to know that all those involved in saving the whales did it for good PR, not from any desire to really save them.
Tonight, Wrath of the Titans http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1646987/, good movie for it's genre, that or I'm just a sucker for mythology. It got right to the story which I appreciate, we all know my lack of patience. The movable design for Tartarus was wholly impressive! And worth watching it for that alone.


Jackie, I posted that in Message #600 but I'll copy and paste that message here for you. (It's one page back.)
**************************************************
COPIED AND PASTED FROM MESSAGE #600:
I finished watching Spinal Tap.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0088258/
I had to read the reviews to figure out what it was all about. It's such an unusual movie. James Berardinelli says in his review:
=================================================
"The film is a composite of classic moments, all of which we sense could have happened to any of the classic heavy metal bands - or at least to those whose members combined delusions of greatness with low I.Q.s."
...
"Since 1984, there have been plenty of This Is Spinal Tap imitators, but none have come close to what Reiner and his talented troupe achieved in this mockumentary classic."
FROM: http://www.reelviews.net/php_review_t...
==================================================
Roger Ebert wrote:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"The movie looks like a documentary filmed during the death throes of a British rock band named Spinal Tap. It is, in fact, a satire. The rock group does not really exist, but the best thing about this film is that it could. The music, the staging, the special effects, the backstage feuding and the pseudo-profound philosophizing are right out of a hundred other rock groups and a dozen other documentaries about rock."
FROM: http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/p...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
BTW, I streamed the movie and it had subtitles. I've noticed lately that some of the movies streamed from Netflix do have subtitles. This is a welcome improvement!
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Joy, I did see the message on the previous page, but you didn't say what you thought of it, just other's reviews. In message 606 I get to see what you thought of it.
Some of it was funny, and like most comedies, it was probably funnier back when I saw it for the first time. The only comedy movie that is still funny and makes me laugh after all these years is Monty Python and The Holy Grail. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0071853/




Has anyone else seen Anger Management? The first scene starts off with Charley Sheen reprising his end on 2.5 Men for his therapy group. It's hilarious.
I love the whole, "Everyone deserves a 24th chance." He's an out of control party boy. That's what they billed him as & what he seems to be. At least he's honest about it & I find it funny.

Charley Sheen has always been honest about his flaws, I find that refreshing.


Jackie, sometimes when I haven't clearly formulated my opinions in my own mind, it's easier to find someone else's words which help me describe what I'd like to say.

Nina, that is so true! That's what's good about book groups! The sharing.

Jim, I watched only a small part of "Anger Management". In Message #582 I wrote:
"I agree with the following Netflix member-review":
==============================================
"I watched a third of this film and then went to rotten tomatoes to see if I should stick it out any longer. A 43% tomato rating was enough to convince me to give up. Adam Sandler plays a nice guy trapped in unjust and infuriating circumstances. I quit watching because it was becoming less and less likely that any coming payoff could adequately compensate me for suffering through the misery. Save yourself the wasted time."
================================================


That's a hard question to answer, Jackie. I wouldn't say I didn't like it and I wouldn't say I liked it. I thought it was OK.

Oh! I didn't know about the new show. I haven't been watching much TV lately.

From imdb: "As a police psychologist works to talk down an ex-con who is threatening to jump from a Manhattan hotel rooftop, the biggest diamond heist ever committed is in motion."
It was a lot better than I thought it would be. I thought I'd watch 20-30 minutes, be bored and quit. Boy was I surprised! The story unfolds in such a way that I was riveted to my seat straight to the satisfying ending.

Thanks, Jackie.
I found the photo linked below:
http://www.imdb.com/media/rm428092288...
Whew!
"Man on a Ledge" (2012)
Here's the Netflix link... for the Netflix people:
http://movies.netflix.com/movie/Man-o...
"When fugitive ex-cop Nick Cassidy steps onto a window ledge high above a busy Manhattan street, police psychologist Lydia Anderson tries to talk him down. But soon Anderson suspects that there's more to Cassidy's stunt than meets the eye."

TCM description: "British aircraft designer, R.J. Mitchell (Leslie Howard), develops the World War II spitfire with his test pilot (David Niven)."
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0034734/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._J._Mi...
Mitchell lived from 1897 to 1937. (died at the age of 42)
Wiki: "The film recounts the story of Mitchell's life and how he developed the design for the famous RAF fighter. ... Mitchell is reported to have said that 'Spitfire was just the sort of bloody silly name they would choose.' "
From the IMDb plot summary: "After a visit to Germany in the 1930s, he sees the Nazi threat first-hand and decides to design a fighter with a completely new engine. The result was the famed Spitfire."
I love these old films, especially with these wonderful actors.

I loved Niven in "The Bishop's Wife".
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0039190/
He has an interesting Wiki page:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Niven
"Niven died as a result of ALS ["Lou Gehrig's disease"] on 29 July 1983, at age 73.
"Niv was the twinkling star, the meteor who lit up every room he entered..."
---from the preface of his biography: Niv by Graham Lord
Niv: The Authorized Biography of David Niven


I think I read and enjoyed almost all the James Bond books. I never liked the movies as much as I liked the books. Somehow the books were easier to follow than the movies. The movie of Casino Royale has been on my Netflix DVD queue for a while, but it's way down on the list. Maybe I should bump it up.

That said, I could see many of Joy's and Jim's criticisms, too. The plotting is condensed to the point that it IS hard to follow, even with a liberal use of verbal narration and vocalized thoughts in an effort to compensate for some of the losses inherent in the shift away from the written form. (In the action sequences, it's often difficult to tell what's really going on.) Having read the book already was a big help for me, but I could see that a viewer like Joy who hasn't would be much more easily lost. And I agree with Jim that this isn't a novel that lends itself well to translation to a two-hour movie in the first place. Too much of Herbert's detailed world-building and exploration of ideas gets just a lick and a promise, and winds up reduced to kind of a quasi-coherent muddle. I think Lynch probably did as well in adapting it as anybody could, within the parameters he had to work with. But I think it would benefit from someday being made into an at least four-hour miniseries. That might have the possibility of really doing the novel full justice.

Enjoyed your comments.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8-086j...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N7qKAW...
PS-Perhaps that tune was before your time. 1956?

Exactly what is "tone-deaf"?
Does that mean you can't sing a simple tune?
Eddie often doesn't sing in tune but he loves Bach organ music! Loud Bach! LOL

I think even a 4 hour miniseries wouldn't be enough. I'm advocating the way HBO does an entire season per book, as they are doing with A Game Of Thrones, 10 episodes for the first two books, the third book will be 2 10 episodes seasons. It enables that in depth exploration of the book that just cannot be done in shorter lengths of time.
I prefer the David Lynch version over the Syfy versions of the early 2000s.

Joy, tone deafness is an inability to sharply distinguish between high and low notes by sound, unless they're at the extreme ends of the spectrum. This makes me experience music differently from people who aren't tone-deaf; I can tell that different musical pieces sound different (and I can even have likes and dislikes in that area!), but I don't appreciate the finer points of tonal variation like some of you do. And yes, that also affects my ability to carry tunes.
This also makes me attach more importance to the words of a song than some folks do, and means I don't usually enjoy purely instrumental music, such as Bach and the other classical composers generally produced. (Although there's something about the sound of bagpipes skirling that appeals even to me.... :-) )

You've taught me a new word, "skirling". I looked it up and found:
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skirl: c.1400, "to make a shrill sound," from a Scandinavian source (cf. Norw. skyrla, skrella "to shriek"), of imitative origin. In reference to bagpipes, it is attested by 1660s and now rarely used otherwise.
FROM: http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?t...
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It's a perfect word for bagpipes. I looked for it at rhymezone.com and they don't include it with the list of words which rhyme with "irl":
http://www.rhymezone.com/r/rhyme.cgi?...
But I asked Eddie if he knew what it meant and he did! Yet I had never heard of it. That's because he's read more than I have.
I've sent an online message to rhymezone suggesting they add the word "skirl".




Yes, Nina, you have my sympathy. I feel bad for Jim and his crew too. Sounds like a terrible ordeal. The heat knocks the stuffing out of you.
Do your nights cool down? Ours do. The large nearby lake (Lake George) tempers the temperature.




Chip & I had a sweat slick worked up between us almost immediately. Of course, he'd have to pick today to duck out of jumps. He did it twice & tried bucking me off once too, the little bugger. I got after him with the whip both times & after that he settled down. Sweat or no, hard ground & hot weather, I don't ask that much out of him, so he can bloody well do it the few times I do.
We had a good ride when everything was said & done. We got in a couple of good canters since the girls were using saddles. They won't do any jumping, much trotting or cantering if they ride bareback. I didn't bother, but I get a lot more leg on a horse than they do & Chip is a lot smoother than either Topaz or Cutter. Topaz has a pretty mean backbone, too.
We jumped half a dozen things, including the blue barrels which are about 30" tall, about the highest he's ever jumped. Erin's had him over them before, but I haven't. It was kind of interesting with the dogs running around. Once we jumped over Amber who took a break in the shade of one jump.

Hope all the horses are weathering the heat OK.
Nina, I'll bet they like that hosing down!
PS-Jim and all, be careful on those jumps. You're brave!

I am careful with the jumps, Joy. I'm too fat & old to hit this hard ground, but it is a chance you take when riding. We've all been dumped more times than we can count. We remember most of the ER visits, although some are hazy.
;-)
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'Army of Darkness' has two endings & the director likes the apocalyptic ending. The S Mart ending is so much more fun, but I guess the first is more in keeping with the rest of the movie. Ash can't even count drops right.
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