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We see the queens leg at the end and then there was an episode preview and after you see Jessica all wet you then see a quick flash of a new red-headed vampire that appears to be in the queen's setting. I had to put the trailer into super slow-mo it is definitely a new powerful vampire, probably the queen. Weeeee!
Can't you just picture the excited little faces of the sick children on the day that Jon Gosselin came to visit? Trying to puzzle out those confusing Ed Hardy shirts, asking their mommies what "douchebag" means after hearing a nurse mumble it, wondering why Elmo didn't come to visit instead?
I have a hard time with Claire Danes blathering on about how much "fun" monogamy is when she participated in the break up of a long term relationship in which the woman was *seven months pregnant* and by all accounts started her latest relationship before she was done with the last. With that track record, the only graceful thing to do is not give vapid quotes about monogamy.
@pmarble: It seemed to me like she was saying, "I have no idea how to be monogamous, but I'm trying really hard." I don't know why she can't be polyamorous or some other relationship variation. Monogamy is not the only option.
Whitney's impending interview: just another reason to relish the fact that I'm about to be unemployed. Thanks for helping me look on the bright side, Jez!
No he did not. I can't see how that's physically possible, because when Bale did it, I imagined him yelling at me during sex, and I really didn't get the same feeling with this Pauly Shore thing.
@morninggloria: Also, Christian Bale is generally acknowledged to have some talent. He can play the "tormented genius" card, while, as always, Pauly Shore is stuck with a deck of "entitled douche."
By appearing on Miss Universe, Heidi Montag decides to go after the coveted "basement dwelling pervert" and "sexually unfulfilled pageant mom" demographics.
So, not to be horrible. But I HATE it when you see these random, C-list celebrities who have no actual talent going to visit children in hospitals or cancer wards. Come on. Jon Gosselin? I'm sure that really brightened the day of those kids...I doubt they have any idea who he is. Unless you are someone who the kids are going to be excited to meet, or you're someone with an actual talent for entertaining, like you're Criss Angel and you can do magic or something, don't do this BS "visiting the hospitals" crap. Take a chunk of your huge amount of money and pay for a clown to go visit them for a day, or donate something to the hospital, or send them all toys.
What Would Brian Boitano Make?
This is a South Park joke, right? Although it doesn't really matter, as I bet the cross section of people who watch South Park and the Food Network consists of: Me, maybe you, no one over age 30.
Re District 9 sequel--of course. The movie flat out tells you there is going to be a sequel. However, I will be skipping that one. For those of you who have been on the fence, I recommend you skip District 9 as well.
@BlondeGrlz: First 30 minutes is great and there's fun (if obvious) stuff to pick apart. The remaining hour and half or so is a generic action flick with aliens.
@confusedforahotsecond is a sodemombeech!: Ummm... I can see where one would say that. There's a plotline that involves traditional African medicine. Frankly, it's Hollywood-ized and in that way uses familiar images that I can see as being taken as racist, but from a sociological standpoint... not so much, it's pretty much tapping in to what some Africans believe. (If you've ever seen the show "Taboo," you'll see similar things being said in a documentary setting... only no aliens.)
@laureltreedaphne: As I said to BlondeGrlz, I thought the end was a bit typical/actiony. Nothing grabbed me after that first half hour, frankly.
@LaComtesse: I liked it! Sort of, I guess. I found it uncomfortable to watch, and I can't say that I "enjoyed" it, sort of like how I didn't "enjoy" A Clockwork Orange or even The Dark Knight. Turns out I like my sci-fi shiny and zoomy, and Zachary Quinto helps.
@LaComtesse: I loved it! Documentary-esque delivery, intriguing, original suspenseful story, great actor, lots of double entendres and political ironies (yet doesn't bash you over the head with them all) and to top it off...just awesome action sequences.
Now a sequel? I'm only on board if they do it right - i.e. bring back the same people and write a helluva follow-up story. If it becomes just about the money, then the story has the potential to falter.
@Yahtzii: I like my sci-fi with less dastardly villians and less gratuitous explosions. I prefer more grit... which at first there was plenty of, but then they had super-cool technology etc. etc.
@LaComtesse: Do you love Firefly? It has a pretty nice balance of grit and shiny. I bet you LOVE Alien and Blade Runner and so on. I love those movies and can actually watch them over and over, but I don't think I'd chose to rewatch District 9. And I'm not so sure I'll be in line for the sequel.
@LucyRed: "lots of double entendres and political ironies (yet doesn't bash you over the head with them all)"
Really? I thought the fact that it took place in South Africa already bashed you over the head with the political analogies.
But the documentary style was great: REALLY interesting... but they abandoned it for loooooooooong stretches at a time and then reintroduced it when they needed it, which I thought was kinda lazy at points. Also the whole premise of what happens to Wikus a) took a huge leap of faith and offered zero explanation b) wasn't necessary. There was another, more interesting way to get him involved in the aliens' world.
@Yahtzii: I was going to say that at first the bit with the Nigerians made me uncomfortable, but then I remembered that when I lived in South Africa, I was bombarded with negativity around them. From everyone, be they white, black or Malay. I reserved my judgment, but it seems like what was portrayed about them in the film, is exactly how they are regarded in South Africa. Although the mention of the "scam" made me laugh because that's one of the things I was warned about, scams.
@Yahtzii: I love the IDEA of Firefly but not the execution... and Kaylee and Inara. I want that show to be so much better than it is, but Joss Whedon gets too cutesy for me when he doesn't have a defined beginning middle and end (as in "Serenity" which I loved and "Dr. Horrible" which I also loved.) Anyway, I digress... we can PM that one.
@LaComtesse: I don't go to movies as a rule- and my friend more or less told me that I am seeing this movie with her this weekend or else we can no longer be friends. I also must note that this friend is such a cine-snob she thinks Manohla Dargis would give 4 stars to her dog taking a crap.
@LucyRed: political ironies (yet doesn't bash you over the head with them all)
Hmm. I felt totally bashed over the head, to the extent that I really didn't like the movie. I felt like the first 45 minutes at least was basically someone yelling at me "See how they treat the aliens? That's just like how they treated blacks during apartheid! Get it? Get it? Get it?" ad nauseum.
@TheUptightMidwesterner: Clearly I'm in the minority here, though I'd be happy to discuss it after you see it. I found it uneven, typical, and not especially compelling.
@Breamworthy: I read an interview with the director this morning and he mentioned that a lot of the interviews by the humans talking about the aliens were taken from interviews by South Africans talking about real aliens--Zimbabweans and elsewhere. And that's a different story. So I think you're a little off on what they're bashing you over the head with. Furthermore, apartheid? People are living in those exact conditions today. Those were real South African homes in the movie, homes that people had really just been evicted from. So it's not about apartheid really. It's about living and working conditions for South Africans and immigrants to South Africa today.
@EkaterinaBallerina: Just curious, because I don't know much about South Africa nowadays, are the illegal aliens who live in those conditions mostly black? Like is the native/alien thing mostly still a white/black issue, or is that not as much a part of the situation now?
@EkaterinaBallerina: I haven't seen the movie, but from what I've heard about from quite a number of Nigerians is that no-one really cared for it. I was told that the film played to the prejudice held against Nigerians by South Africans.
The David Copperfield story -- I feel like I'm having deja vu. I hope that TMZ is just picking up on the old story and not that there's another woman who claims to have been assaulted on that island.
@sportz.star: Either way, I think the lesson is, never go to David Copperfield's private island. Or, really, the private island of anyone you don't already know and trust. I mean, I can't imagine the island has any sort of objective police force to come to your rescue.
08/23/09
SPOILER SPOILER SPOILER *************************************************************************
We see the queens leg at the end and then there was an episode preview and after you see Jessica all wet you then see a quick flash of a new red-headed vampire that appears to be in the queen's setting. I had to put the trailer into super slow-mo it is definitely a new powerful vampire, probably the queen. Weeeee!
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No he did not. I can't see how that's physically possible, because when Bale did it, I imagined him yelling at me during sex, and I really didn't get the same feeling with this Pauly Shore thing.
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I've been singing that since I saw the ad for the show.
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This is a South Park joke, right? Although it doesn't really matter, as I bet the cross section of people who watch South Park and the Food Network consists of: Me, maybe you, no one over age 30.
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Really? I'm interested to know why you feel that way. I thought it was really great.
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@laureltreedaphne: As I said to BlondeGrlz, I thought the end was a bit typical/actiony. Nothing grabbed me after that first half hour, frankly.
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Now a sequel? I'm only on board if they do it right - i.e. bring back the same people and write a helluva follow-up story. If it becomes just about the money, then the story has the potential to falter.
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Really? I thought the fact that it took place in South Africa already bashed you over the head with the political analogies.
But the documentary style was great: REALLY interesting... but they abandoned it for loooooooooong stretches at a time and then reintroduced it when they needed it, which I thought was kinda lazy at points. Also the whole premise of what happens to Wikus a) took a huge leap of faith and offered zero explanation b) wasn't necessary. There was another, more interesting way to get him involved in the aliens' world.
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Hmm. I felt totally bashed over the head, to the extent that I really didn't like the movie. I felt like the first 45 minutes at least was basically someone yelling at me "See how they treat the aliens? That's just like how they treated blacks during apartheid! Get it? Get it? Get it?" ad nauseum.
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