turn your brain into silly mode and enjoy ;D ;D ;D ;D cannot wait :)
what happened to her husband? they didn't show him at all.
Stone. as much as I like Norton as an actor his accent and overall body language as criminal was off. I cant say I really liked and I kind of didn't get it.have only glimpsed at that movie. couldn't get into it.
This is a list of films coming out next year:
Cloud Atlas
Elysium
After Earth
Pacific Rim
The World’s End
Ender’s Game
Oblivion
The Prototype
Robot & Frank
Gravity
Singularity
You've never heard of Ender's Game? It's the first book in the Ender's series from Orson Scott Card. One of my favorite book series.
Interesting picks. Outside of Cloud Atlas, I haven't heard of any of these.
I look forward with some dread (lest they botch it up) to this.
Surprised not to see any posts for it so far...
soon o so soon
he's showing enthusiasm, dammit.
Cannot wait to watch, may sneek out with my daughter as wife isnt into these movies.
apparently a trailer for a ghost movie showed pre the main movie scared the hell out of them more ;D ;D
looking forward toI suppose it has been a long time, but I don't remember Legolas being the the Book.
Grand Budapest Hotel
http://www.traileraddict.com/the-amazing-spider-man-2/feature-international-trailer (http://www.traileraddict.com/the-amazing-spider-man-2/feature-international-trailer)
still haven't watched number 1 ;D ;D
different indeed
fing you tube links again invalid
Only managed to watch about 45 ,ins of the original :-[
creepy as hell :o
when he sat in the house and the camera focused on something in the far room through a door moving towards him, A scramble to find the remote between me and the wife ensues ;D ;D ;D
damn, i also grabbed the Sinbad movie thinking it sounded like a good movie.
like nicholas cage
?? why that happened, poss because I used the imdb link ??
Movie is indeed Marvellous 2014
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3659786/ (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3659786/)
You use the IMDB feature for the title as it will search for it. If you already have the link, that's better.
Great film, by the way.
The Woman in Black: Angel of Death (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2339741)
My son's friend (Alfie Simmons) is in this but is was ages ago when he was filming and had to skip school. About a year ago I think.
Man! the video editors take their time. They must be on a day rate.
In the Heart of the Sealooks interesting
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b_n2CAhgPiA (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b_n2CAhgPiA)
It looks like a movie version of Mountain's "Nantucket Sleighride (To Owen Coffin)".
To Brits of a certain age that music is very evocative: "Weekend World" was a British television political series broadcast from 1972 to 1988. The theme music used throughout the series run was the closing bars of "Nantucket Sleighride (To Owen Coffin)"
Considering there were only 3 TV channels at the time, serious programmes meant less cartoons.
This song needs update.
I got elastic bands keepin my shoes on.
Got those swollen hand blues.
Got thirteen channels of poo on the T.V. to choose from.
I've got electric light.
And I've got second sight.
And amazing powers of observation.
And that is how I know
When I try to get through
On the telephone to you
There'll be nobody home.
The Lazarus Effect
Isn't this just Flatliners revamped ?
I'm not trying to be sexy. It's just my way of expressing myself when I move around.
Elvis Presley
;)
http://www.traileraddict.com/crimson-peak/trailer
Try Salem's Lot.agree, read a few S,King but most let me down. Could be that I hardly read horror ;D ;D
I think that Mr King writes the best "first halves" of books of anyone I have ever read, but then he has a tendency to lose the plot (literally) and have to resort to cheating to get to the end. He is better than Dean Koontz, in that he often cheats in different ways, where a DK book is so formulaic you can tell in advance the page number of the deus ex machina. Having alien babies, or fluke immunity, or supernatural forces descend and resolve the issue is cheating, as it invalidates everything that went before (the resolution could have just as easily come at the beginning of the book, and saved us all the bother). I find it particularly irritating in his 'straight' books that he gets nearly all the way to the end, and then bottles it with supernatural intervention (Gerald's Game is a good example).
I keep reading them, because the plot set up is often brilliant, but rarely does the end match the beginning. Salem's Lot is a good example, because the supernatural is an integral part, rather than a bolted on 'escape hatch'. Carrie, too. He is at his best when he sets up a situation that we all know is unbelievable, but so do the characters, which is what makes their position all the more difficult, and then has them figure out how to resolve it - without cheating.
Dark Tower wrecked him.never read but watched the film, enough said
I think that Mr King writes the best "first halves" of books of anyone I have ever read, but then he has a tendency to lose the plot (literally) and have to resort to cheating to get to the end. He is better than Dean Koontz, in that he often cheats in different ways, where a DK book is so formulaic you can tell in advance the page number of the deus ex machina. Having alien babies, or fluke immunity, or supernatural forces descend and resolve the issue is cheating, as it invalidates everything that went before (the resolution could have just as easily come at the beginning of the book, and saved us all the bother). I find it particularly irritating in his 'straight' books that he gets nearly all the way to the end, and then bottles it with supernatural intervention (Gerald's Game is a good example).
I keep reading them, because the plot set up is often brilliant, but rarely does the end match the beginning. Salem's Lot is a good example, because the supernatural is an integral part, rather than a bolted on 'escape hatch'. Carrie, too. He is at his best when he sets up a situation that we all know is unbelievable, but so do the characters, which is what makes their position all the more difficult, and then has them figure out how to resolve it - without cheating.
The Stand is possibly the best example of exactly what I mean. When it was a "post-apocalyptic disease killed nearly everyone" book, it was very good. As soon as it introduced supernatural bad (and good) guys, it jumped the shark.
Shame, because Stephen King writes the absolute best "natural" bad guys (Harold Lauder from the Stand is the baddest character in the book, Satan notwithstanding, Big Jim Rennie from Under the Dome, Greg Stillson from The Dead Zone, etc., etc., etc.) without resorting to the supernatural.
Dark Tower is the personification of an issue that Mr King seems to have. He seems to have one book in him, that brings a disparate set of ideas together in a particular plot. But he can't seem to get the book out: he keeps using (and reusing) themes and ideas, recycling and refining them, and using them in different situations, in the search for a way of getting it right. The Dark Tower saw him at least subconsciously recognise that, and attempt to draw them all together and tell the reader that everything was connected - it essentially attempts to unify all of his work in a world, but doesn't recognise that the set-ups for different books are essentially the same with different clothes on. I think his attempt to write as Bachmann were another outlet for the same problem: He is constantly trying to find a direction from which he can approach the problem that will allow him to fully express the themes that he needs to share.
It doesn't help that the "clothes" that he used for the Dark Tower were a "Ka-Tet" that really didn't work for me at all, I really liked the overall theme of the (possibly never-ending) spiral of time but disliked the people that he used to express it.
Flippant is Pratchett's home ground. I'm not sure that I would say 'hip', but his bread and butter is parody - in his early work he parodied broad themes such as "tourism" - and in his later works (particularly using Moist von Lipwig) he was reduced to parodying more up-to-date trendy themes such as sexism/ internet/ banking/ transport so I can see how the 'hip' label could be applied.
I prefer (to the point of fanboy-ism) books with Rincewind, Granny Weatherwax or Mr Vimes the policeman (and Carrot) - DEATH is also a favourite: they tend to be more broad brush rather than modernist but if you don't like flippant, you can't really like Pratchett.
I was going to say that I don't do much reading these days.
Be warned you may like itso i did watch on a dank Saturday night with a few shandies, laughed to bits
His book was insane.
One of his wives left him and took the kids to Jamaica, so he hired a team to recover the children via speedboats (I'm not sure if that story is based in reality)
https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1996-06-14-sp-14878-story.html
He named five of them George.
Honestly, the grill saved him, he was starting to do stupid bad boy promotions, and then he had to stop because of the grill contract.
Matrices.So sorry, was too lazy to name them all.
Matrices.
New idea for Alien series. Alien and aged Sigourney Weaver come to common terms and team up to save the universe from some looming threat. They succeed and realize the benefits that come from not trying to kill one another. They go on a road trip and find a race of hybrid Alien/Humans that manage to create a paradise out of simple planetary elements. The end.