Right. The path of "reinvention" ends up at
Catwoman,
people. Don't you learn anything??
I saw
Abre los ojos
over the weekend, and it was one of those movies that seems like a happy ending, until you think about it, and it's actually sort of the opposite of what you thought at first. Cool, though.
Brian Cox lost weight and his voice changed? ?Wha?
I didn't realize he was on the verge of puberty.
His is a far more resonant and rich voice than any of the other actors listed. That's too bad.
Was
Catwoman
reinvented or reimagined? 'Cuz there's a difference (although at the moment I don't remember what it is).
Reinvented implies that a rational thought process was at work. Reimagined implies the use of hallucinogenic drugs.
And Joel Silver created the Trinity character in the Matrix flicks.
Huh.
The Wachowski brothers must be so grateful to him.
eta: That's a perfect semantic distinction Tom.
His is a far more resonant and rich voice than any of the other actors listed.
I am in love with the man's voice, but Sean Bean can give his profundity a run for its money.
Sean is in the Jodie Foster movie! I'm so all over that!
Yeah, ita, I saw that trailer. Looked damn good, huh?
Eh - both of Tim Burton's Batman movies reinvented everyone's origin to a certain extent. I'm not too concerned about that (especially if it lets Joss cast, say, Gina Torres - not that I'm holding out a lot of hope for that).
On the air travel theme, I'm not sure Red Eye looks interesting, but it sure was funny.
I'm just not sure how much watchable horror they can wring out of "my seatmate won't shut up." I mean, do they not have headphones in this movie's universe?
I loved the trailer's shift from romcom to slightly creepy "romantic" to a flash of red and "Wes Craven presents..."
The audience lost it then, and again when the movie's title came up. In a way I don't want to know anything more about it. It was a perfect experience all encapsulated like that.