Thanks for the suggestions for government movies - I've got a few more to add to the list now.
Anya ,'Touched'
Buffista Movies 6: lies and videotape
A place to talk about movies--old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
More Imaginarium news:
Despite earlier reports that the director might shelve the $30 million production, Gilliam, whom Plummer describes as "terribly saddened" by Ledger’s death is "trying to work out at this moment how to continue on. Fortunately, because the film deals with magic, there is a way, perhaps, of turning Heath into other people and then, using stills and I think they call it CGI…
Yay the Librarian movies are at the top of my roomie's netflix queue!
I just watched The Fly ! That was certainly a gross movie. Good old corrosive vomit! But it was cool to see 1986 special effects. The Brundlefly looked like a real monstrosity, tangible and sickening. If they did it now, it'd be all CGI.
Also! I had no idea that "Be afraid. Be very afraid" was from this movie! It was so weird to hear it in its original context.
I always thought the movie was about a guy who immediately becomes a fly-monster and starts terrorizing everyone, but that's just because that's how it's always parodied.
My dad saw the original when he was in high school. He drove a bunch of friends to see it and later that night when he was driving home (his parents lived on a farm), a giant horse fly flew into one of the open windows.
He was so freaked out and scared that all he could do was lay on the horn until his mother came out of the house and to rescue him.
Jeff Goldblum absolutely makes the remake worth watching, even if it's gory and depressing. I think it's perhaps the most undersung/underappreciated horror roles ever.
I always thought the movie was about a guy who immediately becomes a fly-monster and starts terrorizing everyone, but that's just because that's how it's always parodied.
That's how it was in the Vincent Price original. Except for the terrorizing part. IIRC, he's more of a misunderstood monster, a la Frankenstein's.
Jeff Goldblum absolutely makes the remake worth watching, even if it's gory and depressing. I think it's perhaps the most undersung/underappreciated horror roles ever.
Both him and Geena were awsome in that. The first half plays almost like a geektastic romantic comedy, and then it gets icky and very very sad (or is that sad and very very icky?).
If they did it now, it'd be all CGI.
With Cronenberg, you never know. He believes in texture when he does those sorts of effects. Though he made some stellar (as in almost undetectable) use of CGI in A HISTORY OF VIOLENCE, so who knows.
P-C, in interviews Cronenberg did around the release of The Fly he talked a lot about his father's death from cancer, and that it was (for him) a metaphor about loving somebody who's physically falling apart in horriffic ways.