tomandshell
tomandshell t1_ja6qnkg wrote
Reply to People who are rude in movie theaters should be given 24-72 hours of jail time depending on the infraction. by idapitbwidiuatabip
I’m surprised they even make it into the theater after spending 45 minutes trying to back into a parking spot. That should also earn jail time.
tomandshell t1_ja0pmj4 wrote
Reply to What is the significance of the rose in the opening scene of "American Beauty"? by ActuallyWrite206
You asked a question about a rose and then posted a long discussion of the plastic bag. I’m confused. Which one do you want to talk about?
tomandshell t1_j9yoqa3 wrote
There’s nothing bad about reading. Read as much as you can, or as little as you can.
tomandshell t1_j9tvlox wrote
Reply to Anyone else hate 3D movies? by sadlibra
I enjoy 3D. Best case scenario is when they offer both formats and let people choose, so we can all see a movie the way we prefer.
tomandshell t1_j6j5gpv wrote
Reply to I just finishes Of Mice and Men! by VravoBince
Yes, the shooting of the old dog foreshadows Lennie's fate at the end. Remember that Candy says that he shouldn't have a let a stranger shoot his dog. He makes everything seem inevitable--I enjoyed it even more the second time, as there are so many things that point toward the conclusion.
tomandshell t1_j2cl22r wrote
Reply to Ursula K. Le Guin's "The Left Hand of Darkness", fourth novel of the Hainish Cycle. by i-the-muso-1968
I read the Folio edition last year and I felt like this novel was ahead of its time. I’m surprised that it hasn’t been adapted as a film or streaming series. The relationship at the center of the book is unique and complex and ultimately moving.
tomandshell t1_j27nfsr wrote
I’ve never seen it. I love the parallel development of young Vito building up the family while Michael destroys it at roughly the same age. I can’t imagine watching all of their respective scenes isolated in chronological order with the first film stuck in between. It would completely destroy the counterpoint that the second film achieves.
tomandshell t1_j25nq1a wrote
I prefer the Coda version.
tomandshell t1_j22lwr8 wrote
Reply to Puss in Boots 2 is almost as good as Shrek 2, and you can’t tell me otherwise. by BallisticMidgets
I can’t stand Shrek 2 but I enjoyed Puss in Boots more than anything in this franchise since the first Shrek.
tomandshell t1_j1r7hm1 wrote
Let’s start a thread discussing white women who like romantic comedies or black viewers who enjoy Tyler Perry films.
tomandshell t1_j1qhhm1 wrote
Reply to Movie suggestion for 9 hr flight by jjj12345679
Airplane is a classic comedy.
tomandshell t1_j1lcigu wrote
I went through that with my taste in movies after I fell in love and got married. My cynical and pessimistic edge really softened and I was able to experience sincerity in stories for the first time in a while.
tomandshell t1_iye23sx wrote
Netflix only allowed it to play in 600 theaters for one week.
Theaters begged for more screens and more time to show it, and Netflix declined.
tomandshell t1_iyd6akr wrote
Jojo Rabbit
tomandshell t1_ixtitrn wrote
Reply to comment by an_ephemeral_life in Distribution of The Fabelmans by an_ephemeral_life
I’m in central California. It would be at least a 2.5 hour drive to see it down in LA, but I don’t have five hours of round trip driving time to spare right now.
tomandshell t1_ixtfmli wrote
Reply to Distribution of The Fabelmans by an_ephemeral_life
It’s not playing anywhere near me.
tomandshell t1_ix9uowo wrote
Reply to Why video game sourced movies are bad by 47-D
I have never finished an interactive game and wished that someone would release a passive non-interactive version. Just about everything that made it a compelling experience would be removed. What’s more fun—playing a video game or watching someone else play a video game? Video game movies are like handing the controller over to someone else and just sitting there watching them have all of the fun.
tomandshell t1_iuc8lyn wrote
I haven’t seen Shawshank Redemption in a theater, and that’s probably the best movie that I’ve only experienced on my TV at home. I’m pretty sure that all the rest of my favorite movies have been seen on the big screen at some point in my life.
tomandshell t1_iuc8b4p wrote
Reply to Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom by movieguy2004
Marion was such an incredible female lead that they just had to go in a different direction—I understand why they came up with such a different character with Willie, but she’s definitely a test of the viewer’s patience at times.
I think that fits in with the overall approach of the film, though. Rather than just doing a retread of the first and giving the audience more of the same, they went in a very different direction at every point possible. Throw out whatever you were expecting, because “anything goes.”
tomandshell t1_iu6jpiv wrote
Reply to Inside Llewyn Davis Moved me Deeply! by Dismal-Ad3069
Don’t like Fargo?
I'm not sure I agree with you a hundred percent on your police work, there, Lou.
tomandshell t1_jbdlxjt wrote
Reply to I need some guidance with iambic pentameter written poems by Intelligent_Head_214
Ozymandias by Shelley
The rhythm’s there, not always in your face. Some subtlety can make it hard to spot—unless you’re used to clapping every line. That’s what I make my freshmen do in class. No matter what I try, some still get stuck. On YouTube, there’s a video that helps: “I am a Pirate With a Wooden Leg.”