Sounds pretty lame.
Sounds pretty lame.
They are very different films. Carpenter's film is a paranoid fest and one of the most cynical films ever made by a major studio. The original is more about two camps who can't get along and have to in order to defeat a common foe. They are both creepy but in different ways.
Am I the only one who loves both versions of The Thing? (And I do mean the 1951 and the '82.)
This is all about politics.
I don't know what the hell a Hipster Bandwagon is but it's weird and pissed off whatever it is.
The movie looks and sounds bad (if that leaked script is to be believed) but this has become something akin to insanity.
He was a great storyteller. He understood the medium so well and how to hook you and get you involved and it's a lesson many modern filmmakers could profit from as well.
Oh, I hope they don't remake It Happened One Night…
Whoops! I don't know how I got that confused. Was I thinking of King of Kings? Anyway, yes he was a superb silent filmmaker, though I appreciated elements of his talkies such as Sign Of The Cross or Cleopatra. I was always fond of the underrated silent, his last in fact, The Godless Girl. It was a tad melodramatic but…
The original silent DeMille epics are really worth seeing and should be better remembered by film buffs. They are really quite stunning, especially the 1926 Ben Hur.(Which was NOT DeMille, but see it anyway!)
I think it's because this is the franchise he most readily identified with. He states this in the video.
That just sounds obnoxious.
"Article"
Right on the money!
That's exactly how I'd describe her "facial expression."
Rust In Peace is one of the greatest metal albums of all time.
Ah, the dream of a film aficionado!
That is SUCH a random reference…or two!
God bless that answer.
I think getting rid of physical media completely would be a fool's errand. Things such as books, cds, DVDs, etc. give the consumer freedom of choice. You are never at the mercy of what is carried on Netflix, what you can stream or how to power it. Plus, especially as a classic film fan, there's really not nearly…