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PS. I said Vanilla Sky's my favourite. I just saw Bladerunner: The Final Cut at the TIFF Lightbox on Friday night. A masterpiece!
Time to be a slightly OT iconoclast.
JJ Abrams took one of the most thoughtful and intellectual franchises in the history of entertainment, Star Trek, and turned it into not much more than a run-of-the-mill summer shoot 'em up blockbuster.
Compare the Abrams attempts to TOS, DS9, Voyager or TNG; "Spock's" 'Not so much' as compared to the allegory on Vietnam that was "Let This Be Your Last Battlefield", the first interracial kiss on network television, CAPT Picard's insistence to the Carassian that there were, in fact THREE lights "I have been, and ever shall be, your friend", or any number of the countless high dramatic points that have characterized Star Trek. IMO no comparison, and the Abrams Star Wars effort, again based on the two previews, looks like more of the action-laden same.
My favourites are Collateral and Minority Report. Did you ever check out Open Your Eyes, the original Spanish film?
I'd rather be like Cruise than Stallone. Sadly Stallone has abused the crap out of steroids and HGH and it shows. Cruise on the other hand....that dude is ageless. He's 50 and looks better than most 30 year olds...thats what I'm aiming for lol
Stallone shares his mother's enthusiasm for plastic surgery too...
Episode III was amazing. Shame you didn't see it. I do agree Episodes I & II were a lot of galaxies away from the Original Trilogy.
aging into Richard Gere is fine... aging like Robert Redford... now that's pain.
I agree, Edward. Apart from the fact that George Lucas created some of my favorite childhood characters and universes, he can go f*ck off.
No, not just the theme. It's the sound of the TIE fighters and the blasters and the Falcon … and those three words from Han Solo.
You look quite young on your avatar there, Navetsea, but it transports me right back to 1977 (when I was 10) when the film first came out amid massive hoopla and it changed everything. Everything else suddenly paled by comparison. And the queues to see it were astonishing - hence the term "blockbuster" as people lined up patiently around the block to get in … I saw it 3 times as there wasn't any video back then, so the only way to see it was to go and buy another ticket and stand in line with all the anticipation to see again something that looked and sounded and felt so magical and special. (Hence the bitterness and resentment from fans for what Lucas later did to the franchise. He's a one-trick pony if ever there was one).
Have to agree with you D.D.Amen, every bit, Amen!
Unless you lived it, you can never truly understand what it was like.