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JonParker

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Posts posted by JonParker

  1. You call it a paraphrase, I call it a lie. What the hell, it's just semantics.

     

    Of course, the line immediately preceeding that statement was "I will never cede America's security to any institution or any other country. No one gets a veto over our security. No one." No equivocation there, but never let the truth stand in the way of a good wingnut meme, eh?

     

    And yes, it's just semantics. I consider waterboarding torture, you consider it fraternity hijinks. I consider members of the US military in charge of a prison to be the US military, you consider them "individuals."

     

    And you think I'm consumed with conspiracy theories, and I think you're a whackjob for letting a single line in a movie turn into 5 pages of ranting about how liberals are trying to brainwash movie audiences.

     

    And so it goes...

  2. Ok, Matt, I'll take your bait. Here's a lie and slander from your own post:

     

    "It reminds me of Kerry saying he thought we should get the UN's persmission before we do anything in our own interest "

     

    Kerry never said that. Period. Find me a direct quote from him where he says that. And don't repeat his "global test" line from the debate, because that does not equate with what you claim he said.

     

    As for torture, secret prisons, and destroying another nation, you're trying to bait me into a war of semantics. Abu Graib, CIA detainment facilities in Eastern Europe, and Iraq are my answers, which you damn well know.

  3. I'm gonna do my best to ignore the wingnut posts here, mostly because there's simply no way to respond to their lies and slander without going way, way off topic. Suffice it to say that Superman never stood for torture, secret prisons, and destroying other nations on the basis of specious reasoning.

     

    I haven't seen the movie yet, although I'm going next week. I didn't care for the original Christopher Reeve movie, although the second one was excellent. Terence Stamp made a much more menacing villain than Hackman, and the reduced roles of Ned Beatty and Valerie Perrine made it much less campy.

     

    The George Reeves series was good in the beginning, but got silly in the third and fourth seasons.

     

    Smallville is true to the character, but at times starts to resemble "Dawson's Creek."

  4. My most memorable was taking a large dose of a halluginogenic substance before going to see "Star Trek: The Motion Picture." I was becoming seriously disturbed by my hands for some reason, and I felt a huge sigh of relief when the movie started. I could deal with Klingons.

     

    My best was taking a date to a revival of "The Big Sleep. There was no one around when we went in, so I made some noise. A guy came out of the back, and I asked him if he was showing the movie. "Sure, if you want to see it," he said, so we sat there in the middle of a deserted theater watching Bogie and Bacall.

     

    When my girlfriend and I went to see "The Two Towers," there was a man behind us talking in Farsi with a low voice through the whole movie. I turned around to ask him to be quiet, and saw that he was watching the movie but murmuring to another man sitting beside him. I realized that he was translating for his friend, and didn't have the heart to ask him to stop.

  5. Going east on 495 around Washington DC, somewhere around Connecticut Avenue you can see the spires of the Mormon Temple rising over the beltway.

     

    For years graffiti artists have spray painted one of the bridges over the highway at that spot with the words "Surrender Dorothy!"

  6. "Beyond the Valley of the Dolls" was released the same day. It's a beautiful two disk set, with a commentary by Roger Ebert and another by the cast (Dolly Read, Cynthia Myers, John Lazar, etc). I'm not sure what's on the second disk yet, but it's apparently got some documentaries and other stuff.

     

    This is the single best movie ever made. Period.

  7. Taking one's chances is like taking a bath, because sometimes you end up feeling comfortable and warm, and sometimes there is something terrible lurking around that you cannot see until it is too late and you can do nothing else but scream and cling to a plastic duck.

  8. Jumpraven,

     

    I agree with you on Sin City, Lord of the Rings and Elephant. I enjoyed Spiderman I and Batman Begins, but I hated Spiderman 2. Napoleon Dynamite seems to be well loved, but it was a bit too much like making fun of losers in high school for my taste.

     

    Sadly, I havent seen most of the rest of your list, but I keep meaning to Netflix most of them.

  9. I always smile and say aloud "Hey Nat!" when I see Nat Pendleton in a film. Seriously. I've been a fan since I first saw him in "Penthouse" with Warner Baxter.

     

    Marie Dressler is the classic "oddly appealing" actress. I think Tor Johnson is fun to watch.

  10. I'm with Rocky Road on "I Married A Monster.." Good flick.

     

    However, I thought of another one: Corman's 1957 classic "The Saga of the Viking Women and Their Voyage to the Waters of the Great Sea Serpent." Come to think of it, you could just cut and paste Corman's entire oeuvre from IMDB onto the list.

     

    And let's not forget "The Wild Angels," which started the whole AIP Hell's Angels cycle.

  11. I have a Panasonic DMR-EH50 which in theory will only accept 8X disks. I've been using 16X Memorex media in it, and it works fine with only a couple of coasters out of 200 or so movies. Firmware can help, but so can switching brands of media.

     

    I do think it's a good idea if you can afford it to get a machine with an internal hard drive. I record to the hard drive, then dub the DVDs from there. If I lose a DVD or two along the way, I haven't lost the movie.

  12. Your comments on this topic, on the other hand, provide an excellent examination of the matter: "modern" advertising of a "classical" work (when the work itself is not compromised) is perfectly acceptable, saavy and enjoyable when done properly.

     

    It is also a way to get and keep viewers interested. Nickelodeon repackaged old sitcoms with smart and funny marketing, and made such a success of it that they ended up creating the TV Land channel.

     

    Frankly, I'd like to see TCM follow in their footsteps. It's certainly a better way of bringing in younger viewers than having a bunch of teens sitting around talking.

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