Showing posts with label film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label film. Show all posts

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire and March Madness Sunday

I am watching Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
“Kinda. Watching it, Tupac and Biggie and the NCAA games while cooking.”
169 others are also watching Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire on GetGlue.com
I’m definitely late to the bandwagon when it comes to the Harry Potter movies.  I have only ever seen the 1st movie in theaters.  I bought the final book on the strentgh of reading someone else’s copy of the book before it.
While I imagine this movie would have been amazing to seen on the large screen.  The only parts that capture my interest are the ball, the flashbacks, the Cedric-Harry moments and the heartwrenching scene when Cedric’s father keens over his son’s dead body.
I was cooking while this was going on.  Sundays are usually when I make things like stews and beans.  I made beans and cornbread.
The Tupac/Biggie documentary was interesting enough.  Rather than focusing on how both men died only, it delves into who they were. 
March Madness is in full swing. Right now the teams competing are ones that I’m not as engaged in. I check in now and again to see the scores.
I imagine that ABC Family, which aired this movie, decided that it was an appropriate one for March Madness, being that it is about competition.

I am watching Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire

“Kinda. Watching it, Tupac and Biggie and the NCAA games while cooking.”



I’m definitely late to the bandwagon when it comes to the Harry Potter movies.  I have only ever seen the 1st movie in theaters.  I bought the final book on the strentgh of reading someone else’s copy of the book before it.

While I imagine this movie would have been amazing to seen on the large screen.  The only parts that capture my interest are the ball, the flashbacks, the Cedric-Harry moments and the heartwrenching scene when Cedric’s father keens over his son’s dead body.

I was cooking while this was going on.  Sundays are usually when I make things like stews and beans.  I made beans and cornbread.

The Tupac/Biggie documentary was interesting enough.  Rather than focusing on how both men died only, it delves into who they were.

March Madness is in full swing. Right now the teams competing are ones that I’m not as engaged in. I check in now and again to see the scores.

I imagine that ABC Family, which aired this movie, decided that it was an appropriate one for March Madness, being that it is about competition.

169 others are also watching Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire on GetGlue.com

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

Robert Altman is dead

One of the last American film mavericks has died at the age of 82.

I became aware of Altman's work in the usual fashion-I saw a movie of his when I was a child and only understood what I was looking at when I got older. The movie was "Popeye" and at the time it was a big thing because Robin Williams was starring in it. As a very small child, I did not like it because it was not animated.

The next Altman movie I saw was "M*A*S*H*," which was a little hard to watch initially because I grew up with the tv series and so seeing Donald Sutherland as Hawkeye and a different Henry Blake was weird. I also was not ready for the meaness and the daily brutality that the characters dealt with. I think in many ways the movie made the better case for how people create a livable situation out of the unthinkable, simply because Robert Altman was able to elicit stories and reactions that were definitely not allowable on television during the time period of the tv series.

I then saw the "Long Goodbye " and "Nashville", both of which I think were as much a commentary on the 1970s as they were their own narrative. I remembered when "Tanner '88" came out, I cursed the fact that we did not have cable. I remembered thinking that it had to be more interesting that some of what was on tv at the time. I am pleased that Altman was able to do an update to Tanner.

The last Altman film I saw was "The Prairie Home Companion" and I was not disappointed. I think that it was a fitting end to a strange and wonderful career. I wonder if Sweet By and By was sang at his funeral.

Review: The Tale of the Dark Crystal

The Tale of the Dark Crystal by Donna Bass My rating: 4 of 5 stars View all my reviews