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And btw everybody, if you haven't already gotten to know, Dodo has /amazing/ taste in film!
As does Pennquaker. 🙂And btw everybody, if you haven't already gotten to know, Dodo has /amazing/ taste in film!
And btw everybody, if you haven't already gotten to know, Dodo has /amazing/ taste in film!
No, I'd go with Rocky II, Rocky III, Rocky IV, Rocky V, and Rocky Balboa above those, I'm afraid. Philly pride!
i also have badass facebook policies. usually, im not a first friender, and i return all pokes, everytime, for as long as it takes. I've been poking two people for over a year. They must have the same policy.
haha I love it, especially the pokes part. I agree with j-weezy, there is something vaguely sexual about facebook pokes...
Nooooo! Say it ain't so!this thread just withered and died...
WAIT!
You omitted the original Rocky, but included Rocky V??
What are you thinking?
These are called poking wars. I've been in 3 for over a year now.
There is NOTHING vague about it.
And if anyone wants to be my facebook friend, I'm on the group and if you can't figure out who I am then you shouldn't be going to an MDPhD program
Rockys- great movies (except number 5, i didn't love it, especially after the climax of #4
THIS thread also needs to slow down, I took a three hour nap after my final and you kids had already filled up over a page
Ok, trying to think up a potentially provocative statement...
...Aah, I think I've got it. I've always wondered why "Citizen Kane" is always at the top of the AFI's Top 100 list of films. I mean, I know it's technically very accomplished and perhaps Orson Welles's best work, but compared to some of my other favourites, it lacks heart. I'm not sure it belongs at the very top.
*Hopes Pennquaker won't chew me alive for this!*
Oooh ooh, I want to be your facebook friend. Not in the group but I stalked you nonetheless.
ooooh and meowkatt and marctam too
No love pour moi?
Gone with the Wind. My favorite movie of all time. I could watch it every day and not get bored. I love Scarlett! (prepares for flood of Scarlett attacks)
I can't find you! I already tried, remember, after Yale. You need to step it up and friend me.
It was a really, really hard call not to put GWTW in my top 10 faves!
"This is one night you won't turn me out" 🙂.
friendship consummated.
"No, I don't think I will kiss you, although you need kissing, badly. That's what's wrong with you. You should be kissed and often, and by someone who knows how."
"Fiddle-dee-dee. War, war, war; this war talk's spoiling all the fun at every party this spring. I get so bored I could scream."
It's a four-hour movie...this could go on for a /long/ time 😉.
I never get poked.Let the poking begin!
I like your personal favourites in English, Pennquaker. Mine, in no particular order, are:
Casablanca
Notorious
Spellbound
Rebecca
Roman Holiday
The Shop Around the Corner (The original "You've Got Mail" from 1940)
After Sunrise...
Sliding Doors
Sense & Sensibility (1995)
An Affair to Remember (way better than Sleepless in Seattle, which was sort of inspired by it)
Bend It Like Beckham
The Namesake
Atonement
Love Story*
I'm sure I've forgotten a few... and 10 was too few, so I bent the rules a bit.
*You can't really claim to have seen this movie unless you've been a froshie here and watched it during orientation week with members of the Crimson Key society shouting out jokes and mocking punchlines, or pointing out factual errors ("That's Emerson Hall, not Barrett.") Hilarious comedy.![]()
I never get poked.
Interesting. I really identified with both the immigrant parents and the younger generation in the movie, but given my history that's hardly surprising! Jhumpa Lahiri's one of my favourite contemporary authors, and I thought Mira Nair did a beautiful job bringing her novel to life.I agree with you on most of these although I must say i didn't care much for the namesake. It fell flat for me.
And my list of favourite classic Hindi movies from the 50s, 60s, etc. down to the presnt is just as long, but I won't bore any of you with that.
Pickles, I think Rebecca may be the best adaptation of a literary classic ever. That was also my introduction to Alfred Hitchcock, with whom I am obsessed.Dodo!!
You like Rebecca too??
Awesome, I should have known with the shared Jane Austen love.
So I would like Atonement, then? I have not seen it yet.
Pickles, I think Rebecca may be the best adaptation of a literary classic ever. That was also my introduction to Alfred Hitchcock, with whom I am obsessed.
And yeah, I think you may like Atonement if you like beautifully photographed, character-driven film adaptations based on a well-written novel... I personally think it's the best movie I've seen all year.
Meh, I actually liked Hitchock's film better than Daphne Du Maurier's book. Much like The Silence of the Lambs, I felt that the director and screenwriter did an excellent job of cutting out a lot of the fat and leaving the really good bits.
And don't hurt me...but I didn't care so much for Atonement (though I did like the book). It felt like a formula picture to me. *covers head*
I think that might be a good idea. That way you won't lose the impact of the ending if you try to read the book after watching the movie.Should I wait to read the book?
As for Rebecca, I remember thinking the first time I watched it, "Wow, that's exactly how I pictured it in my head from reading the book." The only time that's ever happened...
I totally agree. AoGG I was great; AoGG II deviated from the story a bit but was still fine. AoGG III - euuugh!!!I feel the same way.
You know what is the complete opposite - have you seen Anne of Green Gables: The Continuing Story? Gag me!
I totally agree. AoGG I was great; AoGG II deviated from the story a bit but was still fine. AoGG III - euuugh!!!