Michael Bay on Kate Beckinsale:
>“I don’t think I fit the type of actress Michael Bay had met before,” Kate said about meeting with him for Pearl Harbor. “I think he was baffled by me because my boobs weren’t bigger than my head and I wasn’t blonde.”
>“I’d just had my daughter and had lost weight, but was told that if I got the part, I’d have to work out. And I just didn’t understand why a 1940s nurse would do that,”
“When we were promoting the film, Michael was asked why he had chosen Ben [Affleck] and Josh [Hartnett], and he said, ‘I have worked with Ben before and I love him, and Josh is so manly and a wonderful actor.’
>Then when he was asked about me, he’d say, ‘Kate wasn’t so attractive that she would alienate the female audience.’ He kept saying it everywhere we went, and we went to a lot of places.”
IS HE GAY OR JUST AN ASSHOLE?
>>70173861
>‘Kate wasn’t so attractive that she would alienate the female audience.’
desu the man is just keeping it real, and understands what works.
>>70173861
he's retarded
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R4rMy1iA268
and Kate is a goddess
>>70173861
no escape from chucky
Matthew McConaughey is making a new movie about how slavery was bad.
What an innovative and ground-breaking, refreshing new premise! Have you ever seen anything like it before? Some studio must be really brave making a feature like this.
>>70173848
Starring the entire black acting community. It'll be The Butler all over again.
Matthew McConaughey is making a movie with humans in it. We get it, humans are things you put in front of the camera, we don't have to see it again. Hack.
>>70173848
I know that he will get an Oscar for this, right? You should think twice before talking shit about that great movie.
Why didn't the Greed victim just take a pound of flesh out of his leg? The side of his stomach makes no sense.
Femoral artery
>>70173755
Wouldn't be too hard to avoid that. Or take flesh from an arm, or the ass.
>>70173856
Did you see what he looked like? Hard to imagine he could even reach his leg, let alone operate on what looks nothing like pic related
ITT:
>godtier side characters
pic related for sure, based tucker
>>70173631
BZZZZ
>>70173631
niggertier transfaggot characters OP sucked dick thread
Hey /tv/, Ryan Reynolds here. We're finishing writing the Deadpool sequel and would like some quip suggestions.
Thanks!
www.reddit.com/r/movies
don't forget to give dolph some quips
>>70173460
Hey /tv/ Zack Snyder here. I need more quips in my Justice League movie.
MMM BOYS
Is Emily okay? I'm worried she might be tied up in the back of a truck near a cliff somewhere...
>>70173411
I read that as #Saturday #Slaughter #Playdate
...
>>70173411
if krasinski wanted do you think he could make jenna do ATM?
who's the old guy
ITT: Actors/Actresses you can really relate to
Of course you can, she's just like us
>Besides being a psychopathic killer I also happen to be a Conservative Republican
Ughhh....... Really?
art is inherently liberal
deal with it trumplette
>>70173191
>trump supporter
>conservative
pick one
you can't keep the democrats out of power forever, and once they're back, I'll be out on the streets
WITH ALL MY CRIMINAL BUDDIES
that joke is redpilled af
FAATHERRRR!!!
>>70172783
This is one of the few shows that my sides literally hurt from laughing so hard at.
I swear I almost died in that episode where Jen turns around and sees Moss tending the bar.
>>70172783
UNHAND ME PRIEST
>>70173227
>Gay The Musical
kinda overrated desu, best episode is The Internet
God tier tv shows.
>>70172623
you /threaded yourself mane
>>70172623
The Shield.
I haven't had a second viewing yet because I feel like I have to mentally prepare myself for that ride before I do it again.
Remember when you stepped on that Lego?
It was me, James.
Remember when you paid 15 dollars to see this shitty film?
>>70172550
Remember that Casino Royal was the only good Bond movie with Craig?
Me, James.
>>70172550
I actually loved Spectre. Saw it with my father, both of us lifelong Bond fans. We both walked out loving it, it was a big dumb spy spectacle thriller, much in the same vein of the Connery films.
Is because of their focus on quality?
>yes
>>70172433
bait
>>70172433
>More capeshit threads
>More company war threads
>/Got/ threads pepper the catalog
/Film/ when?
>"I'm not the Zodiac, and if I was, I certainly wouldn't tell you."
So was he?
>>70172381
He just told you he wasn't, thus not making him the Zodiac. But then if he isn't the Zodiac, that makes him the Zodiac according to him. It's a paradox.
Bravo Fincher
>>70172381
No
By the way that movie was ruined by Manlet Quip Jr, turning it into buddy cop like comedy.
>>70172381
No, DNA evidence proved he wasn't.
i just watched this for the first time last night (criterion blu ray) and was blown away by it. what other kurosawa movies are this good?
I like to think I ama cinema fan but I will still never watch anything old japanese and black and white because it will be too boring.
I bought this movie on DVD too, had it for about 4 years. Never watched it. I could watch it right now, but instead I will watch the jack black goosebumps movie instead.
>>70172240
Seven Samurai is amazing. I really got into it after about an hour and was glued to the screen until the end. Throne of Blood is great. Yojimbo is very good. Rashomon is decent. Ikiru is amazing. I haven't seen anything else by him yet.
>>70172319
hey, sanpai! *unzips katana* watch THIS....
Thought some of you might find this interesting. At first glance this scene of Lois opening her locker with a key is quite unassuming, but on further inspection a peculiar depth is unveiled.
There are two hidden purposes that this scene has. Firstly, it foreshadows Flash’s warning to Bruce.
>Lois Lane. She’s the key.
This message will gain importance in future movies.
Secondly, and the purpose that will be our focus of attention, the scene is a key in itself for the movie’s interpretation.
Take a look at the names on each locker. Surely they can be connected somehow if they are shown to us this clearly. After all, Snyder is very fond of adding little hints like this. The first and easiest connection to make is that the names Rigby and Lane can be linked to two Beatles songs: Eleanor Rigby (credited to Lennon/McCartney but written by McCartney,1966) and Penny Lane (also credited to Lennon/McCartney but written by McCartney, 1967). Notice how both of them are female names.
With this in mind we can link the incomplete name on the far left, that reads “-melstein”. At first one might think it’s simply another Beatles reference, since the band’s manager’s name was Brian Epstein. This might not be far from the truth, however, there is an even better connection with the other two names that can be found.
>>70172188
Miss Marmelstein (Rome, 1962) is a song first introduced in the musical I Can Get It for You Wholesale by Barbra Streisand in the minor role of secretary Miss Marmelstein. In the number Miss Marmelstein laments that no one calls her by her first or second name. This fits perfectly with the leitmotif of female names.
Next, on the far right, also scribbled crudely on a piece of adhesive tape, reads “Hendrix”. At this point this shouldn’t surprise. To follow the pattern, a female name on a Jimi Hendrix song title could be found. The only Hendrix song released on his main albums to feature a woman’s name on the title is The Wind Cries Mary(Hendrix, 1967). However, we couldn’t simply stop there. Another Hendrix song to feature on a Snyder film (Watchmen) was his cover of Dylan’s apocaliptic All Along the Watchtower (Dylan, 1967). Remember that there are other references to Snyder’s Watchmen and his other past films sprinkled throughout Batman v Superman. If we want it, we can take it even another step further, and link the name Hendrix through free association of his Dylan cover to another Dylan song used in Watchmen, The Times They Are a-Changin’ (Dylan,1964).
Finally, the name that has proven the most cryptic is Klaff. There are several candidates to whom this name might belong to. The one that seems to tie with the baby boomer musical epoch of the 60’s and 70’s is Heinrich Klaffs, a photographer of the folk/rock/jazz musicians of the era. Note that Martha Wayne was a baby boomer too, born in 1946.
Eleanor Rigby
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kE-VRFWmHJ4
Penny Lane
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S-rB0pHI9fU
Miss Marmelstein
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QMFozm0biSc
The Wind Cries Mary
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e3xy0ZpIoeE
All Along the Watchtower
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TLV4_xaYynY
The Times They Are a-Changin'
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aVUDdQS2UxA
>>70172218
But what does it all mean?
The obvious thing to do is to analyze the songs and see what they tell us about Lois Lane. Contrasted with Miss Marmelstein, who complains about the lack of intimacy of being addressed solely with her surname, Lois thrives in this and embraces her professional persona.
>I’m not a lady, I’m a journalist.
As with everything in the film, everything in it revolves around indirectly developing Superman’s character (read http://www.thegekdom.com/home/2016/4/30/a-thesis-on-batman-v-superman-dawn-of-justice), so this insight on Lois can be juxtaposed to the Kal-El/Kent dichotomy as well.
So far, Sinatra’s Night and Day and Cole Porter’s Ev’ry Time We Say Goodbye have provided depth upon further inspection of their meaning within the film’s context (see the Kubrick/Nietzsche analysis). The Eleanor Rigby/Penny Lane dichotomy is by far the most interesting in this framework.
>>70172261
On one side, Eleanor Rigby continued the transformation of the Beatles from a mainly rock and roll / pop-oriented act to a more experimental, studio-based band. With a double string quartet arrangement by George Martin and striking lyrics about loneliness, it broke sharply with popular music conventions, both musically and lyrically. Richie Unterberger of Allmusic cites the band's "singing about the neglected concerns and fates of the elderly" on the song as "just one example of why the Beatles' appeal reached so far beyond the traditional rock audience".
The song is often described as a lament for lonely people or a commentary on post-war life in Britain.
McCartney could not decide how to end the song, and his friend Pete Shotton finally suggested that the two lonely people come together too late as Father McKenzie conducts Eleanor Rigby's funeral.
On the other hand, Penny Lane is far more upbeat, although McCartney himself in interviews has brought to attention its nostalgic undertone. The song features contrasting verse-chorus form. Lyrically there are several ambiguous and surreal images. The song is seemingly narrated on a fine summer day ("beneath the blue suburban skies"), yet at the same time it is raining ("the fireman rushes in from the pouring rain") and approaching winter ("selling poppies from a tray" implies Remembrance Day, 11 November). Ian MacDonald has stated: "Seemingly naturalistic, the lyric scene is actually kaleidoscopic. As well as raining and shining at the same time, it is simultaneously summer and winter."