Spontaneity!
Friday, October 17th, 2003 09:29 amYesterday
ladymoonray and I had a rather spontaneous afternoon.
We'd intended to see a 4pm-ish showing of Underworld as it seems to be disappearing from cinemas, but found it wasn't showing on Thursday at Leicester Square.
So we checked the Metro listing and wandered over to Haymarket to see The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen.
But that listing was wrong and the only showing was at 8:40.
So we went to see Once Upon a Time in Mexico again. I'd expected to find its appeal waning, third time around, but this film just grows on me: the light! the colour! the sociopathy! And the soundtrack is excellent, too: just the right (re)mix of traditional spaghetti Western scoring and Mexican pop.
I had a vague notion of sushi, but instead we went to Livebait in Covent Garden and had cooked fish, excellent fish (I had kingfish with mashed potato and seaweedy salad), with a bottle of pink drink. Possibly because of this -- well, fish is brain food -- our shared brain cell went into overdrive, first helping us decide on which dessert to share (baked pear and cinnamon cheesecake with maple creme, if anyone cares), and then making it seem quite reasonable to head back to the UGC Haymarket and catch the 8:40 showing of The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. (I can't remember the last time -- if ever -- that I saw two films at the cinema on the same day).
Stop reading now if you don't want to know. (No spoilers though)
It's fun, but most of the best acting is in the first 30 minutes. Stuart Townsend plays Stuart Townsend again, very pretty and foppish and slinky, and calls it Dorian Grey. Sean Connery is excellent as Allen Quatermain (though one scene is spoilt by the fact that practically everyone in the Western world can recognise Connery). Peta Wilson makes a very proper Mina Harper (all the better for the glimpses of the monster), and Shane West is unexpectedly engaging as Special Agent Sawyer. Oh, and they found Nemo: Naseeruddin Shah's exotic Sufi/pirate mix doesn't get much focus, and ends up as a cypher.
I had the advantage -- and I suspect it's quite a major advantage -- of not having read Alan Moore's original comic. I wonder if Stephen Norrington has tried too hard to be true to that original, at the expense of pacing and plot in the movie (which feels very rushed and hectic in places). There are some splendid scenes, and some of the effects work very well. Others don't: I failed to be convinced by the Nautilus. I'm glad I saw it, but I have absolutely no urge to see it again.
We'd intended to see a 4pm-ish showing of Underworld as it seems to be disappearing from cinemas, but found it wasn't showing on Thursday at Leicester Square.
So we checked the Metro listing and wandered over to Haymarket to see The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen.
But that listing was wrong and the only showing was at 8:40.
So we went to see Once Upon a Time in Mexico again. I'd expected to find its appeal waning, third time around, but this film just grows on me: the light! the colour! the sociopathy! And the soundtrack is excellent, too: just the right (re)mix of traditional spaghetti Western scoring and Mexican pop.
I had a vague notion of sushi, but instead we went to Livebait in Covent Garden and had cooked fish, excellent fish (I had kingfish with mashed potato and seaweedy salad), with a bottle of pink drink. Possibly because of this -- well, fish is brain food -- our shared brain cell went into overdrive, first helping us decide on which dessert to share (baked pear and cinnamon cheesecake with maple creme, if anyone cares), and then making it seem quite reasonable to head back to the UGC Haymarket and catch the 8:40 showing of The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. (I can't remember the last time -- if ever -- that I saw two films at the cinema on the same day).
Stop reading now if you don't want to know. (No spoilers though)
It's fun, but most of the best acting is in the first 30 minutes. Stuart Townsend plays Stuart Townsend again, very pretty and foppish and slinky, and calls it Dorian Grey. Sean Connery is excellent as Allen Quatermain (though one scene is spoilt by the fact that practically everyone in the Western world can recognise Connery). Peta Wilson makes a very proper Mina Harper (all the better for the glimpses of the monster), and Shane West is unexpectedly engaging as Special Agent Sawyer. Oh, and they found Nemo: Naseeruddin Shah's exotic Sufi/pirate mix doesn't get much focus, and ends up as a cypher.
I had the advantage -- and I suspect it's quite a major advantage -- of not having read Alan Moore's original comic. I wonder if Stephen Norrington has tried too hard to be true to that original, at the expense of pacing and plot in the movie (which feels very rushed and hectic in places). There are some splendid scenes, and some of the effects work very well. Others don't: I failed to be convinced by the Nautilus. I'm glad I saw it, but I have absolutely no urge to see it again.
Re: Such a thing as being too famous
Date: Friday, October 17th, 2003 02:55 am (UTC)I'd add Whoopie Goldberg to your list, too.
Re: Such a thing as being too famous
Date: Friday, October 17th, 2003 03:07 am (UTC)Re: Such a thing as being too famous
Date: Friday, October 17th, 2003 03:31 am (UTC)