Ash to ashes. (Taken with instagram)
Suspension Of Disbelief
- me: So, Prometheus?
- Amy: Yes, I'm in.
- me: Really? It's not too scary for you?
- Amy: I'm not afraid of things that aren't real.
- me: But wh--
- Amy: Ghosts could totally happen.
“Like anything new, it will be impossible for your mind to digest.”
Last night I had the opportunity to go see the upcoming Fox Searchlight film The Sound Of My Voice (out 4/27), co-written by and starring the charismatic Brit Marling (Another Earth). Now, I don’t want to give too much away, but I will say it’s about a cult led by a charismatic young woman out of a basement somewhere in the San Fernando valley. The first twelve minutes of the movie are online, should you want to whet your appetite (you do, trust me), but I’d avoid looking up the trailer as it gives far too much away. Suffice it say, this is an awesomely intense film that you won’t be able to get out of your head. You just have to ask yourself: Do you believe in Maggie?
Infographic of the Day: Of course the MPAA doesn’t want people to see Bully. If people stopped turning a blind eye to bullying it would no longer exist.
Good thing the MPAA is still a relevant, useful organization.
May the odds be ever in my favor. (Taken with instagram)
“Like a girl for 11 years, don’t tell her until you’re supposed to kill her.”
(via independentframeofmind)
The new Avengers poster has serious light source problems.
Margaret
Last night I saw Kenneth Lonergan’s much-delayed follow up to the wonderful You Can Count On Me. The trailer doesn’t fully express how engrossing this movie is and only the second half gets close to encapsulating what the movie is really about. Lonergan deals with the experience of being a teenager in a way that is so on the mark and, as a result, not always easy to watch. Anna Paquin is pitch perfect (even her shortcomings work in her favor) as a typical teenage girl who witnesses — and is partly responsible for — a horrific accident. Through this, Lonergan explores what happens when the already dramatic, histrionic, everything-is-the-end-of-the-world life of an average teenager is jolted by a situation is quite literally life and death. The results are mesmerizing.
The Adventures of Tin Tin: CGI
- Mom: How was this made? It's not real people.
- Dad: Computer enhanced graphics.




