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New So then...
you would rather not think ANY films made after Woodstock are any good then.

The reason I picked THFRO, was because it was a well directed movie, with a grand plot. Tom Clancy has written several novels that have Jack Ryan in them, there are others. They all have a very good structure in them, that lead to the ease of making a manuscript out of them. They are well thought out, descriptive and seem to even have a good author behind them. The mere fact the John McTiernan is the Director, means it should have had Bruce Willis and Mel Gibson in the cast. Also maybe the Governator should have been in there as well. Sorry, but THFRO might have been able to direct itself. Well, now if Rob Reiner had directed it, would that have been okay? If not him, Francis Ford Coppola?

Now as for Top Gun, Pretty Woman, Weird Science and Porky's Revenge, all I can say is that they were entertaining, not stellar box-office movies I could see again and again and again.

Top Gun lost its luster after I was in Consumer Electronics sales. I got to hear it and see it 4-10 times a day, day-after-day, for months on end.

Pretty Woman, all I can say about a chick flick is... my wife likes it.

Weird Science, never saw it, never will, willingly.

Porky's Revenge, it lost any luster as soon as I heard it was being made (or released, whichever it was)

But then what about the recent [link|http://www.citynews.ca/news/news_13059.aspx|re-mastering to HD of the Moon Landings]? Now we should be able to see the strings and cables used to shoot it in a Studio in Area 51. Or don't you think that movie rates that much attention either.
--
[link|mailto:greg@gregfolkert.net|greg],
[link|http://www.iwethey.org/ed_curry|REMEMBER ED CURRY!] @ iwethey
PGP key: 1024D/B524687C 2003-08-05
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New now, now...
That was mere joshing on my part, spurred on by my vast amusement at your invoking THFRO (a serviceable if not, by my own standards, particularly memorable piece of popular entertainment) to establish your mise en scène credentials. But really, different flicks for different folks (and folkerts), and if your preferences and mine run to the styles of different eras, nichto problemo: it doesn't mean that your tastes, however misguided, are any reflection on your fine qualities as a human being (cue "Slippery when Sarcastic" sign). Incidentally, the rogues' gallery of flicks I cited (Top Gun, etc) were none of them titles I've actually seen.

As it happens, Woodstock falls outside the period I was referring to when I alluded nostalgically to a more leisurely, more discursive aesthetic of editing. The domestic product had started to become disagreeably frenetic by the mid-sixties.

Now as to Tom Clancy, I stand by [link|http://z.iwethey.org/forums/render/content/show?contentid=88094|my earlier observations]: "bloated, self-indulgent and utterly devoid of literary merit...a smug, parochial, deeply naive and breathtakingly vulgar man." His career describes a curious arc: not the parabola of the typical novelist (although I would not apply this term to Clancy, whose work product is better described as "heavy booklike artifacts"), but a steady descent from his Red October debut to the cringe-inducing (and indifferently-selling) excesses of late titles like The Bear and the Dragon. I speak as one who inherited and read several paperback editions from my late mama: I particularly savor the memory of 1988's Cardinal of the Kremlin, in which the Afghan mujahideen are depicted in heroic colors as, under the benign guidance of the Great White Father in Washington, they kick the asses of the wicked atheistic Rooskie infidels. Hah! Bet Clancy would like that one back!

cordially,
Die Welt ist alles, was der Fall ist.
New Much better.
I don't have a pitiful excuse to hate you.

But I have a question then. Have you ever seen [link|http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0055809/|Boys' Night Out]? If so, what is your thoughts on it?
--
[link|mailto:greg@gregfolkert.net|greg],
[link|http://www.iwethey.org/ed_curry|REMEMBER ED CURRY!] @ iwethey
PGP key: 1024D/B524687C 2003-08-05
Fingerprint: E1D3 E3D7 5850 957E FED0  2B3A ED66 6971 B524 687C
Alternate Fingerprint: 09F9 1102 9D74  E35B D841 56C5 6356 88C0
Alternate Fingerprint: 455F E104 22CA  29C4 933F 9505 2B79 2AB2
     Ratatouille (the movie, not the dish) - (folkert) - (16)
         Saw it at the drive-in. - (Lily) - (3)
             But did you wait for the climax? -NT - (Steve Lowe) - (2)
                 Heh heh, he said "climax". - (bepatient)
                 Oh very funny - (Lily)
         just returned from the matinee - (rcareaga) - (9)
             I disagree with the opinion... - (folkert) - (8)
                 Just watched 'Hunt...' again. - (static) - (1)
                     Book was better - (bepatient)
                 I probably missed the news... - (rcareaga) - (4)
                     well, after watching Walter Brennan doing all of those horse - (boxley)
                     So then... - (folkert) - (2)
                         now, now... - (rcareaga) - (1)
                             Much better. - (folkert)
                 Favorite line, from The Train Job - (drewk)
         What kind of board were the kids getting: Particle, Surf...? -NT - (CRConrad) - (1)
             It was a stale dried up pizza. :) -NT - (a6l6e6x)

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