If they provided the recipe in the credits, I'd watch it.Noise Monkey wrote:He makes a mean chicken pot pie.
Who's going to see Cloverfield? (warning - spoilers)
Forum rules
- Please use the forum attachment system for jam images, or link to the CG site specific to the Jam.
- Mark threads containing nudity in inlined images as NSFW
- Read The rules post for specifics
- Please use the forum attachment system for jam images, or link to the CG site specific to the Jam.
- Mark threads containing nudity in inlined images as NSFW
- Read The rules post for specifics
- Nanda
- Cartoon Hero
- Posts: 4268
- Joined: Fri Jan 07, 2005 9:06 am
- Location: Peeking out of the closet.
- Contact:
That would depend on the story, kolter. The point is, this is often the reality of these situations, and it's almost never represented in media as such, because in our society, if a woman strays from what is expected of her, she is usually much more severely punished than her male equivalent. Men have affairs in films and nobody blinks. A woman has an affair in a film, and inevitablty something awful happens to her. Or, if she does make it through alright, it's because her husband has been set up as a bully or a philanderer. We have a really warped view of women in this country, and it shows in our narratives. Want to make a popular horror film? Just hack up a few naked, screaming women. Viola!rkolter wrote:Dunno. Why is the woman staying with her husband, if she's getting her fulfillment elsewhere?
- Jim North
- Cartoon Hero
- Posts: 6659
- Joined: Tue Nov 04, 2003 10:55 pm
- Location: The Omnipresent Here
- Contact:
Wow, that's . . . not what I pulled from it at all. Especially since it says stuff like "Of course, not all critics use angst as a benchmark for quality" and seems to put a hell of a lot of the blame on the creators themselves for inundating the market with super-angsty pieces. Further, towards the end they talk about how the opposite effect is starting to take place as a backlash.yeahduff wrote:Treating critics as some sort of monolith with bullshit excuses and generalizations.
And hell, what they're saying seems quite a bit in line with what you pointed out before (that people don't like Juno because it's supposedly glossing over something that's typically seen as negative) anyway, which is why I posted a link to it. I may be reading into this wrong, but it would seem to me that you're suddenly offended by your own side of the issue.
I don't see how you could hate PA for that, since "happy" isn't a word I'd even remotely consider using to describe it. I've been reading it for a few years now and "gleefully sociopathic" would be the closest I'd dare to get.I don't hate Penny Arcade because it's happy, I hate it because it sucks.
Existence is a series of catastrophes through which everything barely but continually survives.
- TheSuburbanLetdown
- Destroyer of Property Value
- Posts: 12714
- Joined: Wed May 05, 2004 8:38 pm
- Location: explod
-
- Regular Poster
- Posts: 649
- Joined: Fri Dec 03, 2004 9:02 pm
- Location: Los Angeles/ New York City
I just saw this movie last night, and it was a lot better than I thought it would be. Maybe it's because I live in NY and so I know all the neighborhoods and how to travel around Manhattan (like getting from SoHo to Columbus Circle going up the 6 line is quite a trek), but it really creeped me out- much more than Blair Witch (if we're all comparing this movie to that b/c of the way it was filmed).
Anyway, I'm not sure how scary this would be for people who don't live in the city. I have a feeling that if I was living in Los Angeles, I wouldn't really quite realize how stressful this movie is.
It made me think that if the city were under attack by something and I had to leave Manhattan, what would be the best way. In my neighbhorhood, it would be easy (it also helps that it's practically in the Bronx), but if I was trying to evacuate from my boyfriend's place in the West Village, it would be more difficult. I'm guessing I would try to take some sort of tunnel to New Jersey. Otherwise I would run toward Chinatown to take the Williamsburg Bridge to Brooklyn.
Of course, lots of people would probably be trying to cross all the bridges to Brooklyn, so unless I was right there, I would probably have a very slim chance of surviving if the island was going through some sort of air raid (or alien monster in this case).
Anyway, if the movie made me think of all the ways I could try to escape the island, it did a pretty decent job of freaking me out.
That said- I don't know if I would recommend people to actually pay money to see it in theaters.
Anyway, I'm not sure how scary this would be for people who don't live in the city. I have a feeling that if I was living in Los Angeles, I wouldn't really quite realize how stressful this movie is.
It made me think that if the city were under attack by something and I had to leave Manhattan, what would be the best way. In my neighbhorhood, it would be easy (it also helps that it's practically in the Bronx), but if I was trying to evacuate from my boyfriend's place in the West Village, it would be more difficult. I'm guessing I would try to take some sort of tunnel to New Jersey. Otherwise I would run toward Chinatown to take the Williamsburg Bridge to Brooklyn.
Of course, lots of people would probably be trying to cross all the bridges to Brooklyn, so unless I was right there, I would probably have a very slim chance of surviving if the island was going through some sort of air raid (or alien monster in this case).
Anyway, if the movie made me think of all the ways I could try to escape the island, it did a pretty decent job of freaking me out.
That said- I don't know if I would recommend people to actually pay money to see it in theaters.
- Swimmingtrunks
- Regular Poster
- Posts: 54
- Joined: Thu Feb 03, 2005 3:36 pm
- Contact:
Wasn't planning on seeing it, but ended up paying a little too much to see it this weekend. Not saying it wasn't good- I liked it. I just have problems finding a movie that really is of enough quality that I don't feel ripped off for paying over $6 to see it.
It was kind of predictable- I expected things to happen, and while they didn't generally happen when/how I thought they would, character deaths- and the ending, especially- came as no surprise to me. Also, the actual story being told was a little on the lame side.
That being said, I think it was very good at being the movie it was meant to be. I was compelled by the general concept- seeing the monster movie not through third-person, or the hero's eyes- but following the story of innocent bystanders, who just happen to have the bad luck of being caught up in it. Aside from a camera and an admittedly far-fetched rescue, these guys are the extras in the now more than often digitally-created crowds. The story of an extra isn't really ever going to be as compelling or satisfying as the story of the hero, but the concept of it- I like it. A lot. I was talking with my friend today, and we were discussing- since they are planning on making this thing a franchise- how interesting it would be if, instead of making your typical sequel, they took the same situation, the same turn of events, and showed a completely different account of it.
Problems I had with it (SPOILERS):
I can hold up my suspension of disbelief for monsters appearing from nowhere, people exploding from bites, etc- but I just couldn't accept that someone impaled through the chest would be able to run down the street shortly later- at a pace to match her healthier friends, no less. Surviving the helicopter crash seemed like a really big stretch too.
It was kind of predictable- I expected things to happen, and while they didn't generally happen when/how I thought they would, character deaths- and the ending, especially- came as no surprise to me. Also, the actual story being told was a little on the lame side.
That being said, I think it was very good at being the movie it was meant to be. I was compelled by the general concept- seeing the monster movie not through third-person, or the hero's eyes- but following the story of innocent bystanders, who just happen to have the bad luck of being caught up in it. Aside from a camera and an admittedly far-fetched rescue, these guys are the extras in the now more than often digitally-created crowds. The story of an extra isn't really ever going to be as compelling or satisfying as the story of the hero, but the concept of it- I like it. A lot. I was talking with my friend today, and we were discussing- since they are planning on making this thing a franchise- how interesting it would be if, instead of making your typical sequel, they took the same situation, the same turn of events, and showed a completely different account of it.
Problems I had with it (SPOILERS):
I can hold up my suspension of disbelief for monsters appearing from nowhere, people exploding from bites, etc- but I just couldn't accept that someone impaled through the chest would be able to run down the street shortly later- at a pace to match her healthier friends, no less. Surviving the helicopter crash seemed like a really big stretch too.
<a href="http://antagonist.swimtrunkstudio.com"><img src="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v51/S ... 3.jpg"></a>
- IVstudios
- Cartoon Hero
- Posts: 3660
- Joined: Sun Dec 14, 2003 11:52 am
- Location: My little office
- Contact:
According to what I heard, they are planning to do just that.swimmingtrunks wrote:since they are planning on making this thing a franchise- how interesting it would be if, instead of making your typical sequel, they took the same situation, the same turn of events, and showed a completely different account of it.
- Rkolter
- Destroyer of Words (Moderator)
- Posts: 16399
- Joined: Tue Jun 24, 2003 4:34 am
- Location: It's equally probable that I'm everywhere.
- Contact:
That would be awesome. They should do St. Louis next! We never get attacked by monsters.ivstudios wrote:According to what I heard, they are planning to do just that.swimmingtrunks wrote:since they are planning on making this thing a franchise- how interesting it would be if, instead of making your typical sequel, they took the same situation, the same turn of events, and showed a completely different account of it.

- Dr Legostar
- Cartoon Villain
- Posts: 15660
- Joined: Tue Jun 15, 2004 1:40 pm
- Location: right outside your window.
- Contact:
you had that black hole monster.rkolter wrote:That would be awesome. They should do St. Louis next! We never get attacked by monsters.ivstudios wrote:According to what I heard, they are planning to do just that.swimmingtrunks wrote:since they are planning on making this thing a franchise- how interesting it would be if, instead of making your typical sequel, they took the same situation, the same turn of events, and showed a completely different account of it.
-D. M. Jeftinija Pharm.D., Ph.D. -- Yes, I've got two doctorates and I'm arrogant about it, what have *you* done with *your* life?
"People who don't care about anything will never understand the people who do." "yeah.. but we won't care."
"Legostar's on the first page of the guide. His opinion is worth more than both of yours."--Yeahduff

"People who don't care about anything will never understand the people who do." "yeah.. but we won't care."
"Legostar's on the first page of the guide. His opinion is worth more than both of yours."--Yeahduff

- Swimmingtrunks
- Regular Poster
- Posts: 54
- Joined: Thu Feb 03, 2005 3:36 pm
- Contact:
Awesome. The only problem with it being, the premise miiight get a little redundant after a couple of sequels.ivstudios wrote:According to what I heard, they are planning to do just that.swimmingtrunks wrote:since they are planning on making this thing a franchise- how interesting it would be if, instead of making your typical sequel, they took the same situation, the same turn of events, and showed a completely different account of it.
<a href="http://antagonist.swimtrunkstudio.com"><img src="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v51/S ... 3.jpg"></a>
- Noise Monkey
- Smells of pee
- Posts: 5848
- Joined: Mon Jun 16, 2003 7:14 am
- Location: A little short...
- Contact:
The story can't be about the monster, anyway. There's only so much you can do if the story is just "a monster attacks". The real hook needs to be in the story that unfolds because of it.swimmingtrunks wrote:Awesome. The only problem with it being, the premise miiight get a little redundant after a couple of sequels.ivstudios wrote:According to what I heard, they are planning to do just that.swimmingtrunks wrote:since they are planning on making this thing a franchise- how interesting it would be if, instead of making your typical sequel, they took the same situation, the same turn of events, and showed a completely different account of it.
Now, they just need to find a story to unfold...
- Rkolter
- Destroyer of Words (Moderator)
- Posts: 16399
- Joined: Tue Jun 24, 2003 4:34 am
- Location: It's equally probable that I'm everywhere.
- Contact:
(spoilers below)
There seemed clearly to me to be multiple monsters - the big momma in the city wreaking havoc with paws that reach twenty stories up buildings and span ten stories across, the smaller one in Central Park that would waste it's time eating one guy, the whatever it was tentacled thing that hit the bridge, the small spider-monsters... I could see several sequals with this array of monsters attacking cities.
There seemed clearly to me to be multiple monsters - the big momma in the city wreaking havoc with paws that reach twenty stories up buildings and span ten stories across, the smaller one in Central Park that would waste it's time eating one guy, the whatever it was tentacled thing that hit the bridge, the small spider-monsters... I could see several sequals with this array of monsters attacking cities.
- Jim North
- Cartoon Hero
- Posts: 6659
- Joined: Tue Nov 04, 2003 10:55 pm
- Location: The Omnipresent Here
- Contact:
Finally got to see Cloverfield today. Good stuff, enjoyed it. Only two problems come to mind . . .
SPOILERS AHOY
First, there were several lines of dialogue that were either lame, cheesy, cliche, or a mix of all three. The scene where Rob finally meets back up with Beth in her ruined apartment was especially bad. It was like listening to a bit in a poorly written romance novel, not at all believable under the circumstances. Fortunately, all the best lines were given to cameraman Hud.
Second, the noise that the parasite spider things make. They're scary little critters and all, but it kind of takes away from the moment when they let out something that sounds like it was ripped straight from a badly made 70's action cartoon. If I want to hear the Herculoids, I'll watch the Herculoids, thank you.
But the rest was pretty damn cool. Definitely a buy when it comes out on DVD.
SPOILERS AHOY
First, there were several lines of dialogue that were either lame, cheesy, cliche, or a mix of all three. The scene where Rob finally meets back up with Beth in her ruined apartment was especially bad. It was like listening to a bit in a poorly written romance novel, not at all believable under the circumstances. Fortunately, all the best lines were given to cameraman Hud.
Second, the noise that the parasite spider things make. They're scary little critters and all, but it kind of takes away from the moment when they let out something that sounds like it was ripped straight from a badly made 70's action cartoon. If I want to hear the Herculoids, I'll watch the Herculoids, thank you.
But the rest was pretty damn cool. Definitely a buy when it comes out on DVD.
This was all the same single monster. The spider parasites (it's been confirmed that they're parasites, by the by) are the only other monsters running around.rkolter wrote:There seemed clearly to me to be multiple monsters - the big momma in the city wreaking havoc with paws that reach twenty stories up buildings and span ten stories across, the smaller one in Central Park that would waste it's time eating one guy, the whatever it was tentacled thing that hit the bridge,
Existence is a series of catastrophes through which everything barely but continually survives.