I'm re-watching the first dvd I ever owned - Pleasantville - which I haven't seen in years.
and it's freakin' cracking me up.
not because it's so funny, but bc
1) the logo swish at the beginning of the dvd is for "New Line Home Video"
2) there is no sound on this dvd until the movie starts
3) I'd totally forgetten about Reese Witherspoon and Don Knotts
4) didn't that syrup just spill onto the table?
5) omg! Paul Walker!
6) and Marc Blucas!!!!!
7) how did I miss that lack of toilets in the restroom all those other times I've watched this movie?
8) why does Pleasantville even have a lover's lane? (I guess even Pleasantville needs something to caution their kids about)
9) kids screwing causes a king sized bed to appear at the department store?
10) the portfolio
11) ha! the townspeople that make up the crowd are arranged in neat rows when "Bud" gets his medal
12) dude! Jonathon!
(I always hated how he explained Huckleberry Finn)
13) Pleasantville Public Library - the sign is color!
14) Big Bob is pinning George :)
15) ok, so, the make-up explains the skin, but how did the hair go back to b&w?
(I love that when she asks if it looks ok, he doesn't answer yes, he says that it looks like it did. i also love that Bill is more interested in the impressionists and abstract paintings than the naked people)
16) and David explains the movie to the stupid people in the audience
17) so....the kids don't know what rain is - but the adults do?
18) so.......the national anthem isn't allowed (if it's recorded)?
"Across the Universe" is such the perfect song to end on .....and it makes me want to re-watch Across the Universe
overall, I love the unsubtleness of it all. anvil-sized metaphors and themes to be sure, but back in the dark ages before the internets - before finding people who I could discuss tv and movies with - (and in the absence of any decent media literacy in school) I must admit that I kinda needed the anvil-sized metaphors to help me see that movies could be more intellectual than Sneakers. that's part of why i love Buffy, too. that show taught me more about film as literature than just about anything else out there.
Friday, August 29, 2008
Swell!
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
(Hi. Found you linked at Feminist SF Carnival.)
It wasn't specifically kids having sex that generated the king-sized bed. It was the existence of sex at all. Hollywood went through a period of strict censorship, when they weren't allowed to suggest that even married couples had sex, because that was too suggestive, and so they'd show married couples going to bed in separate twin beds. Why would you need a bigger bed when there's never more than one person in it?
"...and so they'd show married couples going to bed in separate twin beds"
I know - I've seen episodes I Love Lucy before .
It was more the jump from the Pleasantville kids fooling around to their parents being presented with king sized beds that struck me as funny. I got the meaning of it all. It just wasn't the smoothest transition in the movie.
Post a Comment