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Post by urrutiap on Aug 22, 2017 19:38:37 GMT -5
Comic Book Villains from way back in 2002. Ive heard about it but never had the chance to watch it.
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Post by codystarbuck on Aug 22, 2017 20:27:03 GMT -5
Comic Book Villains from way back in 2002. Ive heard about it but never had the chance to watch it. Has its moments but doesn't quite come together. Mark Hamill's Comic Book: The Movie, is a pretty good one. Of course, Kevin Smith's Mall Rats and Chasing Amy involve comic books and shops and conventions. Plus, Kick Ass.
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Post by Reptisaurus! on Aug 22, 2017 20:37:43 GMT -5
True Romance? I think?
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Post by Cheswick on Aug 22, 2017 21:08:15 GMT -5
Yes. Christian Slater's character worked in one.
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Post by Cheswick on Aug 22, 2017 21:11:51 GMT -5
Lost Boys. Corey Feldman's character worked in one.
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Post by The Captain on Aug 23, 2017 8:00:34 GMT -5
Comic Book Villains from way back in 2002. Ive heard about it but never had the chance to watch it. I bought a copy of it, watched it once, and wasn't impressed, so it hasn't left the shelf in close to 15 years.
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Post by adamwarlock2099 on Aug 23, 2017 9:34:42 GMT -5
Comic Book Villains from way back in 2002. Ive heard about it but never had the chance to watch it. Has its moments but doesn't quite come together. Mark Hamill's Comic Book: The Movie, is a pretty good one. Of course, Kevin Smith's Mall Rats and Chasing Amy involve comic books and shops and conventions. Plus, Kick Ass. The best, if not only, good thing Kevin Smith has offered society.
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Post by codystarbuck on Aug 23, 2017 10:32:52 GMT -5
Has its moments but doesn't quite come together. Mark Hamill's Comic Book: The Movie, is a pretty good one. Of course, Kevin Smith's Mall Rats and Chasing Amy involve comic books and shops and conventions. Plus, Kick Ass. The best, if not only, good thing Kevin Smith has offered society. I can't quite agree with that. I enjoy his early films, though in varying detail. Clerks has interesting character scenes and some funny scenes; but, was rather over-praised. It's still an engaging film, though. Mall Rats is more of a romp and is mostly stupid hijinks, though with some clever moments. Chasing Amy really tries for something deeper, though it struggles with the relationship between Affleck and Joey Lauren Adams. It has personal issues, for me, as I saw it in a theater while going through some relationship issues that mirrored Affleck and Jason Lee and Joey Lauren Adams. not exactly the same, but close enough to make me uncomfortable in the theater, when I saw it with a friend and roommate. Dogma is a lot of fun, with something deeper to say about belief and philosophy, vs the dogma created by the organization of the church. Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back is a stupid stoner comedy, which is fun. Jersey Girl is an interesting essay on parenting and making mistakes, growing up and accepting the responsibility for the life you brought into the world. Clerks 2 doesn't totally work, but, does have some nice scenes about realizing what you really want in life and accepting adulthood. The Clerks animated series was brilliant fun, though you had to get the home video set to see the 6 episodes, as the network only offered 2. Jeff Anderson was really good at voicing the cartoon character. After that, I haven't watched. I think he is a good writer, with his generation's penchant for profanity and a good director of character interaction. He is not much of a visual stylist, though. I do think he got a bit full of himself and pulled back from doing deeper movies; but, then again, he has a family to support and is not the first to act in service to maintaining a lifestyle, rather than creating art. Hollywood tends to do that to creative types. I think he has offered more than many of his contemporaries from the 90s; but, his films do seem to have a more select audience. Like I say, I prefer the earlier stuff, to different degrees. Oh, and since it probably arouses curiosity, when Chasing Amy first came to theaters, I shared an apartment with a friend. He is gay, I am not. He was in love with me, much to my surprise. He had this fantasy that I was secretly gay and didn't realize it. I shattered that fantasy when I hooked up with a woman from work. I returned home after to find him in tears, having called his mother, coming out to her, and needing to talk to her. I cleared out of the way so they could be alone. Later, I came home and he was calmer. We decided to go see a film to take our minds off of events and were both Kevin Smith fans. So, we went to see Chasing Amy. As the plot unfolded, I sunk lower and lower in my seat, as it was hitting way too close to home. My roommate took anxiety and depression medication and was medicated enough that he didn't really recall the film. I swore that I would punch Kevin Smith if I ever met him, jokingly. It was a few years before I could watch the film again and I can never disassociate it from the events surrounding that first viewing.
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Post by EdoBosnar on Aug 23, 2017 12:07:50 GMT -5
Yeah, I like Smith's movies from the '90s, too (and luckily, I have no real life situations like Cody's attached to Chasing Amy - which is otherwise my favorite of them). Can't say I've seen many of the later ones besides Zack and Miri Make a Porno, which had some funny moments but was mostly forgettable.
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Post by adamwarlock2099 on Aug 23, 2017 13:02:12 GMT -5
While, I don't abhor any of his movies, and actually own Jay & Silent Bob, they've just never impressed me outside of Mallrats. Something is just really great about that movie, and seems so un-Kevin Smith, as compared to his other movies at the time. Chasing Amy being the only at that time I've not seen. The rest were either meh or forgettable.
As far as his writing, I've tried it too, and never really cared for it. Grant Green Arrow was, at the time, mostly because it was constantly late and I lost interest along with the first few issues not wowing me. Heck I even bought the next issue of Spiderman/Black Cat with a 4 year gap. Naw, I won't lie I bought it for the Terry/Rachel Dodson art. :-)
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Post by codystarbuck on Aug 23, 2017 16:01:07 GMT -5
While, I don't abhor any of his movies, and actually own Jay & Silent Bob, they've just never impressed me outside of Mallrats. Something is just really great about that movie, and seems so un-Kevin Smith, as compared to his other movies at the time. Chasing Amy being the only at that time I've not seen. The rest were either meh or forgettable. As far as his writing, I've tried it too, and never really cared for it. Grant Green Arrow was, at the time, mostly because it was constantly late and I lost interest along with the first few issues not wowing me. Heck I even bought the next issue of Spiderman/Black Cat with a 4 year gap. Naw, I won't lie I bought it for the Terry/Rachel Dodson art. :-) I think his comic book writing is about average and is probably rated higher due to celebrity, more than talent. I'd put him ahead of someone like Judd Winick; but, behind guys like Roy Thomas, marv Wolfman and Steve Engelhart and way behind people like Moore, Gaiman and Morrison, let alone creative giants like Kirby and Eisner.
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Post by DubipR on Aug 23, 2017 18:59:14 GMT -5
The terrible Ralph Bakshi film Cool World was shot in the old golden SFV Golden Apple store...
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Post by urrutiap on Aug 24, 2017 17:50:48 GMT -5
Hey, watch it lol. I happen to like Cool World. Not a bad movie with Kim Basinger
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Post by foxley on Aug 25, 2017 6:45:45 GMT -5
I must admit that I am also a fan of Cool World.
Samuel L. Jackson's character in Unbreakable (a movie I'm not a fan of) owns a comic shop, and several major scenes take place there.
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Post by MDG on Aug 25, 2017 9:51:43 GMT -5
The Martin & Lewis "comedy" Artists & Models is kind've set in the comic publishing world, though still newsstand-based.
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