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Speed
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All reviews for Speed

    minjoeminjoe I'm an Expert.
    by minjoe in minjoe Blog
    loved it.
    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    "When it comes to the Film Speed, I would be willing to say, with confidence, that I am the worlds foremost expert on this flick. You see, I moved out of a house when I was in 4th grade and had to spend an entire summer living with my grandparents and family in a little tiny house while our new home was being built. Almost everyone of my posessions was packed away, execpt for one glorious movie that made my summer one to remember.To be honest, I'd say I've seen this movie well over 100 times. I am not exaggerating. That summer, I lived in one of the most boring neighborhoods in the world and all I would do was watch this movie--often several times a day. What kept me coming back to this film time and time again? A few things...First off, I am more than willing to admit that my first "Hollywood crush" was Sandra Bullock and it was because of this movie. She is sassy, in-control, and absolutely rockin' hot in this movie (or at least I thought so when I was ... " [More]
    marymcilwainmarymcilwain Humiliating Movie Deaths
    by marymcilwain in Dollar Video Curator
    lost interest.
    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    "The power of film. You recognize it when you see it. Or feel it. Quotes that stick with you, or a glistening tear rolling down a beautiful cheek. A soaring score that tugs at your heart strings, or a heroic death, a sacrifice that was made for the good of all humankind. Eh. What of the overlooked? The filler parts of the film, meant to amuse, move the story’s plot or suspense along, or to act as comic relief? For every poignant film death forever memorialized on the big screen, an extra, a bad guy or some other lesser character has to take one for the team. The yang to the hero’s yin. The black to the white of your starlet’s blank, emotionless eye. Let us look at some of the unfortunate sacrifices that have been made for the good of the plot, and share a moment of silence for these unfortunates. Raiders of the Lost Ark - The Egyptian guy with the sword.[More]
    marymcilwainmarymcilwain Humiliating Movie Deaths
    by marymcilwain in Dollar Video Curator
    lost interest.
    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    "The power of film. You recognize it when you see it. Or feel it. Quotes that stick with you, or a glistening tear rolling down a beautiful cheek. A soaring score that tugs at your heart strings, or a heroic death, a sacrifice that was made for the good of all humankind. Eh. What of the overlooked? The filler parts of the film, meant to amuse, move the story’s plot or suspense along, or to act as comic relief? For every poignant film death forever memorialized on the big screen, an extra, a bad guy or some other lesser character has to take one for the team. The yang to the hero’s yin. The black to the white of your starlet’s blank, emotionless eye. Let us look at some of the unfortunate sacrifices that have been made for the good of the plot, and share a moment of silence for these unfortunates. Raiders of the Lost Ark - The Egyptian guy with the sword.[More]
    SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Dennis Hopper Knows From Rivers ...
    by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
    hasn't rated it.
    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    "The Guardian published a long, bizarre story yesterday on Dennis Hopper. The story seems to have been spun out of a brief meeting over chocolate cake at the Serpentine Gallery in London (which, as author Stuart Jeffries puts it, "has managed to seduce Hollywood's most enduring screen psychopath to greet guests to its [annual] fundraising party"), and is thus suitably heavy with Hopper's musings on art. But there's one very strange paragraph right in the middle, in which the actor/filmmaker/photographer/A meriprise shill responds to a question about his involvement in a heretofore-unannounced franchise film: [Hopper] certainly isn't in the mood to discuss any of the half a dozen films he is due to appear in this year, a roster which is due to include a performance in Speed 3, even though I have plenty of questions about that. Surely his character Howard Payne died in a decapitation incident in the last reel of Speed 1? "It's a river of shit," he tells me pleasantly but firmly, "fro ... " [More]
 
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