|
Grouchio posted:So what was the problem with Gossip Girl again? it didn't have abbott and costello in it
|
# ? Sep 28, 2021 19:51 |
|
|
# ? May 31, 2024 22:53 |
|
Alaois posted:it didn't have abbott and costello in it Costello: Well then who slept with Chuck? Abbott: Yes. Costello: I mean the lady's name. Abbott: Who. Costello: The woman who slept with Chuck. Abbott: Who. Costello: The woman he slept with. Abbott: Who. Costello: The girl that slept... Abbott: Who slept with Chuck! Costello: I'm asking YOU who slept with Chuck. Abbott: That's the woman's name. Costello: That's who's name? Abbott: Yes. Costello: Well go ahead and tell me. Abbott: That's it. Costello: That's who? Abbott: Yes.
|
# ? Sep 28, 2021 19:59 |
|
I remember exactly one character's name from that show and I hope that was it.
|
# ? Sep 28, 2021 20:00 |
|
christmas boots posted:Costello: Well then who slept with Chuck? I appreciate this post.
|
# ? Sep 28, 2021 20:15 |
|
Ellie Trashcakes posted:I mean also Lana del Rey I don't quite understand this I am afraid! Megillah Gorilla posted:
Same, it is very good.
|
# ? Sep 29, 2021 00:07 |
|
christmas boots posted:Costello: Well then who slept with Chuck? Oh I see what your problem is! The woman’s name is Hu and you’re confusing it with who. You’re probably not used to that name as it’s Chinese. So for clarity Susan Hu slept with Chuck.
|
# ? Sep 29, 2021 00:14 |
|
BIG FLUFFY DOG posted:Oh I see what your problem is! The woman’s name is Hu and you’re confusing it with who. You’re probably not used to that name as it’s Chinese. So for clarity Susan Hu slept with Chuck. I should never have saved you from those seals!
|
# ? Sep 29, 2021 00:28 |
|
I loosely recall that someone once did a Whos On First variant using actual names of contemporary baseball players.
|
# ? Sep 29, 2021 13:21 |
|
BIG FLUFFY DOG posted:Oh I see what your problem is! The woman’s name is Hu and you’re confusing it with who. You’re probably not used to that name as it’s Chinese. So for clarity Susan Hu slept with Chuck. I don't know Hu and my name's not Susan
|
# ? Sep 30, 2021 05:00 |
|
Ghost Leviathan posted:I loosely recall that someone once did a Whos On First variant using actual names of contemporary baseball players.
|
# ? Sep 30, 2021 06:22 |
|
Ghost Leviathan posted:I loosely recall that someone once did a Whos On First variant using actual names of contemporary baseball players. Slovin and Allen on their Comedy Central Presents special. When I was younger, I thought it was the greatest thing i ever saw on stand up special
|
# ? Sep 30, 2021 06:43 |
|
I remember this making the rounds on Facebook a while ago, but it was surrounded by Boomer Borders
|
# ? Sep 30, 2021 12:33 |
|
I picked up the Universal Classic Monsters collection because I had never actually seen the original Universal Monster movies. Dracula... is kind of a hot mess, if I'm being honest. The plot is almost incoherent without reading the original novel, entire weeks will pass between scenes with the only hint being a quick mention of something from the previous scene being "Weeks ago", and they start the Vampire Lucy plot, and even show her as a vampire, but... forget to resolve it. I know that the movie had a very troubled production, but it really has not aged well. I have also seen Frankenstein and The Mummy, and both aged MUCH better (well, okay, except for one part in The Mummy where a character is outraged that the Egyptian government won't let them take the loot from the tombs back to Great Britain, and wanted it to stay in the museum in Cairo. Then again, the guy came off as a dick, so... maybe The Mummy was well ahead of its time in that regard?)
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 13:54 |
|
Watch the Spanish version of Dracula that was filmed on the same sets pararel to the more famous version. It's got a lot of the same problems since it's basically the same film with the same scenes but with Spanish speaking actors but makes up for it with all these little stylistic touches that were intended to one up the English version as the Spanish crew would watch the dailies from the English version and try to think of ways to add movement or style to each shot.
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 16:14 |
|
I saw a pic of a cable line running through (what looked like) a sewage pipe to me in the OSHA thread, and it made me wonder: How well did Jim Carrey’s Cable Guy age? The description on IMDb calls it a black comedy, but it was also made in 1996 so I have some serious doubts about the “comedy” part of that equation.
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 16:20 |
|
It has Jim Carrey in it so I have some serious doubts about the “comedy” part of that equation.
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 16:31 |
|
This isn't so much media aging badly as much as me aging badly, but as a kid, when I would read the TV listings and see something listed as a "Black Comedy" I thought that meant it'd be a film like "Friday".
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 16:49 |
|
Icon Of Sin posted:I saw a pic of a cable line running through (what looked like) a sewage pipe to me in the OSHA thread, and it made me wonder: It’s imo one of the funniest movies he’s ever done. It’s amazing and I still laugh. I don’t know what hasn’t aged. The film is about two rough characters, Jim being way more deranged. The ending is kind of sweet despite the rest of the film. Idk it still cracks me up and I quote it all the time.
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 16:58 |
|
I remember liking The Cable Guy when I watched it 20 years ago but it definitely was a very different movie from the Ace Ventura movies that Carry was known for at that time. I don't think the concept really aged poorly, guy is obsessed with media to the point it horribly affects his personality, just if you made it now it would be a guy obsessed with online influencers instead of TV shows
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 17:29 |
|
duck trucker posted:I remember liking The Cable Guy when I watched it 20 years ago but it definitely was a very different movie from the Ace Ventura movies that Carry was known for at that time. The Streamer Guy "Somebody doxx me!"
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 17:35 |
|
Has anyone watched Kubrick's adaptation of Lolita? I read the book recently and enjoy Kubrick, but the tagline for the poster is "a tale of forbidden love" and has the 14-year-old actress wearing heart sunglasses and suggestively sucking a lollipop. So it just feels like they miss the point of the novel and went straight to "sexy pre-teen seduces man" instead of "normal young girl kidnapped and raped over the course of years leaving irreparable damage and suffering"
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 18:47 |
|
Kevin DuBrow posted:So it just feels like they miss the point of the novel and went straight to "sexy pre-teen seduces man" instead of "normal young girl kidnapped and raped over the course of years leaving irreparable damage and suffering" This is not the point of the novel.
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 18:55 |
|
I don't mean to give that as the "point" of the book. I just mean it's a novel with a very sensitive subject that even some contemporary readers took as a riveting tale of love and the poster sets off red flags.
Kevin DuBrow has a new favorite as of 19:03 on Oct 2, 2021 |
# ? Oct 2, 2021 19:00 |
|
Kevin DuBrow posted:Has anyone watched Kubrick's adaptation of Lolita? I read the book recently and enjoy Kubrick, but the tagline for the poster is "a tale of forbidden love" and has the 14-year-old actress wearing heart sunglasses and suggestively sucking a lollipop. So it just feels like they miss the point of the novel and went straight to "sexy pre-teen seduces man" instead of "normal young girl kidnapped and raped over the course of years leaving irreparable damage and suffering" There’s a very good Lolita Podcast that goes into the representations of the main character in other media, and it’s both fascinating and sickening. Highly recommended, but in the same way Requiem for a Dream comes highly recommended (is it anymore? I think it aged into mediocrity, personally, but I haven’t spent much time thinking about it lately.) Tl;dr on the podcast is that interpretations of Lolita are a symptom of a society that sees young women as extremely fuckable, even when it’s obvious the character is being abused. I’m too far from expertise in the subject to try and break it down any further, esp when the podcast exists and did such a good job.
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 19:11 |
|
Kevin DuBrow posted:I don't mean to give that as the "point" of the book. I just mean it's a novel with a very sensitive subject that even some contemporary readers took as a riveting tale of love and the poster sets off red flags. Not even close to the worst thing, quote:In 1959, novelist Robertson Davies wrote that the theme of Lolita is "not the corruption of an innocent child by a cunning adult, but the exploitation of a weak adult by a corrupt child. This is no pretty theme, but it is one with which social workers, magistrates and psychiatrists are familiar." [/29] There’s not a yikes big enough.
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 19:26 |
|
Dirt Road Junglist posted:There’s a very good Lolita Podcast that goes into the representations of the main character in other media, and it’s both fascinating and sickening.
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 20:00 |
|
Torquemada posted:Not even close to the worst thing, Tbh im not sure how anyone could read lolita and think this lol, hh is a piece of poo poo from the beginning to end
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 20:09 |
|
Anyone remember The Weekend Web? It was a frontpage feature where goons would screenshot funny/weird/horrifying posts from various other forums. Anyway I bring it up because I read Lolita a few years ago and was kind of shocked how closely Humbert Humbert's MO matched some of the posts from some pedophile forums that were featured there. So I guess that means the novel has aged well?
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 20:09 |
|
mandatory lesbian posted:Tbh im not sure how anyone could read lolita and think this lol, hh is a piece of poo poo from the beginning to end Because these days we take for granted the idea that people in charge of children could or might be up to no good, but 65 years ago there was exactly the same proportion of abuse happening but the idea was never considered out loud. So much so that an author felt completely comfortable penning an article that doesn’t even consider a different proposition than ‘all child professionals understand that 12 year old girls seduce men all the time’.
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 20:22 |
|
Icon Of Sin posted:I saw a pic of a cable line running through (what looked like) a sewage pipe to me in the OSHA thread, and it made me wonder: Cable Guy is fantastic and well worth multiple viewings.
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 20:33 |
|
Dirt Road Junglist posted:There’s a very good Lolita Podcast that goes into the representations of the main character in other media, and it’s both fascinating and sickening. Highly recommended, but in the same way Requiem for a Dream comes highly recommended (is it anymore? I think it aged into mediocrity, personally, but I haven’t spent much time thinking about it lately.) It's kind of amazing because the whole book is pretty explicitly about reading around Humbert's linguistic charm, so what we have is several decades of people taking him at face value. Part of the issue with the Kubrick film is that it doesn't really translate that relationship between the reader and the narrator, because everything that happens in the film seems to happen literally and explicitly. It's why I'm glad we never got and probably will never get a film of Catcher in the Rye, because once you remove the act of translation between Holden and the reader, you're just left with a miserable little kid having a horrible time. I think the best way to adapt Lolita would be as a solo/stand-up act (Louis CK's jokes about public masturbation come to mind). Weirdly enough, there was a musical version made in the early 70s that I think kinda works really well for that reason, because it's like Cabaret, where Humbert is the emcee and the music makes it come across as black comedy, until it unravels and just becomes a nightmare horror. The worst way Lolita has aged I think is in its use of female suffering as (quote-unquote) entertainment, which has been a pretty consistent topic of discussion the past few years.
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 22:49 |
|
Dirt Road Junglist posted:There’s a very good Lolita Podcast that goes into the representations of the main character in other media, and it’s both fascinating and sickening. Highly recommended, but in the same way Requiem for a Dream comes highly recommended (is it anymore? I think it aged into mediocrity, personally, but I haven’t spent much time thinking about it lately.) Link please! I love me some book/social talk.
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 22:50 |
|
Torquemada posted:Because these days we take for granted the idea that people in charge of children could or might be up to no good, but 65 years ago there was exactly the same proportion of abuse happening but the idea was never considered out loud. So much so that an author felt completely comfortable penning an article that doesn’t even consider a different proposition than ‘all child professionals understand that 12 year old girls seduce men all the time’. this was the defense presented in a child sex case in france like 5 years ago and they won
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 22:54 |
|
I mean France loves their pedophiles and always has
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 23:06 |
|
CharlestheHammer posted:I mean France loves their pedophiles and always has les mods savaient
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 23:14 |
|
CharlestheHammer posted:I mean France loves their pedophiles and always has There's even a famous novel about a French pedophile iirc.
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 23:23 |
|
Mr.Chill posted:Link please! I love me some book/social talk. here u go
|
# ? Oct 2, 2021 23:44 |
|
mandatory lesbian posted:Tbh im not sure how anyone could read lolita and think this lol, hh is a piece of poo poo from the beginning to end I did the first time I read it, though to be fair I was like 16. Humbert is such a clever, quick-witted character that it is possible for a reader to be taken in by him.
|
# ? Oct 3, 2021 00:05 |
|
HH isn't even that smart (it's been a while since I've read Lolita, but I think it's at least heavily implied that he couldn't hack it in Europe and his career success in America was mostly charlatanism), just very articulate, which is part of the point -- a major theme of the novel is HH taking advantage of American preconceptions about "sophisticated, intellectual" Europeans and "seductive" teenage girls. It just turns out that the same preconceptions colored people's interpretations of the novel, predictably enough.
|
# ? Oct 3, 2021 00:33 |
|
|
# ? May 31, 2024 22:53 |
|
Rochallor posted:I did the first time I read it, though to be fair I was like 16. Humbert is such a clever, quick-witted character that it is possible for a reader to be taken in by him. Nabakov does the unreliable narrator pretty well; Pale Fire has a delusioned and obsessed narrator too. Regards Cable Guy, I haven't rewatched it since the first time in the cinema, other than Carrey's Jefferson Airplane karaoke, which is pretty amazing.
|
# ? Oct 3, 2021 00:39 |