This is what I believe myself, but I'm not a parent, so chances are I don't have a clue"The Village" raises compelling questions about the lengths parents might go to shield their children from harm, and whether isolating the young ones from the phantoms in the closet might simply unleash the monsters under the bed.
The Village
- Azalin
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The Village
The movie is coming out today, I just read a review and I thought the author (of the review) wrote something very interesting about parenthood.
- avanutria
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I'm not a parent either, but I know (don't ask how, please) that kids can handle an awful lot when they have to. I don't plan on hiding my kids from the scary stuff but neither will I thrust it on them...there's got to be a middle ground where a parent can support their child as he learns about fear and how to handle it.
Of course, Az, you know we are getting eye-rolls from EVERY parent reading this.
Haven't heard anything about the movie, but that's not surprising for me really. I've always tended to be a popular entertainment black hole.
Of course, Az, you know we are getting eye-rolls from EVERY parent reading this.
Haven't heard anything about the movie, but that's not surprising for me really. I've always tended to be a popular entertainment black hole.
- Chuck_Clark
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That quote sounds like one of those pretentious reviews that are "assisted" by the movie flacks and follow the general premise of "If you can't dazzle them with brilliance, baffle 'em with b***s**t."
I saw the trailer while attending another movie - looks like just another gothic horror flick.
BTW, if you're tempted to spend good money on "I, Robot", it's not bad as "shoot-em-up"s go, but it has almost nothing in common with the great Asimov story besides it's title and a few character names.
I saw the trailer while attending another movie - looks like just another gothic horror flick.
BTW, if you're tempted to spend good money on "I, Robot", it's not bad as "shoot-em-up"s go, but it has almost nothing in common with the great Asimov story besides it's title and a few character names.
Its Winter - Gotta learn to play the blues
- avanutria
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- chas
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They're not mutually exclusive. I'm having a blast, it's almost like a second childhood. Except for all the responsibility stuff, but I try not to let that get in the way.avanutria wrote:No, I'm not ready to be a parent - I'm still having fun being a kid!
Charlie
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- OutOfBreath
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Having fun as a parent is immoral, irresponsible, and unnatural - it's reserved for when you become a grandparentchas wrote:They're not mutually exclusive. I'm having a blast, it's almost like a second childhood. Except for all the responsibility stuff, but I try not to let that get in the way.
John
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The Internet is wonderful. Surely there have always been thousands of people deeply concerned about my sex life and the quality of my septic tank but before the Internet I never heard from any of them.
- TonyHiggins
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I was protected from some scary stuff when I was 8 and I resent it now. Whether it was a good thing or not, I don't know. We lived for a year with my mom's dad and sister in Dublin then. My grandfather was notorious for scaring kids with stories for fun and he was told not to do this to us. He restrained himself. My sister, a year younger, spent some weekends with my dad's mother, who was fiercely superstitious and scared the crap out of my sister (my sister's own words). Things like, don't stare at the mirror or the devil will appear, banshees, etc.
We were never so protective of our own kids and they've done fine. My daughter, 16, was watching a documentary on poltergeists when she was younger and asked me worriedly if it was real. I could only say that I've never encountered anything like that, but a lot of people believe it's true. Bad answer? She doesn't seem too spooked nowadays. My sister, on the other hand is pretty spooked in general and so is her daughter, who by some weird coincidence, won't keep a mirror in her room. My sister says she never told her about my grandmother's stories.
Tony
We were never so protective of our own kids and they've done fine. My daughter, 16, was watching a documentary on poltergeists when she was younger and asked me worriedly if it was real. I could only say that I've never encountered anything like that, but a lot of people believe it's true. Bad answer? She doesn't seem too spooked nowadays. My sister, on the other hand is pretty spooked in general and so is her daughter, who by some weird coincidence, won't keep a mirror in her room. My sister says she never told her about my grandmother's stories.
Tony
http://tinwhistletunes.com/clipssnip/newspage.htm Officially, the government uses the term “flap,” describing it as “a condition, a situation or a state of being, of a group of persons, characterized by an advanced degree of confusion that has not quite reached panic proportions.”
- Azalin
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I read the review before seeing the movie, and before I read the review I was expecting something very scary. After I read the review I knew that wasnt the case, and that's the reason why I actually enjoyed the movie, because I knew what too expect, to a certain extent. The movie is well written and directed, and the actors are great. It's just that it's too soft for my taste.
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I make it a point to scare the crap out of my kids at least once a moth to "toughen them up."
Not really.
Roger Ebert gave 'The Village' a horrible review.
Yes, really.
Not really.
Roger Ebert gave 'The Village' a horrible review.
Yes, really.
"Meon an phobail a thogail trid an chultur"
(The people’s spirit is raised through culture)
Suburban Symphony
(The people’s spirit is raised through culture)
Suburban Symphony
- ChrisLaughlin
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The one stop shop for all movie reviews:
http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/village/
http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/village/
- Steven
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I saw the movie last Tuesday. Yes, that's 3 days before it came out. My wife was an extra in it, so we got to go to the special screening. I thought it was a very good movie (even though you never get to actually see my wife!). Certainly not at all a typical horror flick. It's got a lot of suspense in it, but it's really about people and their reactions to things. A lot of people seem to be complaining that it has a Shyamalanish (like my new word?) twist at the end, but that's really not what it's about.
Bryce Howard did a really great job, and I think Adrian Brody will be nominated for a Best Supporting Actor Oscar (you heard it here first).
Steven
Bryce Howard did a really great job, and I think Adrian Brody will be nominated for a Best Supporting Actor Oscar (you heard it here first).
Steven
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I'm going to be unpopular here, but I thought the film was simply terrible. Poor plot (I saw through it about 30 minutes into the film, and I hadn't read any reviews before I saw it), terrible dialogue/script (I won't give it away, but there are recordings from that era and people didn't sound that way), and the acting - well, lets just say I wasn't impressed.
I really liked Sixth sense, but I think the director is too tied into the twist formula these days.
Eric
I really liked Sixth sense, but I think the director is too tied into the twist formula these days.
Eric