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Post by !~DarkAngel~! on Jan 3, 2004 14:47:44 GMT -5
hi imayne i know what you mean but i watched an interview where she said she cried at him calling her names even though he was only trying to help supposably and that still means to me he sucks . ;D ;D ;Dnoni rules
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Post by lia on Jan 4, 2004 4:55:21 GMT -5
Coppola doesn't love his actors.
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Post by !~DarkAngel~! on Jan 4, 2004 10:05:21 GMT -5
yeah obviousley
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Post by imayne on Jan 4, 2004 10:21:58 GMT -5
I'm actually a bit of a believer in what Edward Norton said once that a lot of bad films probably had very pleasant shoots.
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Post by imayne on Feb 2, 2004 1:43:27 GMT -5
BY THE WAY, who saw the Van Helsing superbowl spot? Never thought of the good doctor as a superhero before, looks really massive and cool...
Though Richard Roxburgh is increasingly getting stuck in such thankless villain roles...here he plays the Count himself...and just last year he had to slum it as Moriarty in LXG...
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Post by gaffa on Mar 1, 2004 12:26:44 GMT -5
In my top five. It's a completely crazy piece of gothic and romantic madness. Blood, lights and colors in shades of blue, gold, amber, red and purple. Fabulous soundtrack, great picture quality and the cast is a dreamteam. Though it's highly metaphorical, the movie is also extremely sensual on the verge of being erotic. And of course, Elizabetha-Mina's beauty is eternal, like love.
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Post by Jen on Mar 2, 2004 10:08:45 GMT -5
i hadnt heard about coppola calling her names. as mean as it may b, i think it's a very good idea. sometimes people cant grab and hang on 2 certain emotions, and u need 2 help them. bet it got some good scenes, huh? i remember 1 year we were doing our play in drama club, and we were all really good friends, obviously. but like, in certain scenes we had 2 b mad @ eachother, and we'd have 2 piss eachother off a bit 1st so that we could hit the scene. 2 get into the moment. u get more emotion that way. it may b mean, but when it comes 2 a movie like this, i think it was an honorable idea. :-*smooches; ~Jen~
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Post by dilelle on Mar 16, 2004 7:50:16 GMT -5
I vote for ‘good’.
Great movie and great Stoker’s book. There are many difference respect the book: many part are lose and the love story don’t exist, but the result it is emotional and remarkable. When I reread the book, in my imagination, Mina could be only Noni. Oldman is deeply.
Great Noni!
Love never dies!
dilelle
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Post by ilovewinona on Mar 16, 2004 11:04:39 GMT -5
Dilelle, Glad you loved Winona in "Bram Stoker's Dracula" ----Rusty
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Post by dilelle on Mar 22, 2004 8:35:54 GMT -5
Hi all! little link CoppolasDracula.jpg (attention, it is fear) Dracula(Sorry if I put this link in polls) dilelle
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Post by ilovewinona on Mar 22, 2004 11:02:33 GMT -5
[quote author=dilelle (Sorry if I put this link in polls) dilelle[/quote] ------ A link included in a Winona Ryder poll is just fine, especially when it is about one of her greatest movies. -------- Rusty
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Post by Evilspirit on Mar 22, 2004 11:12:08 GMT -5
It is such a wonderful W.R film. ;D ;D ;D
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Post by imayne on Mar 22, 2004 11:19:11 GMT -5
Can you introduce yourself, O Evil One?
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mina
First Timer
Posts: 39
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Post by mina on Feb 27, 2006 17:48:05 GMT -5
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Post by imayne on Dec 14, 2023 3:14:42 GMT -5
Lovely little writeup on the film"The Dracula story is about repression and xenophobia and, so, here we are. In Coppola’s telling, it’s a ravishing, moveable feast for cinephiles. It’s a grand romance, told in bold strokes unembarrassed about its extravagance. It’s the definition of maximalism, a Cecille B. Demille film every bit as ecstatic as his The Ten Commandments (1956), that occurs at the end of only a modern master’s middle period. I can’t imagine any one of his “movie brat” peers — not Scorsese, nor DePalma, not even Spielberg — who could make a movie this naughty, bloody, this punk rock revolutionary."
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