Review: Orange County 184
Shaun is a brainless Orange County surfing dude until he stumbles across a novel and decides he was to use his brain and become a writer. He obsesses on Stanford, doesn't get in because of a paperwork screw-up by his moonie guidance counselor (Lily Tomlin) and, with the help of his perpetually-stoned brother (Black) and girlfriend (Fisk), sets out to gain admission to Stanford. Part of his obsession comes from a desire to get away from his hilariously and spectacularly dysfunctional family (drunken drama queen mother is played by Catherine O'Hara, remote divorced money-obsessed dad by John Lithgow).
Black is by now wonderful at playing the stoned loony, but he needs to be careful, as it's already nearly impossible to imagine him in any other role. And he's great at it. He nearly steals the movie, especially playing against the steady-as-she-goes nice guy Colin Hanks who, like his Dad, has a Jimmy Stewart quality that makes you root for him, even when he's behaving badly.
The plotting and conceit of the movie are both strange. Orange County, a wealthy suburb of LA, is held to be insipid and valueless. Although we get a peek at the dummies who Shaun befriends and who go to his high school, there is little feel at all for the actual place, one of America's early, mythic suburbs. At least at first, all Shaun wants to do is get away, though the writers eventually suggest that wanting to leave arid suburbs and go to colleges like Stanford is a mistake. Creative and interesting people should stay at home where their roots are, all the better to be inspired and keep their needy parents and girlfriends happy.
Shaun's paperwork snafu could probably have been corrected with a phone call, so all the slapstick racing around -- there's an improbably mad dash up to Stanford -- and hysteria seems a bit silly. And the ending -- well, it's original, but also goofy. It lost me.
I think for a total of 15 to 20 minutes this is one of the most inventive and original movies I've seen in awhile. In toto, it's disjointed. It seems as if Kasdan wanted to make a semi-serious, biting movie but either chickened out or was held back. Still, there are more than a few great laughs in Orange County and the parts of the film that portray a complex kid trying to figure out where he belongs while coming to terms with his insane family really work -- at moments.
News for nerds? Can a STORY be modded Offtopic? (Score:2, Offtopic)
Is this really a Slashdot news story? I mean, I'd never submit a non-tech movie review to
Perhaps the editors could do the same thing we lowly grunts do—post stories like this in your journal.
Re:News for nerds? Can a STORY be modded Offtopic? (Score:2)
Re:News for nerds? Can a STORY be modded Offtopic? (Score:2)
Re:News for nerds? Can a STORY be modded Offtopic? (Score:1, Funny)
a) claim to have a social life but;
b) use Slashdot for movie reviews?
I wonder if ESPN will cover movies soon, too. Or if
Re:News for nerds? Can a STORY be modded Offtopic? (Score:3, Offtopic)
I still think it's interesting that many types people interested in a given topic, also typically share an interest in another seemingly unrelated topic.
For example, slashdot typically runs significant stories on space exploration / physics topics. What does linux and open source have to do with NASA? Nothing really, but for whatever reason, it seems like the majority of linux enthusiasts are also interested in physics / science stuff.
I guess I'm way, way off topic on the movie review, but I guess my point is something like, "if you don't like a story headline, don't read it." It's most likely posted here because it will appeal to a number of other slashdotters.
Re:News for nerds? Can a STORY be modded Offtopic? (Score:1)
It's not like
Re:News for nerds? Can a STORY be modded Offtopic? (Score:2, Interesting)
Yes, but... (Score:2)
I mean, come on! If I wanted a review of orange county I could get it in my local paper.
LOTR I can definitly see being reviewed on slashdot. But this?
Re:Yes, but... (Score:1)
Re:Yes, but... (Score:2)
People talked about different things on the slashdot LOTR article than would be mentioned in a typical newspaper review.
I didn't see any such conversations regarding Orange County.
Re:News for nerds? Can a STORY be modded Offtopic? (Score:2)
So to say the least, this geek would really rather not see these reviews, thank you very much.
Re:News for nerds? Can a STORY be modded Offtopic? (Score:2, Offtopic)
Where next though? Has "Ocean's 11" any relevance to Slashdotters? SFX and CGI are interesting as well as techie topics, but there are other places to go to talk about movies just for their own sake.
Kuro5hin [kuro5hin.org] has a voting system open to all registered users for the front page. Maybe this is needed here on Slashdot.
Re:News for nerds? Can a STORY be modded Offtopic? (Score:1)
You stupid ponce. This is slashdot, and that [adequacy.com] is Kuro5hin.
Both slash and scoop sucks. With slash, you have to put up with the idiocy of the authors on the front page. But with scoop, you have to put up with the idiocy of the entire site. You get hundreds of retarded authors, instead of ten.
It's a hell of a lot easier to filter the authors you don't like, than to sift through endless trolls and pointless links and regurgitation on k5. Picking the lesser of two evils, you get slash.
You don't like it? There are plenty of other quality websites [olsentwins.com] out there.
Re:News for nerds? Can a STORY be modded Offtopic? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:News for nerds? Can a STORY be modded Offtopic? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:News for nerds? Can a STORY be modded Offtopic? (Score:2, Insightful)
If the article doesn't interest you, skip it. I'm sure a good amount of daily slashdot readers are interested in knowing whether or not they should spend the zillion bucks to go see a movie. And believe it or not, nerds don't go see only tech movies.
End mini-rant.
Re:News for nerds? Can a STORY be modded Offtopic? (Score:1)
He nearly steals the movie, especially playing against the steady-as-she-goes nice guy Colin Hanks who, like his Dad, has a Jimmy Stewart quality that makes you root for him, even when he's behaving badly.
Creative and interesting people should stay at home where their roots are, all the better to be inspired and keep their needy parents and girlfriends happy.
Root is a *nix term, therefore its tech related...and he says it twice!
Re:News for nerds? Can a STORY be modded Offtopic? (Score:1)
Re:News for nerds? Can a STORY be modded Offtopic? (Score:1)
Then also read the comments before you post.
Re:News for nerds? Can a STORY be modded Offtopic? (Score:2)
There are options to block out specific types of stories, or specific authors- set it to block out JonKatz or Movies, and you'll never see a movie review again. Now stop trolling and get a better hobby.
Go see a movie or something.
Re:News for nerds? Can a STORY be modded Offtopic? (Score:1)
I think we should stop the elitism, and allow for a wider variety of posts, ones encompassing more genres of knowledge.
I agree that /. is elitist but I believe our mileage varies.
If postings from the "great unwashed" (you and me) were permitted the range that is permitted to the "elite" (in this case Katz), /. would soon lose all focus, and no longer serve the various purposes it is now well-suited for. This is the literary equivalent of "littering." The only way to stop the elitism (in this case) is to have Katz follow the same strictures expected of any /. user.
There's a guy somewhere who frequently decries the practice of showing moderation by a /. editor as "moderated by user." The response to his complaints is invariably that "editors are users." This is pretty clearly "lip-service to egalitarianism."
In my opinion, a lot of the kinks that remain in the system come from a natural reluctance to own up to the truism, that "/. is elitist and needs to be." Hopefully some people who can make a difference will eventually own up to this, and we can transform /. into the earthly paradise it was meant to be. Of course, that will also require strait-jacketing Katz.
Re:News for nerds? Can a STORY be modded Offtopic? (Score:1)
After all, we're not all the same. Right?
I also saw it.... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I also saw it.... (Score:2)
By George, you're right about that. Take a look at this image I found: Tom, I mean ummm, COLIN Hanks [fanforum.com]
Re:I also saw it.... (Score:5, Funny)
Colin is Tom's clone! (Score:2)
Naah (Score:1)
Re:Naah (Score:1)
Re:Naah (Score:1)
Re:Naah (Score:1)
Hey! Now they can make sequels to all of Tom's best films, starring his son! I can just see it now. "Insomniac in Islip," "You've Got Text Message," and, of course, "Toy Story 16."
O C (Score:3, Offtopic)
When I saw the prewiews (Score:5, Informative)
Re:When I saw the prewiews (Score:2, Funny)
I thinc you need forth grade agan to lurn how to spel.
Re:When I saw the previews (Score:1)
Re:When I saw the prewiews (Score:2, Insightful)
When I see a joke in a trailer, even if it is funny, I virtually never laugh at it in the final film, because I know it's coming. You should be happy that the filmmakers filled the running time with fresh material, rather than recycle the stuff they used for the trailer. And as long as the film didn't betray the way the trailer marketed it (which I really doubt), you're not being robbed of anything, because the trailer is probably widely available for d/l.
Just some thoughts is all...
Re:When I saw the prewiews (Score:1)
If they showed outtakes in the trailer, and the titles said, "This is the stuff that we cut out of Orange County," that would be enormously cool. They could even say "The stuff we left in is even better." Millions of moviegoers would be grateful. But including excised scenes in the trailer with no such disclaimer is uncool, dishonest, deceptive advertising, bait and switch, theft of the viewer's money, etcetera and ad nauseum. "You don't need college to rock" is the only reason I ever considered seing this movie.
Re:When I saw the prewiews (Score:2, Insightful)
Movie folks work on multi-year timelines, and rarely stay within them
Re:When I saw the prewiews (Score:2)
Translation: "It would be silly to wait until we know what our product actually is before we start trying to pursuade people to buy it. The only thing that matters is that they buy it, not whether it works, or even does what we say it does."
Yeah. I'm ok with that. It's not like I actually need to make intelligent decisions about where to spend my money. I've got plenty to spread around for things that aren't really what they say they are.
Happens all the time... (Score:2)
And then there was the funny exchange from the Major League [imdb.com] trailer: "That ball wouldn't have been out of a lot of parks." "Name one." "Yellowstone." That little gem actually made it into Major League II [imdb.com].
These are only the first two instances I can think of... but there are plenty more.
What really chaps my ass, though, is when they put a song that catches my ear in the commercials for a movie, and then the song is not in the movie or on the soundtrack, and doesn't get any/enough radio play so I can ever find out what song it is. Thanks to CDNow's samples, and Napster/Morpheus nowadays, though, I no longer have to waste $20 on the soundtrack CD, only to find out that the song I bought it for, isn't even on there.
~Philly
Re: (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:Redundant, Over rated, Off topic, Flame... (Score:1)
It seems several people are complaining about this post being redundant and "not 'News for Nerds.'" Then don't read it. I, for one, lament the fact that there aren't more posts on Slashdot. I tend to read even the ones that discuss things I know nothing about, because I learn, and because there's always somebody out there who will make me laugh.
As an aside: does it seem to anyone else like Jon Katz just sends these things in and doesn't ever read the responses he gets? Every time the guy makes a post, there are hundreds of people flaming his very existence. That would make me feel kind of unwelcome...
Hm.
Re:Redundant, Over rated, Off topic, Flame... (Score:2)
Well, duh.
Hmmm... (Score:1, Funny)
I'd imagine it would be hard to watch it in a dog, even if it was toto.
ummmmm (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:ummmmm (Score:2)
Which is ironic since they're from Orange County, Florida...
Pulling my hair out (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:Pulling my hair out (Score:1)
Oh and just to go with the flow, I hate Jon Katz, this isn't News for Nerds, blah blah jump on the bandwagon because karma is more valuable than my life) blah.
Re:Pulling my hair out (Score:2, Insightful)
Katz Theory (Score:4, Funny)
aarrgh... I have a feature request (Score:1, Offtopic)
I am sick and tired of all of the whining about Jon Katz that appears (and gets modded up) every time Katz posts a story. It's obvious that all of the posters who hate him and complain about everything he posts derive some perverse pleasure from their moaning, otherwise they would exclude Katz's stories in their preferences and shut up about it. So, i have a feature request: I would like two new toggles in the preferences. One should be labeled "I hate Katz" and the other "Ignore Katz haters." That alone should double the amount of constructive, thoughtful posts that I read.
Sorry, everyone's welcome to their own opinions, but this anti-Katz rhetoric is beyond old.
Re:Katz Theory (Score:1)
Well it ain't working then - Fuck Microsoft!!
Suburb? (Score:2, Funny)
Orange County is a ... county, NOT a suburb.
There is the City of Los Angeles, and there is the County of Los Angeles.
Orange County is next to the County of Los Angeles, but it is NOT a suburb of the City of Los Angeles.
I live in Orange County and it takes me an hour and a half to get to LA...
Oh, did I mention that Orange County is NOT a suburb of the City of Los Angeles.
Re:Suburb? (Score:2)
Re:Suburb? (Score:2)
Now I live in Waltham just outside of Boston. When I tell people where I live, I just say Boston. It's easier and there's no real stigma against it so people know what I'm talking about.
Re:Suburb? (Score:1)
Re:Suburb? (Score:1)
Re:Suburb? (Score:2)
I would dispute Katz's use of "wealthy" though. He's obviously never been to Placentia, La Habra, Santa Ana, Stanton... The emptiness, vulgar materialism, white-shoe golf-Republicanism and near-total lack of culture, and obsession with brand-names sounds a lot like many of the more upper-middle-class enclaves, though.
By the way, I grew up in OC and live there now. And it never takes me more than 45 minutes to get to LA, unless traffic on the 405 is too bad...
Re:Suburb? (Score:1)
And between the disgust that is Los Angeles the city and the better parts that are in Los Angeles the county, those boundaries are very meaningful.
And you're mentioning of Santa Ana and Stanton in the same sentence as "wealthy" is quite disturbing. Under that statement, Irvine, Newport Beach, Huntington Beach, etc, etc would be millionaires.
I do agree regarding the materialism, but how is LA any different? If you ever watch the news when they're talking about fashion, they don't come to OC, they go to LA. I don't personally pay any attention to it and find it kinda disturbing when people put so much effort into being "fashionable". But I, however, am a geek, so fashion matters to me not.
Re:Suburb? (Score:1)
For those of your who don't know, Orange County is
the county that lies directly between LA and San Diego counties. Orange County is home to Disneyland,
Knott's Berry Farm, the Crystal Cathedral, etc.
It isn't exactly fair calling it a suburb of L.A.
entirely, even though the whole thing is a fairly large, interrupted sprawl of homes and shopping districts.
I suppose that North OC is a bit more like
Los Angeles than South OC. South OC is actually
bit more like San Diego. Not that there is a
huge difference between LA and San Diego except
for sheer size.
Re:Suburb? (Score:2)
OC does have local flavor, and the farther you get away from the county line, you do get a sense of independence from LA. But... if you're still only in Santa Ana, I think you're still in LA.
Re:More like LA is asuburb of OC,,, (Score:1)
What do you mean by boring? My sister manages to find things to do just about every night. Oh, that's right, you're posting to Slashdot. You must be a geek. You're right then, it is boring here. Nothing better to do than play RTCW online all the time :p
Great Movie (Score:1)
The part I had a hard time with is how the husband divorced his other wife so quickly, it was amusing but rather disturbing. I found the ending very hilarious, when they decide to commemorate Lonnie. I'd give this at least 4 and half stars.
I don't know... (Score:1)
Its one of those thats worth the price of admission, but nothing more. Jack Black is really good. The rest of the acting is is also decent, but nothing special. Not good enough to be compared in anyway to American Beauty.
That and Shaun was never brainless. He had straight A's and was very intelligent. He was merely directionless. I think by calling him brainless really shows that Katz missed one of the major themes: The vast and quick change a person goes through as he's about to enter college, where he gains a since of responsibility and respect for things that he never would have understood before. Specifically in this movie family and friends.
Blake
Tenacious D (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:Tenacious D (Score:5, Informative)
Tenacious D (Mature Humor!) (Score:1)
Warning: Mature Humor. Don't watch this in front of the kids.
Re:Tenacious D - Ingorance is Bliss (Score:2)
A list of some of Tenacious D shows in ciruclation is here [etree.org].
Don't assume that just becuase a band exists means they don't allow their music to be traded. In addition, trading legally recorded shows IS supporting the band as it helps spread the tunes to listeners that may have never heard the band before.
Hollywood Monarchy (Score:1)
I have no time for frivoulous movies. Hollywood can go jerk itself off (while I jerk myself off toying with computers...)
Is Jon Katz a nerd? (Score:2, Insightful)
/. is not Jon's personal weblog. Are these stories likely to make the
..and it's certainly not 'news for nerds.'
Re:Is Jon Katz a nerd? (Score:1, Troll)
Hahhaa, that was a joke, right? I think the reason Jon does these reviews is because it's his only excuse to goto the movies by himself since god knows that's the only way he's getting there.
Re:Is Jon Katz a nerd? (Score:4, Informative)
Boy, that should be the catchphrase here. That and "pot. kettle. black."
Guess what? Slashdot started life as a big weblog -- Taco's weblog. OK, it wasn't a "read my journal" blog, it was a "hey, look what I think is interesting in the science/technology world plus a few other things thrown in" blog. And it turned out to be so succesful that people like you hit reload on their browser at least 5 times a day while at work or wasting their lives in their parents basement, and feel some strange desire to post comments.
And then, at some point, the editorial staff of this glorified (and cool) weblog decided that movie reviews might matter to some people. So here's Katz's take on a movie. Perhaps you may have noticed he does the same thing every week. Repeat: It's not a journal entry. It's a movie review. It's a regular feature, too.
So what are you complaining about? That the editors decided to have weekly movie reviews? That the movies that Katz picks don't quite match up with your interests? That you don't like Katz's writing? That you might have to actually use your judgement and decide not to read some of these movie reviews yourself, rather than obsesive-compulsively reading every last slashdot article? Or that you might have to learn to use the topic/author filtering boxes in the preferences?
If so, perhaps you should start your own weblog, and read it instead of this one. That way, you won't have to be inconvenienced by the presence of any content that doesn't match your individual expectations.
Re:Is Jon Katz a nerd? (Score:2)
Re:Is Jon Katz a nerd? (Score:1)
Ham and Green Peppers is my fav. (Score:4, Insightful)
Why did you post story X?
Slashdot is many things to many people. Some people think it's a Linux site. To others, it's a geek hangout. I've always worked very hard to make sure that Slashdot matches up with my interests and the interests of my authors. We think we're pretty typical Slashdot readers... but that does mean that occasionally one of us might post something that you think is inappropriate. You might be interested in my Omelette rant.
Personally, I have a pet peeve when people post comments saying things like "That's not News For Nerds!" and "That's not Stuff that Matters!" Slashdot has been running for almost 3 years, and over that time, I have always been the final decision maker on what ends up on the homepage. It turns out that a lot of people agree with me: Linux, Legos, Penguins, Sci (both real and fiction). If you've been reading Slashdot, you know what the subjects commonly are, but we might deviate occasionally. It's just more fun that way. Variety Is The Spice Of Life and all that, right? We've been running Slashdot for a long time, and if we occasionally want to post something that someone doesn't think is right for Slashdot, well, we're the ones who get to make the call. It's the mix of stories that makes Slashdot the fun place that it is.
Answered by: CmdrTaco
Last Modified: 6/26/00
"The Omelette"
Let me try to give you an analogy for Slashdot's homepage. It's like an omelette: it's a combination of sausage and ham and tomatoes and eggs and more. Over the years, we've figured out what ingredients are best on Slashdot. The ultimate goal is, of course, to create an omelette that I enjoy eating: by 8pm, I want to see a dozen interesting stories on Slashdot. I hope you enjoy them too. I believe that we've grown in size because we share a lot of common interests with our readers. But that doesn't mean that I'm gonna mix an omelette with all sausages, or someday throw away the tomatoes because the green peppers are really fresh.
There are many components to the Slashdot Omelette. Stories about Linux. Tech stories. Science. Legos. Book Reviews. Yes, even Jon Katz. By mixing and matching these things each and every day, we bring you what I call Slashdot. On some days it definitely is better than others, but overall we think it's a tasty little treat and we hope you enjoy eating as much as we enjoy cooking it.
Answered by: CmdrTaco
Last Modified: 6/14/00
Re:Is Jon Katz a nerd? (Score:1)
Check the box with Jon Katz. Click Save.
Problem solved?
Jeremy
Mock. Mock. Mock. (Score:1, Troll)
JonKatz is a brainless hack writer until he stumbles across the Internet, and decides he was to use his brain and become a hack movie-reviewer and soapbox-monkey for a technological Website. He obsesses on SlashDot, doesn't get in because no one there really likes him and, with the help of his perpetually-stoned buddy CmdrTaco and his girlfriend Cowboy Neil, sets out to gain acceptance with SlashDot. Part of his obsession comes from a desire to get away from his hilariously and spectacularly dysfunctional writing career.
JonKatz is now wonderful at writing god awful movie reviews, but he needs to be careful, as it's already nearly impossible to imagine him in any other role. And he's great at it. He nearly steals the Website, especially playing against the I-actually-post-information-about-relevant-techno
The point and conceit of a movie review on a technological Website are both strange. SlashDot, a premier source of tech news the world over, is held to be insipid and valueless when it posts rubbish like this. Although we get a peek at the dummies that gave JonKatz a job, there is little feel at all for the point of a badly written movie review {and subsequent badly written parody review}. At least at first, all JonKatz wants to do is make an ass of himself, though I'm sure he's been told on numerous occasions that he would probably fit in better with the people at Ain't It Cool instead of the tech crowd. Hack writers and poor movie reviewers should stay at home where their roots are, all the better to spare the rest of us from this sort of garbage.
JonKatz should probably be fired with a phone call, so all the insults and bad-sort-of-laughter - there's an improbable amount of this - can be redirected. And the ending - well, he'll probably die from old age.
I think for a total of 15 to 20 yoctoseconds this is the most inventive and original review I've seen in a while. It's still pretty disjointed though. It seems as if JonKatz wanted to make a semi-serious, biting review but either chickened out or was held back. Still, there are more than a few great laughs in the review of Orange County and parts of the review that portray a complex look into the mind of a monkey with a keyboard trying to figure out what he should do with it.
I don't blame him. (Score:5, Insightful)
For at least as long as I've been reading Slashdot, Jon Katz has posted op/eds and stories investigating many of the social implications of emerging technology and current political trends, that have an impact on both our freedom to use technology and the industry itself. He's gone beyond speculating about the technical limits of supercooled processors, or the Quake 3 engine, to look at some of the things that actually make a dent in our lives.
And for at least as long as I've been reading Slashdot, readers have posted their opinions of Jon Katz, and why he can go to hell, or why his opinion sucks, or some other complaint. Almost all of them request that he take his writing elsewhere, that he is not welcome with their morning news and cup of coffee.
I'm not writing this to support the presence of goofy teen flick movie review on Slashdot. But judging from the way he's received, what did you expect? He's clearly come to the conclusion that, at least about important things, geeks must not like to think very much.
And I don't blame him.
If he has, then he's not been listening (Score:2)
... or he's been listening only to the "we hate Katz" roar and not discovering where that roar comes from.
I'm going to go out on a limb and speak not just for myself, but for everyone who has the same visceral reaction against most of Katz's "social commentary" articles. I say "visceral" specifically because my first reaction is an uncomfortable feeling in my gut that is similar to the feeling I get when in the presence salesman who's overpromising.
In short, the stories of Katz's that irk me say nothing.
It's much more than that though that gets to me - certainly the "yet another Outlook-enabled virus found" story adds very little useful information - it's the style in which Katz says his nothing. It screams of the overpolished language of an excited journalist trying to "capture the feeling of the movement". This style ends up completely obscuring any other message, substance, or information that the article might have once contained. The end result is that I get the story of the intrepid reporter, out reporting his bold new story that the establishment doesn't understand. Lost is the underlying reality, lost (or never present) are serious sociological considerations. What I'm left with is a bunch of speculative drivel and the overriding story of the reporter.
And I get that story every damn time. Once was really much more than enough.
It's nice to see that Katz has backed off in his writing style. If he can return to social commentary without riding the intrepid reporter horse, it might go better for him. I'd hate to think that the slashdot editors would assume that the anto-Katz reaction reflects a fundamental unwillingness to discuss those issues among the slashdot audience. (Though I would also contend that the slashdot medium does not lend itself easily to considered discourse, but that discussion is for another post)
In short, when we rail against Katz, we're not shooting the messenger because he carries an unpopular message. We're shooting the messenger because he arrives empty-handed.
The only reason for it being on Slashdot... (Score:5, Informative)
Also, as a Jack Black fan, that was the only reason I went to see the movie and, after the preview made it seem like Jack Black was a major co-star and had a major role in the film, I was extremely disappointed with how minor his role in the film was.
So, what I want to see, is the sequal that takes place in a year after his girlfriend has dumped him (it took her about 10 minutes to find a frat party and start chatting up some preppie frat guy who obviously has a thing for jailbait 17/18 year old girls) and he feels like complete shit for turning down admission to one of the most prestigious schools in the country for his girlfriend who obviously didn't love him enough to even consider a long distance relationship and so he can keep hanging out with his stoner friends and live at home well into his twenties like his waster brother? Give me a break.
Also, what about Bob? His mom was still married. His dad is going back to his ex-wife who is obviously just as unfaithful as his new ex-wife. I mean, she slept with a guy while her husband was in the house and flaunted him all over the place the next day.
Disappointed overall. But still okay.
Re:The only reason for it being on Slashdot... (Score:1)
Moon and College (Score:1)
Not to mention I should see it for the D
Hail Satan
What the fuck (Score:2)
Just from the advertising I'm sick of this obviously lame piece of crap. I can't believe somebody here went to see it, let alone REVIEWED it!
The reason I click on "Read More..." on Katz stuff (Score:5, Insightful)
I find myself ONLY reading Katz stuff for the comments. I don't read anything he writes but I love reading all the colorful commentary that is provided down here by fellow slashdot users.
What is this world coming to...
Re:The reason I click on "Read More..." on Katz st (Score:2, Insightful)
You've got to wonder where the value is when the replies are more fun to read than the actual article
Re:The reason I click on "Read More..." on Katz st (Score:1)
disappointing ending (no spoilers) (Score:2)
wait a minute... (Score:1)
Someone actually saw that movie? And these are the same people whose comments I read on /. to get useful information about tech stuff? Dear gods...
Is there a way to get a -5 score on all comments by people who've seen this movie? I think that would be a lot more useful than any meta-meta-meta-meta-moderation scheme you can come up with.
Tell ya why it's on this site.. (Score:2, Funny)
Orange County is not a suburb of LA (Score:1)
Anaheim, home to the first Disneyland, is in Orange County.
The population consists mainly of middle-class Caucasians. There are more Republicans than Democrats and the school system is reputed to be better than in LA, no doubt due to the richer populace and accompanying higher property taxes. (You did know that's where Californian public schools get most of their funding, right?)
In Toto (Score:1)
Obscure trivia time:
The band Toto was (is?) comprised of stand-in (backup) musicians for other popular bands. It could be said that their jobs were to play in toto the original guitarist, drummer, keyboardist, bassist, etc., anyway, they thought it would be cool to start jamming together when they weren't busy filling in for other musicians on tour, and thought it'd be clever and rather apropos to actually name their little band Toto. So they did. And they rock(ed).
I can listen to Africa all day and all night, non-stop. I don't know why. I also don't understand what the hell African rain has to do with anything they're singing about, but who the fsck cares, they're Toto!
Orange County vs Los Angeles (Score:2)
Counties sorted by (Gore+Bush)*log(Bush/Gore)
Gore, Bush, County, State
338047, 466232, Orange, CA
173705, 286843, Tarrant, TX
415514, 525679, Harris, TX
445196, 89377, Brooklyn, NY
1291805, 541208, Cook, IL
1598375, 812154, LosAngeles, CA
And didn't Chris Rock say... (Score:1)
Wait, that's nowhere near Orange County...
Re:And didn't Chris Rock say... (Score:2)
Wait, that's nowhere near Orange County...
That Chris Rock -- he's a real comedian isn't he?
Hey -- I've got one that's even more hilarious!
A teacher in the San Diego school district, we'll call her Caetlyn O'Malley, childless woman who had dedicated her life to teaching teenagers (ESL) in San Diego, was talking to her vice principle, who we'll call Marta Sanchez, about the problem with all the illegal immigrant kids in her class.
Marta looks to Caetlyn and through a contemptuous smirk says, "You're all just giving it away."
To which Caetlyn replies with the cheerful smile of a Leprechaun with her impenetrable riddle, "Right, up until we start building camps!"
At which point Marta Sanchez suddenly turns white.
You think that was the punch line? Actually -- here's the punch line:
That actually happened around 1991 -- I knew Caetlyn O'Malley.
Jim Bowery -- San Diego County resident 1983-1994
Saying that Orange County is a suburb of L.A. ... (Score:1)
Clueless people.
Not really OC (Score:1)
True, only Orange Countians (and Valley girls and boys) will notice this, but would it have cost so much more to shoot it on location?
Katzerific! (Score:2)
Wow, Jon. What a wonderfully botched sentence. Were you also a brainless Orange County surfing dude, by any chance?
Friends of Jon Katz (Score:2)
Where's the review for A Beautiful Mind? (Score:2)
Re:junis's review?? (Score:1, Funny)
He's preparing for the next Linux Developers Conference being held in Kandahar [thetimes.co.uk]
Re:Yes (Score:2, Offtopic)
"Teenage Tit Freaks -- 9 times."
I note that if the movie requires a mind and/or a non-teen viewer Katz almost always hates it. On the other hand, if it is plotless but has buxom, lithe young starlets then it usually passes his muster. To put it another way, I would trust Katz' taste in porn movies.