Wired on Hollywood's Elite Message Boards 264
superflippy writes " Wired journalist Ben Mezrich gets the scoop on the online forums that film producers and other Hollywood heavyweights use to "track" the buzz on spec scripts, actors, writers, etc. "The tracking boards are the herd mentality gone digital," says one tracker. This helps explain how dreck like Kangaroo Jack makes it to theaters."
AC flames kill movie projects! (Score:5, Funny)
Imagine what a goatse redirect would do!
Re:AC flames kill movie projects! (Score:5, Funny)
Imagine what a goatse redirect would do!"
Remind George Lucas that he's got room to make 3 more movies?
Re:AC flames kill movie projects! (Score:3, Funny)
What?!? (Score:2, Funny)
Nah...back to Fox. ;-)
Explains? (Score:2, Funny)
But since the linked article had eye candy, you get a pass.
Re:Explains? (Score:3, Informative)
It certainly does explain how Kangaroo Jack makes it to theaters.
On the second page [wired.com]:
Re:Explains? (Score:2)
flip [reference.com].
(See the adjectival sense).
Hope that helps.
Re:Explains? (Score:5, Insightful)
The simple fact is, Dude, Where's My Car may have been stupid, but it was fun. And enough people agreed with me that it made enough money to justify a sequel. It's easy to mock movies, but if they sell, they have succeeded in their goal, no matter how stupid and worthless you may think it is.
missunerstood problem (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Explains? (Score:2)
blue
Hollywood Execs are a bunch of Trolls (Score:5, Interesting)
As everyone knows, a certain well-known site [slashdot.org] has a similar problem. Yet with the magic of Zoo [slashdot.org], trolls can be banished [slashdot.org] with just a few mouse clicks! And as we all know, now slashdot is perfectly free of such ill-behaved creatures.
So the obvious answer is for Hollywood to use slash! Blacklist the Trolls, and we'll get better movies.
Re:Hollywood Execs are a bunch of Trolls (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hollywood Execs are a bunch of Trolls (Score:2, Funny)
Film Tracker Website (Score:3, Informative)
With all of the effort that goes into writing cracks for things like Everquest, you would think that someone would be interested in finding a way in to cleverly promote things that make sense.
But the whole vetting thing they do would be a pain to get around. A really closed community.
So true... (Score:5, Interesting)
Having to work around writers and executive producers and other people in the industry is a drain. You will never find a group of folks more full of shit. I completely agree with the article in that all the movers and shakers in the industry run on fear, constantly looking around to see what everyone else is doing.
Re:So true... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:So true... (Score:3, Interesting)
Um, try reading his book, or his older Wired article. I'm sure the people he covered in his book are crying about you calling them fools -- all the way to the bank, since many of them made millions of dollars.
Re:So true... (Score:2)
Oh, and you might make a little cash too.
Re:So true... (Score:2)
In the film biz??
Oh, but casinos will no longer send you to the bottom of the harbor for pissing them. That is the difference...
Re:So true... (Score:2, Interesting)
Carmack [xent.com] is many things, but not a fool. Perhaps you have made a misjudgment?
Re:So true... (Score:2)
Re:So true... (Score:2)
Looks up to me (minus the "the"):
Wizard of Odds [wizardofodds.com]
And here is the story [wizardofodds.com] you were talking about.
Par for the course. (Score:5, Interesting)
We're discussing [fark.com] this at Fark. Here's what I had to say there:
Ben's experience matches up EXACTLY with what I've known to be standard industry practice for as long as I can remember.
We used to joke that there was one guy, who'd get drunk at a restaurant and spout out movie ideas (it changes as things go in and out of style -- in the 80s it was Spago, in the 90s I think it was the Viper Room. I have no idea what it is now, as I attempt to claw my way back up to the "b" list.) The joke went that there were execs from all the major studios, and they'd only hear flashes of the conversation, like ". . . asteroid . . . earth . . . big summer movie . .
The worst thing about this article is that Hollywood will see it, and they'll add Ben to the "we hate him because he doesn't play by our rules" list, and Bringing Down The House will never get made.
Which REALLY sucks, because I was hoping to score a part in it.
A friend of mine (who is now an indie director) worked on "Batman and Robin."
The horror stories he told me about the insane wasting of money on actor crap would make you explode.
The budget for actor garbage -- workout rooms, personal chefs, personal assistants, personal drivers, groomers, and all that useless shiat -- was THREE MILLION DOLLARS.
We made Neverland [newmediaen...nment.info] for less than 50 grand, and even THAT was a ton of money to me. (I'm not an investor, just an actor, in that picture.)
Jane White Is Sick And Twisted [janewhitemovie.com], which is coming out on DVD in just a couple of weeks, was similar in budget . . . and I'd wager that both of these movies are more entertaining, and more watchable than Batman and Robin.
Yeah, Hollywood is fucked. Royally. The big media conglomerates (you can't even call them 'studios' any longer) have co-opted "independent" as a marketing device . . . but there are some real indie studios out there, with people who love the material, love the process of bringing it to life, and create great work. It's just hard to find right now, is all.
As for Ben's movie? I'd DIE to play Kevin, but a part that big will go to someone who is currently "established," who can "open" a movie. (By "open," I mean that they can get people into the theatre based on their name alone.)
Kevin's character is asian in Real Life, IIRC, but they'll change that for the movie, and you'll see someone like Matt Damon (if Hollywood is smart, which they're not so we'll probably see someone who's a lousy actor, but on a "hot" series right now. I leave it to you to fill in the blanks on that one) in that role. Which he probably won't take, because it's too similar to "Rounders," which leaves it wide open for me!
. . . to lose out to some guy who's hot right now.
But Dealer #5 is all mine, baby!
Re:Par for the course. (Score:2)
Re:what kind of pay? (Score:5, Informative)
Well, SAG makes several contracts available for producers who wish to use SAG actors, but don't have a lot of money. They are all listed at the SAG Indie website (warning: it's flash hell) http://sagindie.com/flashFS.html
For those two movies I mentioned, I worked for the SAG minimums, and took some profit-participation incentives. I did it because they were both great scripts, and I wanted to work with the people involved.
I'm very conflicted about actor's salaries. On the one hand, if an actor is going to be "opening" a movie, he or she should share in the massive profits that movie will be bringing the studio. On the other hand, because of this phenomenon, we're looking at one actor getting a multi-million dollar salary, while all the other actors work for scale.
In Sydney Lumet's book "Making Movies," he talks about those stupid actor bonuses, and how money that's spent on those things doesn't end up "on the screen," and the audience gets cheated because of it.
I'm not sure what the crew and department heads got paid. I'm sure you could get an idea for that stuff by tracking down some indie film makers . . . they usually like to help out aspiring film makers.
Fear and AI (Score:4, Interesting)
Everyone's out to get you mother fucker!
Re:Fear and AI (Score:2)
There's a good chance that Stanley stipulated that that be the case; he was a private person, to the point where some people might consider him to have certain psychiatric problems. Still, poor == crazy, rich == eccentric, hey?
Re:Fear and AI (Score:2)
Thing is, that in the industry they probably really are the few with any insight and I'd say that fear was justified. Hollywood is the place where the man with one eye does not rule the blind, instead he has to keep it closed because everyone else wants to pluck it out for themselves.
Re:Fear and AI (Score:2)
The universe is not so poor, but people who talk to each other through fax machines might be. And these are the people who would shape the future of general computing with DRM.
William Gibson communicated entirely without the internet. Much of his communication was taken care of via fax until 1996 or so.
I don't think paranoia is the state of mind we're seeing in Hollywood. Paranoia would have ensured that these boards remained a secret (or at least a perpetually unconfirmed rumor) with lots of NDAs an
Re:Fear and AI (Score:2)
Also if you have an investment fr
That could exmplain it (Score:2, Interesting)
"If the buzz is any indicator..." (Score:5, Funny)
"What buzz?"
"The Internet buzz."
"What the fuck is the Internet?!"
Re:"If the buzz is any indicator..." (Score:5, Insightful)
On the other hand, your sig contained one of my favorite lines from Donnie Darko. What a spectacular movie Donnie Darko was.
Funny how these same hollywood dumb asses that spend their time trolling elite message boards, pumped millions in production and advertising to push a piece of crap like Jay and Silent Bob, but did very very little to promote a gem like Donnie Darko.
Subsequently, Jay and Silent Bob made a fortune at the box office, donnie darko did not do well at all.
Re:"If the buzz is any indicator..." (Score:2, Insightful)
Uhhh, doesnt sound like crap to me. You laughed, you found it pleasureable. It entertained people, it has done what it set uot to do in the first place.
What then constitutes crap? If crap means a ridiculous and incoherent story, then most of my favorite movies are crap (that includes JaSB:SB). Of course, if you mean that crap = not entertaining, then it is quite obvious that it wasn't crap.
Now i was argueing with a friend that Vertigo was a
Re:"If the buzz is any indicator..." (Score:2)
Not to say I didn't enjoy J&SBSB. I'm a big Kevin Smith fan and I really enjoyed the movie (for what it was: dick&fart jokes). Most of the 30 million was probably due to the cult following Kevin Smith has, and not advertising.
(BTW, I also really enjoed Donnie Darko)
Donnie Darko, and film's Hollywood SHOULD make (Score:3, Informative)
Indeed. And your comment provides me the opportunity to post the URL to my just published, really long and detailed review of Donnie Darko. [locusmag.com] I've posted it before. Given the opportunity, I'll post it again. Hell, I've maxed out my karma, and if causes one intelligent person to seek out this singularly interesting film, it will be worth it...
Re:"If the buzz is any indicator..." (Score:2)
Re:"If the buzz is any indicator..." (Score:4, Insightful)
The whole point of Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back was that is WAS a shitty movie. They know this, it was on purpose.
"Any movie with Jay and Silent Bob will lick balls"
I don't believe this... (Score:5, Funny)
reading a board is one thing, basing your decesions on it another.
Then again, there is this anecdote from Terry Pratchett. He met a Hollywood executive who wanted to make a movie out of his book "Mort" (that is about Death taking on an apprentice). Here's what happened in the word of Pratchett himself:
"A production company was put together and there was US and Scandinavian and European involvement, and I wrote a couple of script drafts which went down well and everything was looking fine and then the US people said "Hey, we've been doing market research in Power Cable, Nebraska, and other centres of culture, and the Death/skeleton bit doesn't work for us, it's a bit of a downer, we have a prarm with it, so lose the skeleton". The rest of the consortium said, did you read the script? The Americans said: sure, we LOVE it, it's GREAT, it's HIGH CONCEPT. Just lose the Death angle, guys.
Whereupon, I'm happy to say, they were told to keep on with the medication and come back in a hundred years."
Re:I don't believe this... (Score:2)
Hollywood: Do you want to play our game?
Pratchett: Go to hell.
Hollywood: Likewise.
The game is always interesting. People get too focused on it and not the end project, though...this is what leads to movies without a soul.
C'est la vie. It continues every day, with new faces and different names, but always the same. Hollywood has been trying to put itself out of business for the past century, always accidentally succeeding when it needs to.
Believe it. (Score:5, Insightful)
This doesn't make them bad people, some of them are exceedingly decent human beings in terms of their personal habits, but the "creative" community in Hollywood is really dominated anti-creative forces and incredibly self-absorbed people. It's truly amazing we ever get any good movies at all.
Re:Believe it. (Score:2)
Hm, s/make money/type/; and I'd think you were talking about Slashdot :)
Re:I don't believe this... (Score:2)
It reminds of the several attempts to make a movie based on Hitchhiker's Guide
Re:I don't believe this... (Score:2)
Terry Pratchett's a dude? Never realized that.
Re:I don't believe this... (Score:2)
Re:I don't believe this... (Score:5, Interesting)
Hollywood types just don't get it.
be a contrarian (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:be a contrarian (Score:3, Insightful)
WTF? (Score:5, Funny)
They make movies like Kangaroo Jack (Score:2, Insightful)
I'd bet more people enjoyed Kangaroo Jack than any given Star Trek film. It's stupid but funny and something to do with the kids on a saturday.
Sheesh, not everything out of hollywood need be an acclaimed arthouse fancy shmancy Cannes film festival fare.
Re:They make movies like Kangaroo Jack (Score:2)
Fancy shmancy like StarTrek movies, for example.
Re:People liked Nemesis? (Score:2)
And if kings had Cheetos and Kraft Mac&Cheese, you know they'd have their chefs make it every day. With tuna or bits of ham. That is some good boxed shit, there.
Re:They make movies like Kangaroo Jack (Score:2)
Re:They make movies like Kangaroo Jack (Score:2)
I'm starting to wonder if this really is what appeals to children, though, since everyone is doing it, and I assume that marketers can't *all* be stupid. We are talking about the generation of kids that made Pokemon successful...
Re:They make movies like Kangaroo Jack (Score:3, Insightful)
OTOH (Score:2)
Re:They make movies like Kangaroo Jack (Score:5, Funny)
Kid movie!=crap! Honestly, Lilo&Stich and Sprited Away beat out EVERY OTHER FUCKING MOVIE this year both in artistic depth and enjoyment. LOTR? It might be pretty good in general, but you're working from Tolkien here! You could make a masterpiece out of that blindfolded and it still manages to have X-TREME skating elves. Even the artsy Broadway thing was fluff crap.
The closest they ever get to creativity anymore is when they're ripping off something. And even Spiderman kept me wishing I had a pause button so I could get up and go have lunch to break the monotony.
Absolutely you don't need Cannes (which, despite it's facade, is about as artsy as Eight Legged Freaks) you just need something that isn't total shit. I'd kill for another Die Hard. Die Hard 3 was probably the last time I sat through a movie without having to supress the urge to scream obsenities.
And don't try and pull some crap about how it's just personal preference. If your personal preference is kangaroos stealing money from the HILARIOUS pair of "skinny white guy #6" and "fat black guy #3", you're a waste of entropy.
Or maybe I've just seen too many movies. Either way, I've got 20 bucks and an old Gameboy for the first guy who lays down some hurt on those boards.
Re:They make movies like Kangaroo Jack (Score:3, Insightful)
By your own claim it was stupid. What does that say about yo
AOL? (Score:5, Funny)
I assume this means they rely excusively on the message boards of AOL customers?
Anyone hack the site yet? (Score:3, Interesting)
pssst! (Score:2)
Don't tell anyone.
Buying a script != shooting a film (Score:4, Insightful)
(Or maybe I just underestimate the stupidity of people)
Re:Buying a script != shooting a film (Score:4, Insightful)
Never underestimate the power of stupid people in large groups.
(yes, taken blatantly from a bumper sticker).
Re:Buying a script != shooting a film (Score:2)
Any sufficiently large group of people is indistinguishable from idiots.
(Or more simply: "Masses are asses".)
Kangaroo Jack (Score:5, Interesting)
That said Kangaroo Jack made money. It grossed $65 million in the USA alone, which matches its budget. Add in foreign releases and DVD/VHS sales/rental and you have a profitable movie. So what was wrong with it again? Oh yes - it was crap - but you know hollywood is a business.
Kangaroo Jack (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't blame the internet or even hollywood. Blame the people who went to see it. That movie was a success (as much as it might scare some of us), because for one reason or another lots of people bought tickets.
There have always been people making crap movies (and tv shows) and people who have what most of us would consider poor taste going out to watch them.
Hollywood isn't bringing down movie quality by only making crap like "The Core". Viewers are bringing down movie quality by watching crap like "The Core". Entertainment is an industry, they produce what sells.
Re:Kangaroo Jack (Score:2)
This logic feels persuasive, but it doesn't hold up--the movies are an industry, and people enjoy the act of going to the movies. As a consequence there are always sales for ANY movie.
Certainly we are responsible for our own actions, but I think this kind of anti-populsm anger isn't very constructive. And it certainly doesn't get us any better movies unless we somehow convince everyone to start boycotting.
Who cares? We care. (Score:5, Interesting)
I wouldn't say that, even though, objectively its correct, but let's face it - we are obsessed with Hollywood. We complain when a bad movie gets released. Doesn't that seem a little odd? Its just taking up space at the local 20-screen cinema, its not like we're forced to watch them at gunpoint.
A movie critic is a respected international job. Why? The TV and the internet are constantly telling us who Julia Roberts is dating or what Heidi Clum wore last week in Paris.
I've divested in Hollywood long ago. I catch the occasional movie and am stunned at how many commercials I have to watch, how much I have to pay, and the how "movie people" simply act like little children when they don't get that perfect movie they were hoping for.
The best thing I did in a long time was buy a Tivo. I now have almost no connection to pop-America, have no idea who "hot" actors are, don't see commercials for crap like "Celebrity Justice," etc. Yeah, I sound like one of those, "I dont have a TV" people, but you know what, they make excellent points. You simply can't see the forest from the trees if you grew up watching TV like I did.
It would be nice if Hollywood would just make art, but it collectively decided long ago that the celebrity star system serves it well and people don't seem to complain much. Heaven forbid we see actors, musicians, and TV-people as our peers and not saints we hope someday will sign our chest with a sharpie at Barnes and Noble.
I love how concerns over real events that affect us, politics, the war, etc made the oscars look like the cheap industry backscratching it truly is. Who wore what? Who cares. Take your little statue and go home.
The nice thing about the internet is that media people have suddenly become real. Reporters have blogs and *gasp* they're trying to make their way through life too, even though they can occasionally get a quote or two from someone holding a powerful office in government. The most common thing I heard when Wil Wheaton's blog hit critical mass was, "Oh, he's just like an ordinary person. We were so mean to him." Or "I'm a dude who wrote some software, enjoy" compared to "Mega-corp announces its newest proactive and innovative product for PC consumers, this revolutionary...."
I think Hollywood's celebrity system is more or less destined to collapse due to the egalitarian aspects of cheap/free information. I'm not going to bother to provide supporting links: (im sure you've read these stories) TV time has been interrupted by internet time, the RIAA is losing sales and indie labels are experiencing a small boom, linux is in the enterprise and kicking ass, fans petition or even pay for quality TV episodes, access to lots of different news brings balance to national tunnel vision, etc.
I really hope my kids grow up in a society in which the self-important PR and other celebrity BS are seen plainly as lies. I hope they don't go crazy over the latest fads because J-Lo was seen wearing something similiar at Spago. Or even how to explain to them why adults can pay 9 dollars to see something like "Kangaroo Jack." I hope my generation looks crazy to them, because we probably are.
Re:Kangaroo Jack (Score:3, Insightful)
The hell? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The hell? (Score:3, Insightful)
Um, no. Retarded movie-goers who still go to see it are why that drek makes it to theaters. And hey, it's cheap to make.
I've got an idea... (Score:2, Funny)
I wonder what they'd do with the Stephen King or Natalie Portman ones....
(And before anyone suggests we send them the goatse trolls, that's a different kind of movie studio.)
This just in... (Score:2, Funny)
A knock on the door of the KID's room, heavy, authoritative. The EXEC enters loudly.
EXEC
Young lady, you need to explain the bill for
your cell pho-- What's that?
KID
(glued to screen, typing)
I'm on a talkback board.
EXEC
I think you talk back plenty already.
KID
Dad! No, it's li
Now we know how (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Now we know how (Score:2)
And I thought +5 Trolls were a bug (Score:4, Insightful)
Personally, I thought it was a great article that really shows just how rapidly the internet has changed the way we think/act/say/do in a converstational or consensual manner.
In fact I think it's fairly obvious that we can expect to see even more of this mode of consensual decision making as communication devices continue to permeate our culture.
For example: I have a G4 tiBook, it has rendezvous which in turn is supported by an app called Hydra [globalse.org] that allows multiple users to edit a single document real-time. And that is a fairly obvious and straight forward model. I believe that within 2-3 years the notion of 1 user/computer will be old hat and many tasks will be done as part of a consensus.
Imagine a team of genetic research scientists in the year 2007. They run Linux workstations and perform calculations to create a designer genome for the creation of a bacteria to use as an eco-friendly solvent. While they work, their CPU/HD and memory are all shared via the net and they are able to operate asynchronously on the same problem via this distributed architecture. Of course any distributed architecture amongst real-time users would require chat. So this small team could also allow in research fellows and peers to help guide and assist them in their work. And now we see an environment just like the one written up. But here, a chat user could influence the course of R&D, by trolling accordingly, they could cause the scientists to follow their friends research while shunning other research by those they do not favor personally.
And as such, would likely follow a similar killing floor for college research papers to be applied and praised or ignored out right WITHOUT even being read.
As you can see today hyper-communication causes people to act without doing any research and as technology progresses it won't get better. In fact far worse in the respect of it's cultural permeation and impact but hopefully better if tools made available to quantify and qualify data may be equally as ubiquitous in the coming age.
a great movie that was never released (Score:2)
here's [bobanddavid.com] some info on it
imagine... (Score:2, Funny)
Amazing!
Surprisngly inept (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Surprisngly inept (Score:4, Insightful)
I'd submit that this was always going to happen. Give a group of terrified, insecure, vain people like these access to the internet of course they are going to congregate into a closed environment. One that's intrinsically self-affirming where there are no dissenting opinions, and they can always be assured of making the "right" desicion. It's a matter of lore that the job of "studio exec" carries with it the professional life-expectancy of a Spinal Tap drummer. What these people want most after the blowjobs, drugs and money is to be constantly told they are great & doing the right thing.
In fact the emergance of this closed circle-jerk system may explain why the synopsis for a lot of recent hollywood films sound like a parody from the Simpsons starring "Troy McClure". I mean c'mon, a movie about a sassy kangaroo that steals a hundred grand of mob money?
Thanks to the corporate bloat of the studios, taking on layer after layer of usesless management incapable of independant thought, films are being made these days from ideas that would have gotten you laughed out of a pitch meeting a decade ago. What's really depressing is that people are actually going to see them...
God damn (Score:5, Insightful)
It's either "mainstream", "indy" or "foreign" with you guys.
How 'bout rooting for some "good" films?
Better Article Here... (Score:2)
Hollywood's Hidden Digital Ether
The Birth of a "Tracker" [ojr.org]
Where the Network is Today [ojr.org]
- James
Slashdot, The Movie (Score:4, Funny)
Can you imagine, Wil Wheaton playing CmdrTaco?
StarTux
This is why they keep making drek like "Kangaroo J (Score:4, Interesting)
Hollywood will keep making dreck as long as it makes money.
BOX OFFICE SUMMARY FOR "KANGAROO JACK"
Box Office Total: $65,708,774
Box Office Opening: $16,580,209
No. of Weeks at #1: 1
No. of Weeks in Top 10: 5
BOX OFFICE HISTORY
Week Rank Wkd. Gross Theaters Per Theater Cumulative
1 1 $16,580,209 2,818 $7,770 $21,895,483
2 2 $11,548,247 2,848 $4,055 $35,112,415
3 4 $9,048,362 2,848 $3,177 $45,886,113
4 7 $6,105,250 2,848 $2,144 $53,035,263
5 8 $3,953,199 2,535 $1,986 $58,954,899
6 13 $1,988,368 1,742 $1,141 $61,901,888
7 17 $1,363,485 1,545 $883 $63,609,564
8 19 $772,413 1,110 $696 $64,691,137
9 23 $352,060 615 $572 $65,478,341
10 44 $108,774 216 $504 $65,708,774
Box office cumulative figures also include daily grosses from Monday through Thursday (not shown).
Re:This is why they keep making drek like "Kangaro (Score:3, Interesting)
I do think that part of the reason it did so well was because it was a rather dry time for movies appealing to idiots and children and thus raked in most of the money that is usually spent on keeping the whining shit factories quiet (but not at any of the films I attend... I recall during a "House of 1,000 Corpses" trailer in front
a few minor points (Score:2, Interesting)
I've got a movie idea (Score:2)
Re:herd mentality (Score:4, Funny)
Adjusted Simpsons Quote (Score:2)
Homer: The code of the Hollywood message board, Marge! The rules that teach a flunky to be a exec. Let's see. [enumerates them on his fingers] Don't tattle. Always make fun of those different from you. Never say anything, unless you're sure everyone feels exactly the same way you do. What else...
Re:herd mentality (Score:5, Funny)
You pretentious little fuck.
Re:herd mentality (Score:2)
Oh, wait. This is slashdot.
Re:herd mentality (Score:2)
The amount of crap in movieland makes it all barely worth watching. blah
Re:herd mentality (Score:2)
Re:herd mentality (Score:2)
SLASHDOT
With special guest star: Lisa Simpson.
Re:herd mentality (Score:2, Funny)
I don't watch movies at all, it's a waste of my fucking time.
And no, I don't consider "porno movies" actual movies so they don't count, but those don't waste much time as I just watch short clips.
Re:herd mentality (Score:2)
No use in watching the entire movie anyway, none of them have any plot. Just the same people fucking over and over again in different ways. Easier just to skip the garbage in between fuck scenes...
SB
Re:herd mentality (Score:2, Funny)
I don't only watch Indy movies, but I do have to agree that they are quite good. There are few movies as timeless as Raiders of the Lost Ark, that's for sure.
Re:herd mentality (Score:3, Funny)
Re:herd mentality (Score:2)
Re:herd mentality (Score:2)
damn, thats funny.
I loved that indie movie with the bad camera shots...