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Resurrecting the Movies thread...

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Brown Eyes:
It was just loose powder glitter?  Probably the cap was just off... Unless it was a gel, then yeah, it could have exploded due to pressure changes.

Haha!!! I love how we've turned this thread into a discussion about glitter! :D


Anyway... more on the Depp/ Manson make-up thing.  This is being discussed kind of a lot in the Manson fandom lately so it's on my mind.



I really never knew how much they are friends until I started looking into ths. I also never realized that Depp could play guitar (certianly not to the level where he could participate in playing at a MM show - based on youtubes he did a serviceable job, though Twiggy and Fred were there to pick up the slack).  I find it interesting how much Depp often seems to model his characters on rock stars (or at least to some extent).





serious crayons:

--- Quote from: Brown Eyes on August 10, 2013, 11:29:52 pm ---  I find it interesting how much Depp often seems to model his characters on rock stars (or at least to some extent).


--- End quote ---

I think he's kind of a rock-star wannabe.

I read a magazine piece a year or so ago in which he interviewed Patti Smith. I've never been much of a Patti Smith fan (I know, sacrilege  ::)), and overall I found the piece annoying and pretentious. I've always felt that way about Smith, and the article made me feel that way about Depp as well

But I am, of course, a huge Keith Richards' fan. Whatever his faults, Keith has never struck me as at all pretentious (one of my least favorite faults). So that relationship redeems Depp for me, even if it does seem to be a sort of shorthand way to acquire cool-by-association.

A few years back, when Depp was up against Sean Penn for an Oscar (I think), I read a magazine article arguing that Depp was actually the better actor of the two because he had taken a lightweight commercial character like Capt. Jack Sparrow and made it into something complex and interesting yet still comic and light, whereas Penn always had to go the standard actorly route of being all intense and serious and tortured and whatnot. At the time, I was thoroughly convinced. I thought the writer had an excellent point.

In the years since then, though, Depp has continued taking lightweight commercial jokey roles. I don't see him ever even attempting any of the deeper, more serious roles that are Penn's territory (and of course, many other actors'). So now my view has shifted again.

There you go -- more than you wanted to hear about my opinions re Johnny Depp!  :laugh:



CellarDweller:
I watched two DVDs yesterday.

Stonewall Uprising - a documentary about the Stonewall riots in '69.  The title comes from one of the interviewees description that it wasn't a riot to him, but an uprising, a group of people rising up to fight for their rights.   Very well made documentary that starts with the history of the gay scene in NYC pre-Stonewall, vintage scenes from anti-gay propaganda films, interviews with people from that time frame, and who were at the Stonewall the night it happened.   Interviewees included Mayor Koch (who admits to police entrapment of gay people) and one of the police who raided the bar that night.


Small Town Gay Bar - another documentary, this film follows twoo gay bars in the rural south, and their clientele.  The film also puts a spotlight on the murder of Scotty Joe Weaver.  The film depicts the Rumors and a change in ownership, Crossroads Estates and its destruction.   STGB also includes interviews with Tim Wildman from the AFA (American Family Association) and Fred Phellps from Westboro Baptist Church.

delalluvia:

--- Quote from: serious crayons on August 12, 2013, 09:45:22 am ---I think he's kind of a rock-star wannabe.

I read a magazine piece a year or so ago in which he interviewed Patti Smith. I've never been much of a Patti Smith fan (I know, sacrilege  ::)), and overall I found the piece annoying and pretentious. I've always felt that way about Smith, and the article made me feel that way about Depp as well

But I am, of course, a huge Keith Richards' fan. Whatever his faults, Keith has never struck me as at all pretentious (one of my least favorite faults). So that relationship redeems Depp for me, even if it does seem to be a sort of shorthand way to acquire cool-by-association.

A few years back, when Depp was up against Sean Penn for an Oscar (I think), I read a magazine article arguing that Depp was actually the better actor of the two because he had taken a lightweight commercial character like Capt. Jack Sparrow and made it into something complex and interesting yet still comic and light, whereas Penn always had to go the standard actorly route of being all intense and serious and tortured and whatnot. At the time, I was thoroughly convinced. I thought the writer had an excellent point.

In the years since then, though, Depp has continued taking lightweight commercial jokey roles. I don't see him ever even attempting any of the deeper, more serious roles that are Penn's territory (and of course, many other actors'). So now my view has shifted again.

There you go -- more than you wanted to hear about my opinions re Johnny Depp!  :laugh:

--- End quote ---

When Johnny came to California, it was to be a musician, not an actor.  Remember, he owned the Viper Club and used to played there fairly often.[/size]

serious crayons:

--- Quote from: delalluvia on August 23, 2013, 08:01:42 pm ---When Johnny came to California, it was to be a musician, not an actor.  Remember, he owned the Viper Club and used to played there fairly often.

--- End quote ---

Good thing he kept his day job.


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