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Penso/spero/prego che sia la canzone dei titoli di coda per pompare l'idol di turno.

 

Curioso poi che qualunque versione facciano del trailer, tendano sempre a mettere 'Yamato Hasshin!" :fash2:

 

Per il resto ristabiliamo un po' il naturale ordine delle cose con Il Tema :fash2:

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K5-NTwR4f9U&feature=related

 

:fash1: :fash1: :fash1:

 

Che poi, tra parentesi:

 

http://undermainstreet.wordpress.com/2010/09/19/i-dont-want-to-close-my-eyes-yamato-hasshin/

 

I Don’t Want to Close My Eyes… Yamato Hasshin!

 

Posted on September 19, 2010 Steven Tyler’s first solo is the theme song in Takashi Yamazaki’s film SPACE BATTLE SHIP YAMATO. This film features famous actor Takuya Kimura as the main protagonist. I guess Steven Tyler singing the theme song came as a surprise for a lot of people. His first solo can be said as a big project because of this and certainly will reach it’s international fan base through this film.

 

This ballad is called Love Lives and Steven Tyler wrote it after reviewing a translated version of the script. The lyrics will complement the flow of the movie very well.

 

I’m certainly looking forward to this movie! It will be released in Japan on December 1st.

 

 

:lolla: :porcodance:

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Va beh magari con il giusto battage arriva davvero al cinema, però sei proprio appiorista dentro eh, come t'è venuto in mente Armageddon? :lolla:

 

Il brano musicale aveva ad un certo punto proprio un tipo di intonazione similare, e poi lo dicono pure la' il riferimento:

 

I Don’t Want to Close My Eyes :lolla:

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Eccellenti ed orgasmiche considerazioni di Del Toro su Le Montagne della Follia, che dimostra anche che le cazzate riportate recentemente da alcuni siti ( :whistle:) erano inventate di sana pianta:

 

"We've been designing for the last 3-weeks. It's being produced by James Cameron, who's been a friend for 20-years," del Toro said, "we have avoided working together until the time came for the right project. Obviously, the difference between the novella and the movie is that Lovecraft had a gift for making everything specifically ambiguous. He would say 'the leering face loaded with madness,’ or 'the evil perverse entity of unnamable'… everything was unnamable, indescribable. When you're reading you go,'Whoa!' your brain fills those spaces. For every creature, everyone has a secret mental image of what those creatures look like. It's going to be impossible to please everyone."

 

"The other thing that Lovecraft does in the novella, brilliantly, is essentially a very dry document," he added. "Thee reason why I read folklore is because folklore is almost stated as fact. It makes it all the more scary. You read a book that says, 'In the moors of so-and-so I had this dog who wanders the land of so-and-so, and a woman wails behind him, a pale spectrum,' and that's it! You go, 'Oh, well… I guess that happens.' When you read books like 'Passport to the Supernatural' or 'Chronicle of Vampirism', they just state it. 'In the town of so-and-so a shoemaker dies. Three days later he came back to haunt his family, and his rotting corpse…' [laughs] It's so factual. Lovecraft was the same. It's a very scientific expedition, only things go really wrong by him, and then by the end there's a few visible moments. Everything that is non-specific in literature has to be specific."

 

"You are loyal to the adaptation of the tale to another medium. I think the worst thing you can do is be slavish to the original document and then destroy the movie. You're not going to get a medal for being loyal. You're going to get a medal for making a good movie. I always say, jokingly, that adapting somebody else's work is like marrying a widow. You have to be respectful of the memory of the late husband but at some point [slaps hand suggestively]."

 

Del Toro went on to enthuse, "I've been thinking of those monsters for twenty years. Fortunately for me no one has done monsters like the ones I'm doing. In all the movies ever made there's never been monsters like the ones we're doing. About two weeks ago we were visited by Dennis Muren. He looked at the designs, and he turned to us and said, 'No one has seen monsters like this ever.' I was like, [boyish grin] 'Yeah!' I was happy and vindicated and all that. All I'm telling you is to me some of these monsters are more real than many of my cousins. [laughs] I mean, I have to point to them when we're at dinner, [whispers] 'who's that, Pedro? PEDRO!' But monsters I know what they had for lunch, for dinner, the biological condition, where they come from. I know all these questions because I live with them in my mind all the time."

 

"It's not only because I want it to be unique, it's because the way I have imagined the creatures for years is my own. I think monsters have to be powerful, fascinating, and you have to be fascinated in the most strict sense of the word. You cannot avert your eyes from them. There's a school of thought that says the unseen is more powerful, and I agree to a point. Then there is another type of horror movie that is a monster movie, in which the fascination of seeing the monster, and seeing the monster do its deed, is very powerful. Most people watch National Geographic secretly waiting to watch the lion attack the gazelle. [laughs] Ultimately, I think there is a part of monster lore that requires the payoff."

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Semplicemente non capite una sega di performance art, arte che imita la vita e viceversa. :snob:

Fappatevi pure su Ghostbusters 3. Che il cielo abbia pietà di voi.

 

BOOM! :lolla:

 

In questi giorni sei terribile.

Su, pensa a quanto sarà ganzo Spider-Man 3D e rilassati, vai. :giggle:

 

Se i gravosi impegni di Sons of Anarchy glielo consentiranno, Ron Perlman avrà, ovviamente!, un ruolo ne Le Montagne della Follia scritto appositamente per lui.

 

E penso anche di sapere quale sia.

Ruolo fenomenale. :pazzia: :pazzia: :pazzia:

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E penso anche di sapere quale sia.

Ruolo fenomenale. :pazzia: :pazzia: :pazzia:

 

If Perlman makes time for del Toro, he'll play "Larson, the sort of dog guy, the guy that cares for the dogs and the sled — the part of the expedition that is dog sleds," del Toro added. "It's a fantastic character. I really love him. He's sort of a pragmatic guy, doesn't care about science or the mythology or the cosmology. He just is a hard-boiled Nordic man, and it is written specifically for him."

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Visto il flusso di info, posso apri' un thread apposito o aspettiamo perlomeno il casting di quello che si prefigura come il film più importante e rivoluzionario del 21° secolo?

 

Sì, si potrebbe anche aprire il topic suo.

Il casting lo scriviamo man mano che emerge. :dance2:

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