"Sometimes entertainment is an overrated function of art. Sometimes being made uncomfortable is the point. Sometimes being repulsed by something is the point."
Simon Pegg in the Criterion Closet
#phm#ryland grace#rocky the eridian#project hail mary spoilers




seen from Türkiye
seen from Germany
seen from Sweden
seen from United States

seen from Belarus
seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from Ireland

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Germany
seen from Indonesia

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from Netherlands

seen from Türkiye
seen from Germany

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Netherlands
seen from Türkiye

seen from T1
"Sometimes entertainment is an overrated function of art. Sometimes being made uncomfortable is the point. Sometimes being repulsed by something is the point."
Simon Pegg in the Criterion Closet
🗣️📢 L O U D E R
Oscar Isaac
JODIE FOSTER is in the Criterion closet... ...and guess what one of her favorite films is 😘
That Scene with the Catherine O'Hara Swordfight...
There's a lot of Catherine O'Hara retrospecting going on now (as there should be), with discussions of her best work, and how many times she was the high point of a movie (some lackluster, some great).
I've watched her work ever since SCTV showed up on the tube in the wee hours (the 1/2 hour Canadian version, which begat the NBC-funded show, which begat....); and there are numerous wonderful bits/scenes/skits that she was in which come to mind.
But in our household, the hands-down favorite of her many works is "the Catherine O'Hara Swordfighting Scene", that was one of the extras of Criterion's The Princess Bride laserdisc.
It is a hoot. Yeah, it's full of slapstick/silent comedy conventions (that usually bore me); but the fight scene has a sort of sheer, Looney Tunes cartoon energy that lays waste to all my nitpicking.
And O'Hara, as an ersatz Veronica Lake villain, is the very best part of it. Her delivery, her spoof of the femme fatale tropes, and her sheer unflappable superiority in the face of law and order is a treat.
Here's the full scene, with sound:
Source for the entire episode.
(I know, the resolution of this clip isn't great; I remember it being clearer on the laserdisc. Apparently the scene never made it to the Criterion The Princess Bride DVD/Blu Ray/4K collection of extras.)
Some background and context after the cut: