I would definitely show him the own homemade movie I and my friends
did as a teenagers. I also happen to be a big fan of
horror movies, so a scary good movie would be worth to watch
with Steve. I don't come up with any good now.
I would definitely show him the own homemade movie I and my friends
did as a teenagers. I also happen to be a big fan of
horror movies, so a scary good movie would be worth to watch
with Steve. I don't come up with any good now.
I would have him sit down and we would watch all three of the Lord of The Rings films back-to-back, because I know he's probably seen them all at least two or three times and knows the storyline, so he'd have plenty of time to sign all of my books while we sat there! (I wouldn't want him to get too bored, don't cha know....) And, yes, there would be snack breaks and potty breaks when ever he needed them, gosh, I ain't THAT cruel!!![]()
![]()
Games with James Caan, Katherine Ross and Simone Signoret. Scared the bejesus out of me in my babysitting days. Found a copy on Amazon and while it didn't scare me, it is still very clever.
The Indian Runner(1991) about brothers and how hard that can be..Nobody's Fool,with Paul Newman,about small town life..and finally,gotta stick a scary flick in there,Phantasm,cause you can't have too many flying,barbed,drilling baseballs zooming about..![]()
The Private Eyes, he's probably seen it but I'm sure it's been awhile and it was damn funny.
Schindler’s list or Life is beautiful.
Or Poltergeist
I'd suggest Dress To Kill if he's never seen Eddie Izzard do his thing.
Magic, a William Goldman (not Golding) screenplay based on Goldman's novel of the same title, starring Anthony Hopkins in an Oscar-nominated performance. I think sK has already seen the movie, so he might not mind as much my verbal interruptions and questions - such as whether he realized that Hopkins was doing the voice of the dummy, was playing a dual role, as it were - as if he were seeing it for the first time.
Bookmarks