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Perhaps you think too much? You seem to read a great deal into what is supposed to be a sharing of cinematic experiences. Your verbose rumination of what you consider to be our motives is not only flawed, but pointless. Perhaps you would do better to read a dictionary or, perhaps install a spell-check on your computer instead of reading our posts if they offend you so.helgi said:But when saying what is and what is not excellent, you achieve a smallish charisma, and small suspicion that you are excellent, and this is all what you're all after, I think.
Firstly, I feel a certain sympathy for your professor, for he has much to teach you, for astute students generally check their spelling. Sophomoric correction, indeed!! Since you cannot spell it properly, I will also assume that you know not the definition of the word. For your sake, I will define it here to assist you from using it inappropriately in the future:helgi said:hey Mrs. Beer Wench, instead of saying 5/5, say that you give it a 1. That's how my proffesor would advise you! How lucky you are to hear it from an astute student such as I, who may forward his proffesor's wisdom at marry and in good spirit of sophmoric correction.
Students who can instruct, but lack the ability to learn? Perhaps the idiom "Those who cannot do, teach" is equitable. Or, perhaps you would be wise to hearken the words of Abraham Lincoln who said, "Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak out and remove all doubt."helgi said:Indeed, it shows that a worthy proffesor results in students who can instruct! You must delight that I speak so brilliantly to you! Chow!
What's a crabby?
Perhaps you think too much? You seem to read a great deal into what is supposed to be a sharing of cinematic experiences. Your verbose rumination of what you consider to be our motives is not only flawed, but pointless. Perhaps you would do better to read a dictionary or, perhaps install a spell-check on your computer instead of reading our posts if they offend you so.
Firstly, I feel a certain sympathy for your professor, for he has much to teach you, for astute students generally check their spelling. Sophomoric correction, indeed!! Since you cannot spell it properly, I will also assume that you know not the definition of the word. For your sake, I will define it here to assist you from using it inappropriately in the future:
Sophomoric:
adj. inexperienced, brash, foolish
adj. asinine, senseless, daft
adj. stupid, half-baked, brainless, dumb
There are numerous synonyms for the word, but I believe you get the point. I hope this will assist you in the future. I too like to convey wisdom in good spirit.
Students who can instruct, but lack the ability to learn? Perhaps the idiom "Those who cannot do, teach" is equitable. Or, perhaps you would be wise to hearken the words of Abraham Lincoln who said, "Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak out and remove all doubt."
If you do not wish to enjoy movies, that is certainly your prerogative. However, there is no need for you to attempt to condemn those of us that do with such vapid condescension. And, for God's sake, if you wish to speak like a scholar, learn to spell. You simply discredit everything you type when you erroneously spell every other word.
..Abraham Lincoln's advice was for fools, but I am a genius, but not a scholar.
Calvin and Hobbes said:- Right, you're TOO smart.
- Believe it, lady! You know how Einstein got bad grades as a kid? Well, MINE are even WORSE!
Watched Elvis: The Early Years (2005)
Kay, so out I went to the library. I had no need for another book on top of the five books that I was already reading, nor did I need to borrow a movie on top of the three movies (or four?) that I'm yet to watch. I went there to kill some time, because my bro was out shopping with his girlfriend and I couldn't get into his apartment - we had places to go together. So I went to the library to hide from the cold Nordic winter.
Anyways, I walked out with a book: George Orwell's Down and Out in Paris and London, and a movie - the one in the title of this post.
To save some kilobytes of the server and weary, bored eyes of the regular forum user, we move along.
I picked this movie, because I have a romantisised (sp?) idea of the world in the 1950's being a cotton candy wonderland; untouched, unspoiled, unpolluted, yet at the same time wealthy enough to support western lifestyle. And I also love rockstar movies of that era, and like some of the music (not Elvis particularily though). I loved the story of Johnny Cash in the movie Walk the Line. I have seen it numerous times, and this one seemed promising aswell.
And it was. Jonathan Rhys-Meyers plays a convincing Elvis and Randy Quaid plays his business minded manager. It starts of very much in the same way as Cash's story on WTL, with Elvis being a young boy dreaming of becoming a star and pushing his foot between the door of a small Nashville based record company. In the end he gets his chance and hits gold. He goes on tours and wins the hearts of the fans, as we all well know. His close relationship with his mother, although quite possibly accurately described, to me was a drag to the movie. His mother is an overly protective guardian of her son, and most of their scenes together are about his mom being worried for nothing and Elvis being a little mummas boy, sobbing on the phone and all that... zzzzZz
What I hoped to see in this movie, but did not, was the sad ending: the death of the King. Within the 2:40 runtime of the movie, we do see the beginning of his abuse of pharmaceuticals, but we do not see the sad end of it. Then again, the title says "Early Days", so there you go... atleast it saved Rhys-Meyers the trouble of gaining some pounds for his role.
Although a good movie, Walk the Line was way better, and remains one of my all time favourites.
Sorry for dragging it so long. Reading is voluntary.
the wearied bored eyes of the regular forum user? geez, what grand nordic adventures you must be having in Finland!
Once again I fail to understand what you're trying to say with your post.
Not that I really care to know anyways...