The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
- Omega
- 0010
- Posts: 7304
- Joined: Mon Mar 05, 2007 9:01 pm
- Favorite Bond Movie: TLD LTK GE TND TWINE DAD OHMSS
- Favorite Movies: Gladiator
John Wick
Pacific Rim
LOTR trilogy
RED
Kingsman
X-Men First Class
X-Men Days of Futures Past
MI Rogue Nation - Location: the lost city
- Contact:
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
Bill O'Reilly is done. Never cared for him but I don't automatically believe he's guilty either. In this atmosphere it's incredibly easy for accuser to extort. Part of the problem is the companies would rather settle than go to court.
But bill Clinton totally not a rapist. No news there. He was never bff with a guy with his own a pedophile island.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
But bill Clinton totally not a rapist. No news there. He was never bff with a guy with his own a pedophile island.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
............
- bjmdds
- 001
- Posts: 14315
- Joined: Sat Mar 17, 2007 10:14 pm
- Favorite Bond Movie: Any without CR-egg in it.
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
He will resurface soon elsewhere, be it on the internet or radio.
- bjmdds
- 001
- Posts: 14315
- Joined: Sat Mar 17, 2007 10:14 pm
- Favorite Bond Movie: Any without CR-egg in it.
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
NOMINEES FOR THE DISTINGUISHED PERFORMANCE AWARD Drama League:
Denée Benton, Natasha, Pierre and the Great Comet of 1812
Reed Birney, Man From Nebraska
Cate Blanchett, The Present
Ato Blankson-Wood, The Total Bent
Christian Borle, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory; Falsettos
Leon Addison Brown, Master Harold and the Boys
Kate Burton, Present Laughter
DANIEL CR-EGG, Othello
Johanna Day, Sweat
Marcia DeBonis, Small Mouth Sounds
Danny DeVito, The Price
Jennifer Ehle, Oslo
Carson Elrod, The Liar
Michael Emerson, Wakey Wakey
Sally Field, The Glass Menagerie
Sutton Foster, Sweet Charity
Gideon Glick, Significant Other
Josh Groban, Natasha, Pierre and the Great Comet of 1812
Harriet Harris, The Roads To Home
Corey Hawkins, Six Degrees of Separation
Allison Janney, Six Degrees of Separation
Rachel Bay Jones, Dear Evan Hansen
Sarah Jones, Sell/Buy/Date
Andy Karl, Groundhog Day
Kevin Kline, Present Laughter
John Leguizamo, Latin History for Morons
Kecia Lewis, Marie and Rosetta
Judith Light, All The Ways To Say I Love You
Laura Linney, The Little Foxes
Jefferson Mays, Oslo
Simon McBurney, The Encounter
Laurie Metcalf, A Doll’s House, Part 2
Joe Morton, Turn Me Loose
Cynthia Nixon, The Little Foxes
Eva Noblezada, Miss Saigon
Caroline O’Connor, Anastasia
Laura Osnes, Bandstand
Aisling O’Sullivan, The Beauty Queen of Leenane
David Hyde Pierce, A Life; Hello, Dolly!
Ben Platt, Dear Evan Hansen
Daniel Radcliffe, Privacy
Amy Ryan, Love, Love, Love
Nora Schell, Spamilton
Jeremy Secomb, Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
Anna Deveare Smith, Notes From The Field
John Douglas Thompson, Jitney; A Doll’s House/The Father
Kate Walsh, If I Forget
Michelle Wilson, Sweat
Denée Benton, Natasha, Pierre and the Great Comet of 1812
Reed Birney, Man From Nebraska
Cate Blanchett, The Present
Ato Blankson-Wood, The Total Bent
Christian Borle, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory; Falsettos
Leon Addison Brown, Master Harold and the Boys
Kate Burton, Present Laughter
DANIEL CR-EGG, Othello
Johanna Day, Sweat
Marcia DeBonis, Small Mouth Sounds
Danny DeVito, The Price
Jennifer Ehle, Oslo
Carson Elrod, The Liar
Michael Emerson, Wakey Wakey
Sally Field, The Glass Menagerie
Sutton Foster, Sweet Charity
Gideon Glick, Significant Other
Josh Groban, Natasha, Pierre and the Great Comet of 1812
Harriet Harris, The Roads To Home
Corey Hawkins, Six Degrees of Separation
Allison Janney, Six Degrees of Separation
Rachel Bay Jones, Dear Evan Hansen
Sarah Jones, Sell/Buy/Date
Andy Karl, Groundhog Day
Kevin Kline, Present Laughter
John Leguizamo, Latin History for Morons
Kecia Lewis, Marie and Rosetta
Judith Light, All The Ways To Say I Love You
Laura Linney, The Little Foxes
Jefferson Mays, Oslo
Simon McBurney, The Encounter
Laurie Metcalf, A Doll’s House, Part 2
Joe Morton, Turn Me Loose
Cynthia Nixon, The Little Foxes
Eva Noblezada, Miss Saigon
Caroline O’Connor, Anastasia
Laura Osnes, Bandstand
Aisling O’Sullivan, The Beauty Queen of Leenane
David Hyde Pierce, A Life; Hello, Dolly!
Ben Platt, Dear Evan Hansen
Daniel Radcliffe, Privacy
Amy Ryan, Love, Love, Love
Nora Schell, Spamilton
Jeremy Secomb, Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
Anna Deveare Smith, Notes From The Field
John Douglas Thompson, Jitney; A Doll’s House/The Father
Kate Walsh, If I Forget
Michelle Wilson, Sweat
- bjmdds
- 001
- Posts: 14315
- Joined: Sat Mar 17, 2007 10:14 pm
- Favorite Bond Movie: Any without CR-egg in it.
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
A five-studio tug of war has broken out over James Bond.
For more than a decade, starting with “Casino Royale” in 2006, the superspy series has been based at Sony Pictures Entertainment. It has been a period of stability and prosperity for 007, as global ticket sales reached new heights. The four Bond films that Sony has released collected $3.5 billion at the worldwide box office, after adjusting for inflation.
But Sony’s contract to market and distribute the films expired in 2015 with “Spectre.” So the two companies that control the franchise but do not distribute their own films — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and the family-run Eon Productions — have started attending dog and pony shows put on by studios that want the rights, according to five people briefed on the sessions, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private conversations.
On Tuesday, for instance, leaders at Sony spent an hour making their case. Kazuo Hirai, the chief executive, helped give the pitch, which emphasized the studio’s deep knowledge of Bond and its ideas for expanding the franchise’s reach. In true Hollywood fashion, Sony gave its presentation inside a sound stage on a recreated set from “Dr. No,” which was released in the United States in 1963 by United Artists and laid the foundation for the entire series.
Also vying for the Bond deal — even though it pays surprisingly little — are Warner Bros., Universal Pictures, 20th Century Fox and Annapurna, an ambitious upstart financed and led by the Oracle heiress Megan Ellison. (Not competing for the business are Paramount, which has been struggling and recently hired a new chairman, and Walt Disney Studios, which has been on a box office hot streak by focusing on its own family film labels.)
MGM and Eon, which stands for Everything or Nothing, are only offering a one-film contract. The expired Sony deal was for four movies. MGM, which is owned by private equity firms, including Anchorage Capital Partners, probably wants to keep its options open as it considers a sale or public offering.
Casting for the franchise has not been discussed in the meetings, according to the people briefed on them, although producers hope Daniel Craig will play the lead for at least one more chapter. He has a gap on his docket, according to movie industry databases, that would allow for filming.
Representatives for MGM, Eon and the studios pursuing the rights either had no comment or did not return calls.
The eagerness to land Bond underscores the continuing strength of the series but also the realities of the modern movie business. As competition for leisure time increases, studios have focused more intently on global blockbusters, and those are in short supply. In some ways, the Bond series was the first to go after a worldwide audience.
Under its previous agreement, Sony paid 50 percent of the production costs for “Spectre” — which totaled some $250 million after accounting for government incentives — but only received 25 percent of certain profits, once costs were recouped. Sony also shouldered tens of millions of dollars in marketing and had to give MGM a piece of the profit from non-Bond films Sony had in its own pipeline, including “22 Jump Street.”
In a 2014 email stolen by hackers and widely published online, Andrew Gumpert, who then oversaw business affairs for Sony, figured that the studio would realize about $38 million in profit if “Spectre” performed as “Skyfall” did. And “Spectre” did not, taking in $881 million, about 20 percent less than “Skyfall,” which was released in 2012.
Why, then, do studios want to distribute Bond so badly? Bragging rights, mostly. Having a Bond movie on the schedule guarantees at least one hit in a business where there is almost no sure thing.
Bond is gargantuan: The 25 movies have taken in nearly $6 billion at the North American box office, after adjusting for inflation, according to Box Office Mojo. The series has generated billions more in overseas ticket sales, home entertainment revenue, television reruns, marketing partnerships (Omega watches, Aston Martin cars, Gillette razors) and video games.
For at least one suitor, Annapurna, landing Bond would be transformative. Ms. Ellison started by focusing on prestige films like “Her” and “American Hustle.” But she has been diversifying toward more commercial movies like the animated hit “Sausage Party” and recently hired a senior 20th Century Fox executive to oversee production. Last month, Annapurna signed an unrelated distribution deal with MGM.
The person Ms. Ellison and the other bidders need to impress the most is Barbara Broccoli, who runs Eon Productions. Moviemaking is a collaborative process, but Ms. Broccoli and her older half brother, Michael G. Wilson, have final say over every line of dialogue, casting decision, stunt sequence, marketing tie-in, TV ad, poster and billboard.
For more than a decade, starting with “Casino Royale” in 2006, the superspy series has been based at Sony Pictures Entertainment. It has been a period of stability and prosperity for 007, as global ticket sales reached new heights. The four Bond films that Sony has released collected $3.5 billion at the worldwide box office, after adjusting for inflation.
But Sony’s contract to market and distribute the films expired in 2015 with “Spectre.” So the two companies that control the franchise but do not distribute their own films — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and the family-run Eon Productions — have started attending dog and pony shows put on by studios that want the rights, according to five people briefed on the sessions, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private conversations.
On Tuesday, for instance, leaders at Sony spent an hour making their case. Kazuo Hirai, the chief executive, helped give the pitch, which emphasized the studio’s deep knowledge of Bond and its ideas for expanding the franchise’s reach. In true Hollywood fashion, Sony gave its presentation inside a sound stage on a recreated set from “Dr. No,” which was released in the United States in 1963 by United Artists and laid the foundation for the entire series.
Also vying for the Bond deal — even though it pays surprisingly little — are Warner Bros., Universal Pictures, 20th Century Fox and Annapurna, an ambitious upstart financed and led by the Oracle heiress Megan Ellison. (Not competing for the business are Paramount, which has been struggling and recently hired a new chairman, and Walt Disney Studios, which has been on a box office hot streak by focusing on its own family film labels.)
MGM and Eon, which stands for Everything or Nothing, are only offering a one-film contract. The expired Sony deal was for four movies. MGM, which is owned by private equity firms, including Anchorage Capital Partners, probably wants to keep its options open as it considers a sale or public offering.
Casting for the franchise has not been discussed in the meetings, according to the people briefed on them, although producers hope Daniel Craig will play the lead for at least one more chapter. He has a gap on his docket, according to movie industry databases, that would allow for filming.
Representatives for MGM, Eon and the studios pursuing the rights either had no comment or did not return calls.
The eagerness to land Bond underscores the continuing strength of the series but also the realities of the modern movie business. As competition for leisure time increases, studios have focused more intently on global blockbusters, and those are in short supply. In some ways, the Bond series was the first to go after a worldwide audience.
Under its previous agreement, Sony paid 50 percent of the production costs for “Spectre” — which totaled some $250 million after accounting for government incentives — but only received 25 percent of certain profits, once costs were recouped. Sony also shouldered tens of millions of dollars in marketing and had to give MGM a piece of the profit from non-Bond films Sony had in its own pipeline, including “22 Jump Street.”
In a 2014 email stolen by hackers and widely published online, Andrew Gumpert, who then oversaw business affairs for Sony, figured that the studio would realize about $38 million in profit if “Spectre” performed as “Skyfall” did. And “Spectre” did not, taking in $881 million, about 20 percent less than “Skyfall,” which was released in 2012.
Why, then, do studios want to distribute Bond so badly? Bragging rights, mostly. Having a Bond movie on the schedule guarantees at least one hit in a business where there is almost no sure thing.
Bond is gargantuan: The 25 movies have taken in nearly $6 billion at the North American box office, after adjusting for inflation, according to Box Office Mojo. The series has generated billions more in overseas ticket sales, home entertainment revenue, television reruns, marketing partnerships (Omega watches, Aston Martin cars, Gillette razors) and video games.
For at least one suitor, Annapurna, landing Bond would be transformative. Ms. Ellison started by focusing on prestige films like “Her” and “American Hustle.” But she has been diversifying toward more commercial movies like the animated hit “Sausage Party” and recently hired a senior 20th Century Fox executive to oversee production. Last month, Annapurna signed an unrelated distribution deal with MGM.
The person Ms. Ellison and the other bidders need to impress the most is Barbara Broccoli, who runs Eon Productions. Moviemaking is a collaborative process, but Ms. Broccoli and her older half brother, Michael G. Wilson, have final say over every line of dialogue, casting decision, stunt sequence, marketing tie-in, TV ad, poster and billboard.
- John Drake
- Commander
- Posts: 340
- Joined: Tue Jun 19, 2007 10:22 pm
- Location: Watching the first twenty James Bond films somewhere...
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
bjmdds wrote:A five-studio tug of war has broken out over James Bond.
For more than a decade, starting with “Casino Royale” in 2006, the superspy series has been based at Sony Pictures Entertainment. It has been a period of stability and prosperity for 007, as global ticket sales reached new heights. The four Bond films that Sony has released collected $3.5 billion at the worldwide box office, after adjusting for inflation.
But Sony’s contract to market and distribute the films expired in 2015 with “Spectre.” So the two companies that control the franchise but do not distribute their own films — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and the family-run Eon Productions — have started attending dog and pony shows put on by studios that want the rights, according to five people briefed on the sessions, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private conversations.
On Tuesday, for instance, leaders at Sony spent an hour making their case. Kazuo Hirai, the chief executive, helped give the pitch, which emphasized the studio’s deep knowledge of Bond and its ideas for expanding the franchise’s reach. In true Hollywood fashion, Sony gave its presentation inside a sound stage on a recreated set from “Dr. No,” which was released in the United States in 1963 by United Artists and laid the foundation for the entire series.
Also vying for the Bond deal — even though it pays surprisingly little — are Warner Bros., Universal Pictures, 20th Century Fox and Annapurna, an ambitious upstart financed and led by the Oracle heiress Megan Ellison. (Not competing for the business are Paramount, which has been struggling and recently hired a new chairman, and Walt Disney Studios, which has been on a box office hot streak by focusing on its own family film labels.)
MGM and Eon, which stands for Everything or Nothing, are only offering a one-film contract. The expired Sony deal was for four movies. MGM, which is owned by private equity firms, including Anchorage Capital Partners, probably wants to keep its options open as it considers a sale or public offering.
Casting for the franchise has not been discussed in the meetings, according to the people briefed on them, although producers hope Daniel Craig will play the lead for at least one more chapter. He has a gap on his docket, according to movie industry databases, that would allow for filming.
Representatives for MGM, Eon and the studios pursuing the rights either had no comment or did not return calls.
The eagerness to land Bond underscores the continuing strength of the series but also the realities of the modern movie business. As competition for leisure time increases, studios have focused more intently on global blockbusters, and those are in short supply. In some ways, the Bond series was the first to go after a worldwide audience.
Under its previous agreement, Sony paid 50 percent of the production costs for “Spectre” — which totaled some $250 million after accounting for government incentives — but only received 25 percent of certain profits, once costs were recouped. Sony also shouldered tens of millions of dollars in marketing and had to give MGM a piece of the profit from non-Bond films Sony had in its own pipeline, including “22 Jump Street.”
In a 2014 email stolen by hackers and widely published online, Andrew Gumpert, who then oversaw business affairs for Sony, figured that the studio would realize about $38 million in profit if “Spectre” performed as “Skyfall” did. And “Spectre” did not, taking in $881 million, about 20 percent less than “Skyfall,” which was released in 2012.
Why, then, do studios want to distribute Bond so badly? Bragging rights, mostly. Having a Bond movie on the schedule guarantees at least one hit in a business where there is almost no sure thing.
Bond is gargantuan: The 25 movies have taken in nearly $6 billion at the North American box office, after adjusting for inflation, according to Box Office Mojo. The series has generated billions more in overseas ticket sales, home entertainment revenue, television reruns, marketing partnerships (Omega watches, Aston Martin cars, Gillette razors) and video games.
For at least one suitor, Annapurna, landing Bond would be transformative. Ms. Ellison started by focusing on prestige films like “Her” and “American Hustle.” But she has been diversifying toward more commercial movies like the animated hit “Sausage Party” and recently hired a senior 20th Century Fox executive to oversee production. Last month, Annapurna signed an unrelated distribution deal with MGM.
The person Ms. Ellison and the other bidders need to impress the most is Barbara Broccoli, who runs Eon Productions. Moviemaking is a collaborative process, but Ms. Broccoli and her older half brother, Michael G. Wilson, have final say over every line of dialogue, casting decision, stunt sequence, marketing tie-in, TV ad, poster and billboard.
The rights being available for a one film deal suggest Craig is coming back for a swansong. I read today that a James Bond scoop site on Twitter claimed that Craig's Bond stunt double has been signed for the next film.
"He is very good-looking" Vesper Lynd
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
That kind of sucks but might be for the best in the long term. Aidan Turner is committed to the fourth season of Poldark. I would rather have one more Craig fiilm and then Turner for 4 or 5 than Craig replaced now by another blond bit of rough because Turner wasn't avaialble (though of course those aren't the only two possible scenarios).John Drake wrote:
The rights being available for a one film deal suggest Craig is coming back for a swansong. I read today that a James Bond scoop site on Twitter claimed that Craig's Bond stunt double has been signed for the next film.
"He's the one that doesn't smile" - Queen Elizabeth II on Daniel Craig
- Blowfeld
- Ministry of Defence
- Posts: 3195
- Joined: Sun Feb 11, 2007 9:03 pm
- Favorite Bond Movie: Goldfinger
For Your Eyes only
The Living Daylights - Location: the world
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
Does not mean much by itself. Pierce's stunt doubles was hired back for Casino Royale, it was one of the 'signs' I thought favoured his return. As it turned out Barbara never entertained the idea of inviting Pierce back. Beside Daniel's double is mostly in a mask as I recall.Kristatos wrote:That kind of sucks but might be for the best in the long term. Aidan Turner is committed to the fourth season of Poldark. I would rather have one more Craig fiilm and then Turner for 4 or 5 than Craig replaced now by another blond bit of rough because Turner wasn't avaialble (though of course those aren't the only two possible scenarios).John Drake wrote:
The rights being available for a one film deal suggest Craig is coming back for a swansong. I read today that a James Bond scoop site on Twitter claimed that Craig's Bond stunt double has been signed for the next film.
The one picture deal is puzzling except I believe they were packaging distributorship as two picture deals since 2006. 2002 MGM still had enough clout to be a distributor, well in the States, 20th Century Fox handled most of the rest of the world. I think this one picture deal is more about not having pressure from another partner to start production on the next film.
I don't recall who the distributors are being a big deal before Sony get involved. Maybe it was because MGM could distribute themselves, dunno.
"Those were the days when we still associated Bond with suave, old school actors such as Sean Connery and Roger Moore,"
"Daniel didn't have a hint of suave about him," - Patsy Palmer
- bjmdds
- 001
- Posts: 14315
- Joined: Sat Mar 17, 2007 10:14 pm
- Favorite Bond Movie: Any without CR-egg in it.
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
Cr-egg will be back and we will be screwed again. The next Bond will be for the 2022 60th anniversary and Broccoli will be 62 then herself, so maybe she will get lost then and drive off with Cr-egg, ala the end scene in ECH-TRE FIVE more years of waiting
Last edited by bjmdds on Fri Apr 21, 2017 7:54 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- bjmdds
- 001
- Posts: 14315
- Joined: Sat Mar 17, 2007 10:14 pm
- Favorite Bond Movie: Any without CR-egg in it.
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
Harvard University is using tuition dollars to tell students that “there are more than two sexes” and that “gender is fluid and changing.” The school is also telling students gender can change daily —sometimes depending on what people choose to wear. If you disagree with those statements, you are promoting “systemic violence.”
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
Fox has set release dates for the next FOUR Avatar movies, if anyone cares: http://www.boxofficemojo.com/schedule/? ... ges&p=.htm
Any word on when we can expect to see Bond 25 yet?
Any word on when we can expect to see Bond 25 yet?
"He's the one that doesn't smile" - Queen Elizabeth II on Daniel Craig
- Omega
- 0010
- Posts: 7304
- Joined: Mon Mar 05, 2007 9:01 pm
- Favorite Bond Movie: TLD LTK GE TND TWINE DAD OHMSS
- Favorite Movies: Gladiator
John Wick
Pacific Rim
LOTR trilogy
RED
Kingsman
X-Men First Class
X-Men Days of Futures Past
MI Rogue Nation - Location: the lost city
- Contact:
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
well probably see bond 26 before the avatar sequels . Great story it took him 20 years to make avatar, but I'd like to finish the movie series some time in my lifetimeKristatos wrote:Fox has set release dates for the next FOUR Avatar movies, if anyone cares: http://www.boxofficemojo.com/schedule/? ... ges&p=.htm
Any word on when we can expect to see Bond 25 yet?
Avatar was 2009 movie, 11 years for the sequels ? Hopefully he'll have the stories down
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
............
- bjmdds
- 001
- Posts: 14315
- Joined: Sat Mar 17, 2007 10:14 pm
- Favorite Bond Movie: Any without CR-egg in it.
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
Jackpot at Chiller theatre tonight: We were hanging out in the Hilton hotel lobby by the bar area when Caroline Munro and George Hamilton meandered over to our area. They were both very receptive and gracious to the attendees. George Hamilton was taking several selfies at the requests of the attendees. Caroline Munro was having a drink at the bar. I could not waste this opportunity so I approached her and said hello and asked her what she thought of Cr-egg as Bond. She told me Roger Moore will always be "her" Bond. She thinks Cr-egg is "fantastic" as James Bond. I told her I totally disagree with her and she smiled. I asked her how many more Bond films she believed Cr-egg would do. She believes he will do at least one, if not two more, from what she is hearing I thanked her and others were talking to her before she went up to her room. Both Hamilton and Munro looked great for their ages too and treated us guests with class, which was very nice.
- Omega
- 0010
- Posts: 7304
- Joined: Mon Mar 05, 2007 9:01 pm
- Favorite Bond Movie: TLD LTK GE TND TWINE DAD OHMSS
- Favorite Movies: Gladiator
John Wick
Pacific Rim
LOTR trilogy
RED
Kingsman
X-Men First Class
X-Men Days of Futures Past
MI Rogue Nation - Location: the lost city
- Contact:
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
There is no reason for a celebrity to diss Craig. It's going against the accepted narrative and will get them nothing but crap.
It's fine for individual thinkers like us to take on the juggernaut but I'd imagine being associated with bond gets them a lot of unwanted questions to justify whatever eon has done when it's nothing to do with the actor
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
It's fine for individual thinkers like us to take on the juggernaut but I'd imagine being associated with bond gets them a lot of unwanted questions to justify whatever eon has done when it's nothing to do with the actor
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
............
- Omega
- 0010
- Posts: 7304
- Joined: Mon Mar 05, 2007 9:01 pm
- Favorite Bond Movie: TLD LTK GE TND TWINE DAD OHMSS
- Favorite Movies: Gladiator
John Wick
Pacific Rim
LOTR trilogy
RED
Kingsman
X-Men First Class
X-Men Days of Futures Past
MI Rogue Nation - Location: the lost city
- Contact:
The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
Oh lord, zorro they gayblade Hollywood would never touch that movie today, it they did it be a serious take like afflecks gay Batman or whatever he's doing
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
............
- bjmdds
- 001
- Posts: 14315
- Joined: Sat Mar 17, 2007 10:14 pm
- Favorite Bond Movie: Any without CR-egg in it.
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
If you remember, at a prior Chiller Theatre convention, Maud Adams told my group she likes Cr-egg but Barbara Bach did not.Omega wrote:There is no reason for a celebrity to diss Craig. It's going against the accepted narrative and will get them nothing but crap.
It's fine for individual thinkers like us to take on the juggernaut but I'd imagine being associated with bond gets them a lot of unwanted questions to justify whatever eon has done when it's nothing to do with the actor
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
- bjmdds
- 001
- Posts: 14315
- Joined: Sat Mar 17, 2007 10:14 pm
- Favorite Bond Movie: Any without CR-egg in it.
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
Erin Moran, best known for playing Joanie Cunningham on the 1970s sitcom “Happy Days,” has died. She was 56.
According to TMZ, Moran’s body was found unresponsive Saturday afternoon by authorities in Indiana. The cause of death is unknown. The California-born actress, who also starred in the “Happy Days” spinoff “Joanie Loves Chachi,” had fallen on hard times in recent years. She was reportedly kicked out of her trailer park home in Indiana because of her hard-partying ways. I met her at a prior Chiller Theatre convention about 7 years ago.
According to TMZ, Moran’s body was found unresponsive Saturday afternoon by authorities in Indiana. The cause of death is unknown. The California-born actress, who also starred in the “Happy Days” spinoff “Joanie Loves Chachi,” had fallen on hard times in recent years. She was reportedly kicked out of her trailer park home in Indiana because of her hard-partying ways. I met her at a prior Chiller Theatre convention about 7 years ago.
- bjmdds
- 001
- Posts: 14315
- Joined: Sat Mar 17, 2007 10:14 pm
- Favorite Bond Movie: Any without CR-egg in it.
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
[video][/video]
- Omega
- 0010
- Posts: 7304
- Joined: Mon Mar 05, 2007 9:01 pm
- Favorite Bond Movie: TLD LTK GE TND TWINE DAD OHMSS
- Favorite Movies: Gladiator
John Wick
Pacific Rim
LOTR trilogy
RED
Kingsman
X-Men First Class
X-Men Days of Futures Past
MI Rogue Nation - Location: the lost city
- Contact:
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
I was going to ask if you had met her
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
............
- bjmdds
- 001
- Posts: 14315
- Joined: Sat Mar 17, 2007 10:14 pm
- Favorite Bond Movie: Any without CR-egg in it.
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
You mean Erin Moran? I was standing next to her while the Saturday night bands were playing in a ballroom at a different Chiller Theatre hotel 7 years ago. She was dancing in place and was full of life and talking to people standing near her in the crowd that recognized her.Omega wrote:I was going to ask if you had met her
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
-
- Agent
- Posts: 1804
- Joined: Sun Feb 22, 2015 9:08 pm
- Favorite Bond Movie: From Russia With Love,GoldenEye,The Spy Who Loved Me,Goldfinger,Dr.No
- Favorite Movies: After the Sunset,The Devil Wears Prada,The Thomas Crown Affair,To Catch a Thief,Midnight in Paris,North by Northwest, Purple Noon, La piscine.