Funny! Let me know about "The Hangover", 'cause I have my doubts. By the way, 
is the bearded dude in "The Hangover" the same guy who played coroner Davis on 
"Tru Calling"? 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Martin Baxter" <truthseeker...@lycos.com> 
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Monday, June 8, 2009 2:11:47 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: [RE][scifinoir2] Look "Up" 








        My friend, IMO, there is only shame in being hard-hearted... 

And, if I ever find the time, I'm going to be broke. "Up" is at one theater 
about two miles west of me, and "The Hangover", which I want to see because a 
friend of mine had a similar life-experience, is at the mall, about three miles 
east. 






---------[ Received Mail Content ]---------- 
Subject : [scifinoir2] Look "Up" 
Date : Mon, 8 Jun 2009 04:38:34 +0000 (UTC) 
>From : Keith Johnson <keithbjohn...@comcast.net> 
To : scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 

Gotta make this quick. Need to get some shuteye, got a busy day today. Went to 
see "Up" Sunday, and thoroughly enjoyed it. It's Pixar, which continues to mean 
quality, I'm glad to say. Movie starts off with an amusing, delightful, and 
ultimately poignant history of the lead character's life that had me grinning, 
laughing, and--I'm not ashamed to admit--tearing up. All in the first five 
minutes or so, much of it told without the benefit of sound. Colors are 
amazingly bright and beautiful, especially those balloons, and the detail is 
amazing. The characters are good, especially Ed Asner's portrayal of the old 
dude, which is warm, cranky, a bit mean at times, but ultimately very human and 
real. Has enough adventure and gags and laughs for kids, and moments of loss 
and reminiscence and hope to keep the adults engaged. I remember tearing up at 
least three times (having lost both parents, a beloved mother-in-law, several 
relatives, a job, and dealing with some health problems in t! he last few 
years, I admit I'm a bit more tenderhearted nowadays). I looked around to see 
men and women sniffling more than once. Like me, the guys tried to be a bit 
surreptious--you know, choking on a jalepeno or something. 
There was some concern that audiences wouldn't respond to a film where the lead 
character is an eighty year old widower. Balderdash! Good stories are good 
stories, and this is a really good film. It's becoming cliched to say, but 
Pixar does it again. 

Longer review whenever I have time this week. Work's a bear... 



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQdwk8Yntds 

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