ironymaiden (
ironymaiden) wrote2009-05-12 08:46 pm
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Star Trek
was rather like getting some cotton candy. it looked nifty hanging in the window of the vendor's cart. i was totally fascinated by the machine that made it and the skills involved in getting it to spool up so beautifully on the paper cone. the texture was neat for a few bites and i thought the way the texture changed when i handled it was interesting. eating it was fun.
it didn't taste like anything but sugar. later, my mouth burned from the sweet and i wanted some water. my hands were stained from the dye.
a few years from now when i see the cotton candy cart i will only remember that it is pretty and interesting to look at, and i will order it again.
it didn't taste like anything but sugar. later, my mouth burned from the sweet and i wanted some water. my hands were stained from the dye.
a few years from now when i see the cotton candy cart i will only remember that it is pretty and interesting to look at, and i will order it again.
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Waiting for the DVD
I'm not sure I've ever read so many online discussions of something so few people claim to have strong feelings about.
in case you were wondering what it's really about
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Re: Waiting for the DVD
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at least the one scene in Star Trek with all the flying debris seemed like it would be less comprehensible on a smaller scale.
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People say that
The main caveat is that I don't really like film that much as an art form in itself. The other caveat is that the social experience of "going out to a movie" is at best unpleasant for me, and at worst downright punishing--independent of the film's artistic merit.
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