(no subject)
Mar. 2nd, 2004 05:34 pmSeaweed salad all gone! *sad*
From work back to my place is a brisk 25-minute walk which did me lots of good (and got me all sweaty) because I have no dance classes this week.
Watching the Oscars on Sunday brought about this strange dream:
I was taking a film course at university and during one class, we watched Pirates of the Carribean. We must have been watching some sort of director's cut or special edition because there were extra scenes, including one added at the very beginning that clearly showed the pirates as skeletons. That's pretty lame, thought I. It totally ruins the shock when what's-her-face is trapped on the ship!
While I was pondering this, Sir Ian McKellen walked into the classroom and started explaining his thesis to us, which involved the use of moonlight as a metaphor and driving force in Pirates of the Carribean. What was even more interesting is that he was explaining it all in flawless French, which impressed me no end. He was also writing it all on the chalkboard so we could copy it and when he suddenly paused, obviously stuck on a word he couldn't remember, I felt sorry for him. He is getting pretty old, after all.
From work back to my place is a brisk 25-minute walk which did me lots of good (and got me all sweaty) because I have no dance classes this week.
Watching the Oscars on Sunday brought about this strange dream:
I was taking a film course at university and during one class, we watched Pirates of the Carribean. We must have been watching some sort of director's cut or special edition because there were extra scenes, including one added at the very beginning that clearly showed the pirates as skeletons. That's pretty lame, thought I. It totally ruins the shock when what's-her-face is trapped on the ship!
While I was pondering this, Sir Ian McKellen walked into the classroom and started explaining his thesis to us, which involved the use of moonlight as a metaphor and driving force in Pirates of the Carribean. What was even more interesting is that he was explaining it all in flawless French, which impressed me no end. He was also writing it all on the chalkboard so we could copy it and when he suddenly paused, obviously stuck on a word he couldn't remember, I felt sorry for him. He is getting pretty old, after all.