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Author
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Topic: Big Fat Liar
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Evans A Criswell
Phenomenal Film Handler
Posts: 1579
From: Huntsville, AL, USA
Registered: Mar 2000
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posted 02-09-2002 12:27 AM
Attendance: 2002/02/08 19:00, Regal Madison Square 12, Auditorium 8, DTS, FlatI found this movie very enjoyable and do not remember looking at my watch a single time to see how much time was remaining. After this movie got a positive review in the Huntsville Times, which I didn't read (just looked at the star rating), I decided it would be the first movie I'd see tonight. It exceeded my expectations. It's basically a teen/pre-teen fantasy of revenge. I've seen several good movies with early and pre-teen kids in them (Snow day is another good one that pops into my mind). I recommend Big Fat Liar. It has some outlandish gags, but they aren't of the variety found in movies aimed at older teens. During the whole movie, I had a good feel for what would eventually happen, but I was never sure of the details of how it would happen, so I stayed interested. The presentation was very good. This was the first movie I'd ever seen where a hair got stuck in the gate. The hair was removed twice but it was stubborn or a different one, but that's neither hair nor there. ------------------ Evans A Criswell Huntsville-Decatur Movie Theatre Information Site
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Evans A Criswell
Phenomenal Film Handler
Posts: 1579
From: Huntsville, AL, USA
Registered: Mar 2000
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posted 02-11-2002 10:40 AM
The movie was aimed at younger audiences (I'd say 15 and under). Still, it was enjoyable. The main point made by the movie is that telling the truth is better than telling lies, which is good for its target audience.A good line: "Your car is parked on a dog." Warehouse scene: One fun thing to do when watching the "warehouse scene" is to try to remember which movies that certain things in that room came from: Dinosaur stuff from "Jurassic Park", Telephone booth from "The Avengers?", Stuff from "The Mummy", etc. Some obvious problems: A single bottle of blue dye having the ability to dye the water in a large swimming pool enough to dye Marty Wolf blue. "The Masher" being able to drive his truck over Marty's car (tires not big enough to be a monster truck), demolishing it, and getting away with it. If everyone that worked with Marty hated him, how could he have gotten as far as he did? Seeing the bully guy in a skirt was funny, but the grandma not realizing he was a guy, even though he was still speaking like a guy, was a bit hard to believe. I felt that the little scene right before the credits where Marty is a clown going to "The Masher's" house, and gets nailed in the balls by his son is out of place and doesn't fit in with the rest of the movie, since those types of gags weren't used in the movie.
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