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Post by ree on Dec 16, 2006 20:11:32 GMT
Anyone want to share their discoveries? I have one...but its at Ruf's expense ...should I share??
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Post by maxx02 on Dec 16, 2006 21:12:44 GMT
why not?
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Post by sevensisters on Dec 16, 2006 22:03:30 GMT
Sure. We all enjoy outtakes and bloopers. And they say Rufus has a self-deprecating sense of humor, he'd probably get a laugh out of it, too.
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Post by ree on Dec 17, 2006 0:23:31 GMT
Oh Dear, I keep thinking about what Barfleur said about Rufus being such a gentleman...but I guess I'm about to show that I have no sense of decorum or propriety myself.... I apologize in advance. Look on Helen of Troy, the scene when Agamemnon is fighting Paris with a broadsword in the marketplace. They take a tumble thru some baskets of green & red apples. Pause & proceed thru the scene still by still & you will see the color periwinkle.. (It's really just silliness, let me know if you see what I saw.) And before you ask yes, I slow down all his scenes, I told you I'm a fanatic
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Post by GreenEyesToo on Dec 17, 2006 0:48:53 GMT
Haven't seen Helen of Troy yet, Ree, so can't comment. One "oopsie" must surely be the bedroom scene in Honest Courtesan/Dangerous Beauty, where Ru was displaying something he probably meant to keep hidden...?
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Post by ree on Dec 17, 2006 1:00:25 GMT
Greeneyes I saw that too but didn't have the nerve to mention it. This Helen of Troy peek is much less...intimate. By the By I have a sad little Jim Croce story to tell you sometime.
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Post by GreenEyesToo on Dec 17, 2006 1:03:31 GMT
Greeneyes I saw that too but didn't have the nerve to mention it. This Helen of Troy peek is much less...intimate. By the By I have a sad little Jim Croce story to tell you sometime. No shame, me!! And please tell me the Croce story? (in a PM, of course)
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Post by ree on Dec 17, 2006 1:08:11 GMT
Sorry, Does PM mean posted message?
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Post by GreenEyesToo on Dec 17, 2006 1:10:17 GMT
PM = private message (just click on my username to get yourself to the right page)
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Post by mcr5137 on Dec 18, 2006 3:02:26 GMT
Haven't seen Helen of Troy yet, Ree, so can't comment. One "oopsie" must surely be the bedroom scene in Honest Courtesan/Dangerous Beauty, where Ru was displaying something he probably meant to keep hidden...? Holy Muskogee! You mean to tell me Rufus exposed himself to us and I didn't see it? Not that I'm a peeping Tomasina......but sheesh! I'll have to go frame by frame I suppose?
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Post by ree on Dec 18, 2006 3:38:03 GMT
No, it will catch your attention at regular speed. Just don't get distacted by the girl, she's on top. Then...you pause and say did I just see what I thought I saw? Yep guess I did
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Post by ree on Dec 18, 2006 3:40:50 GMT
Oh, And don't forget to check out Helen of Troy, let me know if I wasn't specific enough!
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Post by sevensisters on Dec 18, 2006 4:01:22 GMT
Oh, And don't forget to check out Helen of Troy, let me know if I wasn't specific enough! Ree, you said periwinkle, didn't you? If I'm seeing what you saw, it appeared white to me. So, now we know what they wore under their tunics, right? And, GreenEyesToo, I also saw what you saw in HC/DB, but like Ree didn't have the nerve to mention it. But it was the first thing that occurred to me when oopsies were mentioned! A jaw-dropping moment!
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Post by quoll on Dec 18, 2006 5:30:54 GMT
Well, I must see these films with blinkers on I think - now need to go back and have a good look at both of them!
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Post by sevensisters on Dec 18, 2006 15:08:12 GMT
I have a couple of oopsies from T & I that always bother me when I watch the film. They're not as spectacular as the ones mentioned above , they're rather pedantic in nature. But at the risk of sounding like a nerd: First, when the warriors ride out at the full moon, the moon they show is not full but rather about three-fourths full. I know, I know, very picky. And, second, the two scenes in the Hall when Tristan doesn't show up for meals they show metal plates, forks, and knives. Correct me if I'm wrong but I don't think forks were in use until about the 17th century and plates were possibly bread trenchers or wooden trenchers, depending on which historian you read. I don't think precious metal would have been wasted on tableware at that time.
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