#bradley whitford
Host: Are you into the Internet at all, Brad? Do you visit West Wing message boards on AOL or fan sites?
Bradley Whitford: You know what, people actually make fun of me because I live in fear of — when you do theater in New York, they always have after-play discussions, and those can be …
Host:Brutal.
Bradley Whitford: … brutal and sort of devastating events.
Host:Right.
Bradley Whitford: And damaging, if you have to do it the next day. And people have said, you know, these very complimentary things, and that I should look at them, but I really kind of live in fear of any West Wing Web sites.
my favorite 7704
Drew Goddard’s horror comedy, The Cabin in the Woods, joins the likes of Evil Dead II and Scream as a genre send-up that actually works - it’s as funny as it is scary, and it’s the most entertaining film of the year.
Ingeniously deconstructing something as familiar as a horror movie, The Cabin in the Woods turns the genre on its head by introducing a supernatural element of puppet-mastery, giving the power of manipulation over a group of five artificially exaggerated sterotypes to corporate middle management. It’s a devilishly clever concept, but one that never gets in the way of the film’s thesis: horror movies are supposed to be entertaining. The Cabin in the Woods never holds back, in terms of both its humour and its horror.
But then the best send-ups are the ones that wholeheartedly embrace their roots - The Cabin in the Woods does just that.