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Best Quality Clips

  • January 4, 2012 10:17 pm

Lynn Chen is an actress who is attached to her computer. She has two blogs – The Actor’s Diet and Thick Dumpling Skin, both about – you guessed it – food. When she’s not writing for those sites she’s starring in films like “Surrogate Valentine,” “Saving Face,” “White on Rice,” “The People I’ve Slept With,” and the upcoming “Yes We’re Open.” Actors from “Better Luck Tomorrow” that she hasn’t worked with yet – Sung Kang, Jason Tobin, and Roger Fan.

I don’t think it should come as a surprise to anyone who grew up with me that I wound up becoming an actress who blogs about food. I’ve always been fascinated with seeing people eat on screen, so much so that I would save certain scenes to watch AS I consumed a meal. Rewind, salivate, play. Rewind, chew, play. Rewind, digest, play. I hate the term food porn, but that’s exactly what it was. My mother used to edit out the sex in movies I’d tape off of cable – there was no need – I wasn’t obsessed with those parts. Here’s some of my favorite drool-worthy scenes.

Joy Luck Club – Best Quality Crab

Never mind that this is the pivotal moment of the movie, where June finally connects with her mother. Give me that crab! I’ll take the worst quality one, gladly.

Hawaiian High School Cliques

  • March 25, 2011 3:28 pm

This is a list of cliques from the school newspaper at Waiakea High School on the Big Island of Hawaii. It’s an interesting 21st Century, Island style take on “a brain, a beauty, a jock, a rebel and a recluse.”

#5, #8, and #9 , I wonder what these cliques are all about!!

(Via Chris Lee)

1,001 Reasons I Love Movies: (#12) Dede Allen & The Art Of The Cut

  • April 24, 2010 12:23 am

The name Dede Allen will probably mean nothing to most of our readers, but she was just as integral to the movement that revolutionized Hollywood in the late 60s/70s as her more famous filmmaking peers like Warren Beatty, Martin Scorsese, Steven Spielberg and Francis Ford Coppola. Allen was a film editor and in my humble opinion, the best editor of the last forty or some odd years. Her credits include such classics as The Hustler, Bonnie And Clyde, Serpico, Dog Day Afternoon, Reds and Wonder Boys. Allen passed away last Saturday at age 86 after suffering a stroke so this seems as good a time as any for me to honor her legacy.

Like many in my generation, I was first introduced to Allen’s work through the 1985 John Hughes film The Breakfast Club. It may seem strange that someone like Allen, who was associated with the type of adult dramas that won Oscars, would work on a teen flick, but Breakfast Club producer Ned Tanen knew that he needed someone of her stature considering this was going to be a film that was going to mostly take place in one location (a high school library) and be directed by a novice (Hughes sole previous directing credit was Sixteen Candles and it had yet to be released). Here’s what Tanen says on this subject in the book You Couldn’t Ignore Me If You Tried:

The Untold Story of the ‘Brat Pack’

  • March 4, 2010 9:09 pm

“When you grow up, your heart dies.” — from The Breakfast Club                                    

Just finished Susannah Gora’s new book You Couldn’t Ignore Me If You Tried: The Brat Pack, John Hughes, And Their Impact On A Generation. As the title implies, the book looks back on the 1980s and the particular brand of teen movies of the era pioneered by the late writer/director John Hughes (Gora focuses on the seven seminal works in this genre: Sixteen Candles, The Breakfast Club, St. Elmo’s Fire, Pretty In Pink, Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, Some Kind Of Wonderful and Say Anything).

Many of us here at YOMYOMF grew up in the 1980s and these films were an important part of our youth despite their flaws (i.e. the glaring lack of diversity in them except for one infamous exception—see below). So let’s take a trip to the past with these little-known facts from Gora’s book: