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To: LTK007 who wrote (2703)4/19/2008 10:05:21 PM
From: coug  Respond to of 3961
 
THANK YOU VERY MUCH max,

WE SAY that from the bottom of OUR HEARTS..

For MOST of time people like us feel like WE are SO ALONE..

We are so lonely at times.. Although we live and work, even play with others, we seem to be so out of touch.. Sometimes we don't even know how to react, but we do.. We really do..

We act with Civilty/b>

Even with people we really DO NOT really like.. For that is HOW ONE finds PEACE with OTHERS..

For the ONLY way to find peace, if that is what ONE is TRULY looking for..

IS TO TALK PEACE



To: LTK007 who wrote (2703)4/20/2008 12:11:59 PM
From: coug  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3961
 
Thinking of sports this morning, here is good,quirky little movie for a sports fan.

GAME 6, about the Red Sox/ Mets world series game in 1986 where the ball dribbled through Buckner's legs.. About a die hard Sox fan that always knew they would let him down.. Sort of like a Coug fan.. lol.. Actually we bought a package of four these type movies at Costco the other day for about 16-17 bucks and this was one of them...

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Synopsis:

Written by award-winning novelist Don DeLillo (WHITE NOISE, UNDERWORLD) and directed by Michael Hoffman (SOAPDISH, ONE FINE DAY), GAME 6 is a smart psychological study of a man unable to face the reality of his life. Michael Keaton stars as Nickey Rogan, a successful playwright of Broadway fluff whose new, serious play is scheduled to open on October 25, 1986 -- the same night his beloved Boston Red Sox have a chance at winning the World Series, playing Game 6 against the New York Mets at Shea Stadium. Despite his popular success, Rogan sees his life as being as futile as the Red Sox, who have not won the baseball championship since 1918. He's not very close with his daughter (Ari Graynor), his wife (Catherine O'Hara) is divorcing him, his girlfriend (Bebe Neuwirth) doesn't understand him, and his lead actor (Harris Yulin) has a parasite in his brain that is causing him to forget his lines. Meanwhile, Rogan is terrified that hated theater critic Steven Schwimmer (Robert Downey Jr.) will tear his play apart, leaving him a shell of a man, like his friend Elliot Litvack (Griffin Dunne). A former cabdriver, Rogan spends much of the day stuck in taxis in heavy traffic, attempting to engage the hacks in conversation, and bonding better with strangers than with his friends and family. As the curtain approaches, he can't decide whether he'd rather be at the play or watching the game on television, afraid that both might fail him. Hoffman sets the film in a tight-knit New York City community that moves at a snail's pace, where coincidences both welcome and not abound. Keaton excels as the tortured soul who is looking for that critical hit--in both Broadway and baseball parlance. He just can't face another ball going through his legs. Hoboken's Yo La Tengo composed the movie's excellent score. [Less]

rottentomatoes.com