Showing posts with label thinks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thinks. Show all posts

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Mel Kiper thinks Redskins could miss out on top QB at No. 6

The NFL draft is still roughly three months away, but with the East-West Shrine game taking place this week, and the Senior Bowl next week, and the NFL combine a month from now, the buzz has gotten underway.

ESPN draft analyst Mel Kiper Jr. released his first mock draft on Wednesday, and today hosted a conference call and offered his opinion on the early projections.

The Redskins currently hold the sixth overall pick, but Kiper believes that the team will have a tough time getting a much-needed franchise quarterback at that pick. Stanford’s Andrew Luck is a shoo-in for the first pick, and Kiper believes Baylor quarterback Robert Griffin III will go anywhere from second to fourth.

Unless the Redskins are able to trade up to get Griffin before Cleveland (the next QB-needy team after Indianapolis), Kiper predicts that Mike Shanahan & Co. would draft for need and take LSU’s Morris Claiborne.

The 6-foot, 185-pound Claiborne last season recorded six interceptions and 51 tackles for LSU and could help bolster a Redskins secondary that recorded only 10 interceptions and is in need of a strong nickelback.

“There’s no other quarterback after [Griffin] to even consider in the early to mid first round, or even the late first as well. I don’t see a quarterback figuring in there,” Kiper said. “Claiborne, to me, it’s a need area. It’s a kid that has a high grade. [Oklahoma State receiver Justin] Blackmon I think will be gone by then. ... I’d put Claiborne there because other guys I was considering [for Washington], I feel will be off the board.”

But what about quarterback?

After Luck and Griffin, the pedigree appears to drop off significantly, but Washington still could wind up with a quarterback. The Redskins have a high second-round pick, and Kiper doesn’t believe any of the other quarterbacks in the draft are first-round worthy.

“The guys you’re looking at would be Brock Osweiler from Arizona State, who I think would be a little high for, same thing with Nick Foles from Arizona, or Ryan Tannehill from Texas A&M. So those will be your next three quarterbacks with no specific order right now, because we’re still very early in the process.”

Kiper points out there are questions about each of those passers, and they could be more developmental players than franchise saviors.

Tannehill was set to display his talents in the Senior Bowl, but now will miss the game with a broken foot. He could have helped his stock with a strong performance during Senior Bowl week, Kiper believes. Also hurting Tannehill is the fact that he has struggled in big games.

The knock against Osweiler is his questionable decision-making (too many games with multiple interceptions), and Foles struggles with accuracy at times as well.

Brandon Weeden from Oklahoma State is an interesting prospect, but he will be a 29-year-old rookie, and he too has accuracy issues. So Kiper projects him to go in the third round.


View the original article here

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Quentin Tarantino thinks ‘The Three Musketeers’ was one of the best movies of 2011

Quentin Tarantino — the Oscar-nominated director and noted cinema geek — recently revealed his list of the top films of 2011.

“Midnight in Paris” is No. 1. Okay, we get that.

“Rise of the Planet of the Apes” is No. 2. An unexpected choice, but one that can be supported by the fact that it was a surprisingly enjoyable movie with a remarkable motion-capture performance by Andy Serkis.

And then there’s the entry that appears at No. 11 on Tarantino’s list, a notch below his two-way tie at No. 10 between “The Artist” and “Our Idiot Brother”: “The Three Musketeers.” Yes, that “Three Musketeers,” the one that bombed at the box office and mustered a 25 percent positive review on Rotten Tomatoes.

This controversial choice — which could be a joke, or perhaps an attempt to say something nice about a movie that co-starred his “Inglourious Basterds” Nazi Christoph Waltz — has prompted bafflement and, in some cases, anger in the blogosphere.

Flavorwire dubbed Tarantino’s list “trollish,” and went on a “Really?!? With Seth and Amy”-esque rant about the “Musketeers” mention. “So, to Mr. Tarantino’s eyes, ‘The Three Musketeers’ was a better film than ‘Beginners,’ ‘Hugo,’ ‘Carnage,’ ‘The Descendants,’ ‘Tree of Life’ and ‘Contagion.’ Really?”

The Portland Mercury summed up its feelings with a blog post entitled, “I Don’t Know What Quentin Tarantino is Smoking .?.?.”

The A.V. Club also was puzzled, but smartly noted that QT “probably has some very long, arcane explanation as to why” he chose “Musketeers.” That’s a good bet considering that Tarantino probably has a very long, arcane explanation as to why he chose to eat lentil soup for lunch today.

Other things about Tarantino’s list that have stuck under the collective craw of the movie faneratti: the fact that “Drive” was featured under his “Nice Try Award” column, and that several arguably questionable releases — “Green Hornet” (another Waltz effort), ”Green Lantern,” “The Sitter”and “The Hangover Part II” — popped up on his “Others He Liked (in no particular order)” rundown.

Somehow, though, we suspect everyone will put this behind them before Tarantino’s “Django Unchained” comes out later this year.

Here’s the full Tarantino list, including his choices for the year’s worst movies, which apparently were subsequently excised from the Tarantino.info Web site. Read, then share your confusion/agreement/irritation by posting a comment.

Tarantino’s Top 11 Movies

1. Midnight in Paris

2. Rise of the Planet of the Apes

3. Moneyball

4. The Skin I Live In

5. X-Men: First Class

6. Young Adult

7. Attack the Block

8. Red State

9. Warrior

10. The Artist/Our Idiot Brother (tie)

11. The Three Musketeers

Others He Liked

50/50

Beginners

Hugo

The Iron Lady

Carnage

Green Hornet

Green Lantern

Captain America

The Descendants

My Week With Marilyn

Fast Five

Tree of Life

The Hangover Part II

Mission: Impossible — Ghost Protocol

The Beaver

Contagion

The Sitter

War Horse

Nice Try Award

Drive

Hanna

Drive Angry

Real Steel

Worst Films

Sucker Punch

Potiche (Trophy Wife)

Miral

Insidious

Rampart

Straw Dogs

Paranormal Activity 3

Meek’s Cutoff


View the original article here