June 28, 2010

When is He More Scrumptious? (see poll)


Do you prefer to see the bright smile & sparkling eyes or the serious sizzling gaze ...
                                                               1.  Bright Smile?
It's more smile than not...and too delicious to not include:)

2.  Serious Gaze?

6 comments:

tyme_4_t said...

It's interesting that the 3 pics with the smiles are RA in real life (as real as being interviewed/photographed on a red carpet or chat show can be real)
And then the 3 pics of the serious gaze are RA characters (or at least the first two are)

So while I find the gazes absolutely gorgeous to gaze back at - the RA smiles are heartstoppingly beautiful to view.

Now where's my defibulator...

Ricrar said...

tyme4t, Richard's smile seemed to be the brightest and widest at the SB premiere. Was it the result of his satisfaction w/finally carrying the clear leading role of the piece? Or was he simply happy to see those he'd endured 5 hot sweltering mos with in No Africa?

Sue said...

No. 2 "Serious Gaze" reminds me more of a moody, sulky face (or as some northerners put it "he's got a cob on")

I prefer the smiles and toothy grin myself!

Ricrar said...

Sue, can we rightfully call it a 'cappy' grin;) Par for the course among entertainers...and a significant % of the US pop.

Americans think of 'corn on the cob' whenever we hear that word(hmmm fresh picked & slathered with melted butter..delish! That season arrives mid-July.

Did you notice during one of the RH3 interviews when Richard described Guy as wearing a 'face of thunder'? - it was definitely a thunder reference - and sounded to my foreign ears like a phrase from the middle ages. He started to use the same words in the next interview, but quickly switched mid-phrase to sour faced.

Enrich2 said...

Having a face like thunder is a British idiom that is still in use today. It means looking extremely angry. Sourfaced suggests more aggrieved and miserable to me.

Sue said...

Yes, "A face like thunder" is a fairly old saying that people still use in England (although not very often these days). As you say Enrich2, "Sourfaced" means something totally different.

Yes, RiCrAr, his peggies have had a little work done on them(but then I can't point the finger, so have mine!)