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  • EADD Moderators: Pissed_and_messed | Shinji Ikari

Recommend another good movie per post

^I still haven't seen all of that, whore. I started to watch the first part on youtube but Thurston Moore was pissing me off way too much.

Haha, he is pretty weird :)

There's some good footage in there with loads of cool bands though, well worth trying to watch it all the way through :)
 
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Romain Duris stars as a young man torn between a life of crime and music in Jacques Audiard's smash hit noir thriller. Set in a seedy and dangerous Paris underwolrd, Duris plays Tom, who seems set to follow the crooked path of his sleezy father as a ruhtless and unscrupulous property dealer. But a chance encounter with an associate of his late concert pianist mother awakens Tom's own musical ambitions and hopes of a more fulfilling life...

Trailer: http://www.lovefilm.com/product/detail.html?product_id=55807&auto_show_trailer=1&show_trailer=1
 
It's not all good, some of the stories are a bit dull and cliched 'love' stories others are really imaginative and funny. As they're all short then it's not too much of a problem.
 
Haha, he is pretty weird :)

There's some good footage in there with loads of cool bands though, well worth trying to watch it all the way through :)


Yeah, I've seen clips of that slow version of Negative Creep (that's from that film isn't it?), plus Babes In Toyland doing Dust Cake Boy at Reading Festival or summink. I will watch it eventually. :)

Speaking of all things French...

I started watching 2 Days In Paris online a while back, the connection buggered up and I never finished it. It seemed fairly promising. And I do love Julie Delpy. She's fantabulous. :)

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imdb
trailer

I shall have to track it down again.
 
I've watched loads of films recently that were really pretty and scenic and beautifully shot yet lacked in any substance / plot. Quite boring after 30 mins or so.
 
The one I mentioned is more of a documentary really, Spadey. It just has a modicum of plot injected to make it more entertaining, I suppose. Would rather it just stuck to the science stuff cos that's the interesting bit. It's a bit of scientific speculation about man's first robotic explorations of an alien planet and the lifeforms contained therein. Not pure fantasy as it's all based on the known laws of physics, evoloution and so forth - held my attention anyway, although it's pretty lightweight stuff really :)

An interstellar spacecraft named "Von Braun", leaves Earth's orbit, and travels at 20% the speed of light for reaches Darwin IV in 42 years. Upon reaching orbit, it deploys the "Darwin Reconnaissance Orbiter", which looks for potential landing sites for the probes. Two probes, Leonardo da Vinci (nicknamed 'Leo') and Isaac Newton (nicknamed 'Ike'), successfully land on the planet, and learn much about its bizarre indigenous lifeforms

Clip/Trailer thingy :)
 
Quite an old favourite of mine. I actually went to the cinema with my best friend to see this and obsessed about it for years. We even bought several books on Wicca and started dabbling in the occult. Fun times. Still, I'm not sure we'd get away with wielding knives in a secluded candlelit area down the local park these days. :D

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imdb
trailer

It also started my <3 affair with Fairuza Balk. :)
 
I've re-rented it, I think I might have watched it on a major comedown. I'm sure it was at the very least a very hungover Sunday so a re-watch is in order.

Che Part 2 tomorrow if I'm fit for it!
 
La Haine is a fucking brilliant film, plus it's nice watching it n understanding the French, but the subtitles are pretty good on it...

Definitely recommended for those of youse who haven't viewed. Gona recomend Amores Perros again, cos it's fantastic! =D
 
We'll see, I just rememeber not finding it all that interesting and a bit dull but if I was hungover / fucked then it's no wonder.
 
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Oscar-winner Steven Soderbergh delivers this ambitious and sprawling biopic of one of the 20th Century's most influential political figures. In the second 127-minute segment, GUERILLA, Ernesto 'Che' Guevara (Benicio Del Toro) has abandoned Cuba in order to start an even more daunting Latin-American revolution. He starts in Bolivia where, using a pseudonym, Che begins training his cobbled-together forces. This time around, however, Che's asthma is taking a greater toll, and the odds are stacked much higher against him. Yet even when the cause appears to be lost, Che remains defiant. Having accomplished the impossible in Cuba, he is determined to do the same thing here. But unfortunately time catches up to him, putting an end to his mission once and for all.


For the second segment of his two-part epic, Soderbergh changes his style, reflecting the tougher battle that Che confronted in Bolivia. Gone is the glorious widescreen photography; replacing it is a more claustrophobic 1:85 ratio. Also gone is the tripod, which produces a much more frenetic, unstable effect for the viewer. As Che wheezes his way through the woods, learning of the loss of more and more soldiers, Soderbergh prepares us, through his cinematography and Alberto Iglesias's foreboding score, for his inevitable fall from glory. Once again, Del Toro is phenomenal in bringing the notorious Che to life on screen. Watched in succession, Soderbergh and Del Toro's CHE is a grueling experience, yet it is rewarding in a way that few films are.

Trailer: http://www.lovefilm.com/product/detail.html?product_id=99125&auto_show_trailer=1&show_trailer=1

Excellent film, rush out and watch it now! :D
 
Spade what was the one that you posted where the people suddenly go blind?

There was another where somebody tries to remember blocked memories of what happened during the army?

Thanks x
 
Blindness & Waltz With Bashir.

Waltz With Bashir is a modern day masterpeice and some of the most original animation I've ever seen. EPIC!

Get on it!
 
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