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Film What's the Last Film You Saw? v. Tell Us What You Thought!

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12 Monkeys, the movie and now some 4-5 episodes of the series, like the series more so far..

In cine the last was Matrix Resurrection. Not bad but somehow commercial. Doesn't touch the bar they set with Matrix I.
 
Nobody (2021)

Yet another mediocre action movie, not that great. Just watched it because of bob odenkirk. Btw better call saul last season starts soon.
 
Tenet (2020)

Good movie, will have to rewatch it sometime in the future.

When it comes to director, which ones are you following?

From time to time I’ll try to keep up with the following: christopher Nolan, David fincher, Darren aronowsky, David lynch and David cronenberg. There are some germans as well but I have no access to their recent work.
 
Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2022)

Decent enough sequel to the original (wtf is this trend of doing this) but by being so 'modern' it loses itself I thought and became just another slasher film. Although the action scenes were short but quite good, there's a certain bus scene that was freaking class I thought. Also there's something like 3 timelines at the moment. Crazy like.

If Netflix can do this then hurry up with a Nightmare on Elm Street!

3/5

My only real problem with it is I didn't like the kids (except the blonde girl who dies first *sigh*) and I felt like it was trying too hard to be "woke". Some nice kills, though, and I liked the bus scene. I'd also give it a 3/5.
 
May (2002) - 4 and a half body parts - Re-watch, for the fourth time, I think. I love this movie. As a child, May had an lazy eye which meant she had to wear an eye patch. She had no friends and the kids all teased her and called her a pirate. Her only friend is Suzy, a porcelain doll who was a gift from her mother. Her mother advises her "If you don't have any friends, make one". As a young adult, May is extremely awkward and strange and after many disappointing attempts at finding love and friendships, decides to take her mothers advice a little too literally. The movie is a modern riff on Frankenstein, thought it's a very loose connection.

Top Quotes:

May: You know how when you meet someone...and you think you like them? And then, the more you talk to them, you see parts that you don't like...until eventually you can't remember anything you liked about them in the first place?

Blank [opens May's fridge and finds a dead cat inside]: What the fuck is that?
May: A Friend
Blank: Whoah. This is some sick shit.
May: So are we like, best friends, now that you've seen what's inside my freezer?
Blank: You fucking freak! I'm not going to be your friend!

[May wearing her Veterinarian work uniform, sitting on a park bench]
Adam: What'cha reading about?
May: Amputation
Adam: Is that for work?
May: No. Just for fun.

[May taking out two dead bodies in garbage bags]
Drunk Girl: Hey! What have you got there?
May: A couple of cold ones

Polly: Maybe we can hang out, eat some mellons.

May [to Suzy, the doll]: I told you to face the goddamn wall!
 
Atlantis: The Lost Empire (2001)

This is probably my favorite Disney movie after Fantasia. The animation is mesmerizing, the soundtrack so on point, the voice actors (such as the late John Mahoney) so on point, the alternate history plot so intriguing, the highest body count in a Disney film... how did it flop?! It had it all!

And why isn't Kida a Disney princess?! It sure as hell ain't because she's... Atlantean? Not white? She's the foxiest of all Disney princesses by far ("I swim pretty lady... pretty good! I swim pretty good!"). And Claudia Christian's sultry voice as Helga, man... Helga even looks like a blonde version of Claudia Christian. Yum.

I believe this film played a major role in leading to my eventual study of history and earning of a bachelor's degree in the subject. And my wife believes Milo's character led her to be attracted to men who look like, well, me hahah. Dorky, scrawny, glasses, and fixated on the fantastical past. I guess Disney should be more careful, their films certainly make an impression upon children. Luckily for my wife and I, the impressions Atlantis left on our lives were positive.

8/10
 
Death on the Nile (2022)

Kenneth Branagh’s latest portrayal of Agatha Christie’s famed Hercule Poirot. I think he does a pretty good job, and he certainly embodies how I always envisioned the character.

Anyways, if you know Agatha Christie stories, this is nothing new. But it was an enjoyable way to kill an afternoon, and the Egyptian setting was sumptuous, if a little too fake in appearance.

The actors are a mix of old school talent and new school not-so-talented. I spent a lot of the film trying to recall some of the B roles I’d seen these actors in. As a result some were good and some were just okay really. Accents were meh, but that’s American cinema.

There was an odd mixture of cliche modern things. Maybe these were part of the original Agatha Christie story, but I have a feeling they were done more to satisfy current audiences. It didn’t terribly detract from the film but it was noticeable and thus not seamless, so distracting at times.

7/10
 
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and richard linklater, a really good director, the last was an coming of age film i saw from him. was not his best but the rest is great stuff.
 
Raising Cain (1992): Awesome. I do love Brian De Palma movies, and this one is high on my list, if not quite up there with Dressed To Kill (1979) or Body Double (1986).
Yes! It was special. Like the best produced & directed B movie ever. John Lithgow being hilarious & darkly, creepy ( the adult version of Stewie, from FG 😉)
... man is a brilliance.

I just watched the trailer, again (thought the title may have been a remake).

B de Palma, honours Hitchcock - style, with better humour but doesn't detract from quality. 👍

 
Richard III (1995)

A film adaptation of the Shakespeare play of the same name, starring Ian McKellen (he also wrote the screenplay) alongside many other familiar and famous English actors of the 90s. Now, I'm not a big fan of Shakespeare, mostly because the Old English dialogue is hard to follow. I enjoy adaptations done right, but for me, Shakespeare adaptations should ditch the original dialogue... It's just too hard to follow. I really enjoyed Ran (80s Japanese Samurai adaptation of King Lear), enough to buy the bluray copy. I can't say the same for Richard III, not because it was bad... but because I guess the translation from Old English to Japanese made Ran significantly easier to follow.

This was an interesting take though. The setting was replaced against a backdrop of 1930s England, in an alternate history style setting where Fascism is taking over England rather than Germany. In the opening scene, we see gas-mask wearing jack-booted stormtroopers bursting into a military command room with a tank in front. From there we follow the regular plot of Richard III, but with Richard being sorta comparable to Hitler. He kills, claws, cheats, and lies his way to the crown... but as history and Shakespeare have taught us, that's not usually an enduring way to gain and hold power.

The sets are all very 1984 dystopian style. Lots of machinery/factory type buildings, very bland building designs in the city reminiscent of Soviet era architecture. Of course, Richard and his ilk are always enjoying ostentatious fetes and the like.

Overall it was a really enthralling film, but the requirement of having to think over each and every line of dialogue before I could even turn my attention to the visual aspects of the film was detracting for me.

7/10
Upon another watch, I liked this film much more. I just had to watch it sober to understand the dialogue.

7.7/10
 
@Jerry Atrick



One of my favourite directors.

Big Trouble in Little China and Escape from New York (not LA) are both classics.

I watched Big Trouble as a kid. Need to watch it again.

Also need to make time for Escape from NY. Thanks for the reminders!

@birdup I highly recommend They Live if you haven't seen it, another JC film I mentioned above in this thread a few months ago.
Watched Escape from NY tonight. I dug it. Had to lol at the last scene when the president played to tape.
 
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