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

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^ that entire series requires a hefty amount of suspension of disbelief.

they're probably more enjoyable if you just let them wash over you without analyzing too minutely what's happening.

i watched them all in recommended order rather than release order and it went pretty well.

my favorites were the 2 ant man movies and the 2 guardians of the galaxy.

alasdair
 
Yeah I don't have a problem with suspension of disbelief if there aren't major plot holes and the film is coherent.

Strange actually reminded me of Antman. The dark dimension is established similarly to the quantum realm. They are both ridiculous films, but Antman has a sense of humour about itself.

I'm not a big magic guy, so Strange is never going to be my cup of tea I guess. It got a bit too "Harry Potter" for my liking at times.

My favourites from the MCU: the first Antman, Thor: Ragnarok & Spiderman: Homecoming...
 
The Godfather III, so sickening it made me puke, Sofia Coppola couldn't act to save her life in that movie, and using George Hamilton to replace Robert Duvall (Tom Hagen) terrible they should erase this movie from the Godfather Saga.

I heard they didn't want to pay Robert Duvall what he was asking, so they wrote him off getting killed or something.
 
Burnt Offerings said:
I hate basically all those superhero movies. The genre is just not for me I guess

I used to say the same thing about superhero flicks (and zombie stuff) because we're so over-saturated with them at the moment... but I actually like them. Sure, it's mindless popcorn cinema. But there's nothing wrong with that.

I spent a lot of time (like 10 years) watching exclusively arthouse films and foreign cinema. Now that I'm a Dad, I have a great excuse to watch garbage again.

My daughter loves super heroes. I didn't force them on her. She discovered them on her own with (the God awful) French cartoon PJ Masks. So, now I'm watching Batman: The Animated Series with her.

Superhero isn't my favourite genre, but there aren't that many quality family friendly blockbuster films being produced that appeal to me.

I grew up with Tim Burton's Batman films. My Dad grew up with the Christopher Reeve Superman films. Back then, we'd get (maybe) one or two decent super hero films every 5 years.

I've enjoyed all of the Spiderman films.

Glad to see that Sam Raimi (Evil Dead / the original Spiderman trilogy) is taking the director's chair for the Doctor Strange sequel. He's one of my favourite directors. He hardly ever does wrong. I'm confident he will do a better job with Multiverse of Madness than Derrickson did with the first one... Raimi has more experience with comedy.

On a side note: it's interesting with the Dr. Strange franchise that they keep choosing horror directors.

@Burnt Offerings

Do you like mindless popcorn cinema at all?
Is it possible you're ignoring the child in you?

:)
 
@The Wizard of the Creek

Was just talking to someone the other day about Harry and the Hendersons. I re-watched it as an adult a couple of years ago and I was surprised how much I enjoyed it. A lot of the time, with nostalgic films, I'm disappointed when I revisit them... so, it was a pleasant surprise.

Totally agree with you on E.T. although I thought he was creepy AF when I was a kid too.

I forgot about your song, BTW. Will listen to it today, when I'm painting the back room.
 
@Burnt Offerings

Do you like mindless popcorn cinema at all?
Is it possible you're ignoring the child in you?

:)

Yeah come to think of it I did like "Guardians of the Galaxy". A couple of the Batman movies were OK too I guess

I watch a lot of low-brow stuff, dumb movies and blockbusters. Tonight I watched "Broken Arrow", which definitely qualifies as mindless popcorn cinema and, since I first watched it as a kid in the 90s, I also checked the second box there with some childhood nostalgia. But the recent glut of superhero movies...I dunno. For one, I was never into comics as a kid, so there's not much in the way of nostalgia on that front...but, beyond that, I just don't really like the conventions of the genre (argh I sound like a snob now lol).
 
All good, I don't really like the conventions of many genres. I particularly dislike fantasy tropes. Enough fucking elves and dwarves and dragons, already!

(y)
 
Honest Thief (2020) <Netfilx or Amazon Prime, I forget>

Liam Neeson is type cast, and this film does minimal effort with his type of role. I can't try to credit as a means for him to break type, either. Premise is a man who has robbed about 8 banks in the past decade meets a woman and decides to come clean - with her, and with the FBI. He calls the FBI and tries to make a deal, the lower level agents sent to check out 'yet another person confessing to be the in-and-out robber' get there, realize he is legit, and end up stealing the millions he tries to turn in as part of his deal. They figure, nobody will believe him. Story gets a bit deeper in that their boss starts to believe Neeson and question his agents, things go proegresively worse for the agents to where they are attempting to kill Neeson and his gf to get rid of witnesses. All in all, the story has a lot of break points - Neeson is smart enough to rob banks and get away with it for years (and some of what he does to the agents), and yet he's dumb enough to hand over the money early in his discussions with the agents? The agents make repeatedly bad decisions that a trained FBI agent wouldn't have thought thru the repercussions? Back to Neeson's type cast....there are very few moments reflective of his 'I know who you are, and I'm coming to get you' type roles, they are too few and too shallow. If you wanted a Neeson film, this won't deliver. If you want to see him branch out a bit...this won't deliver. This isn't the worst film ever, or even in his career, but it's def on the low end. 4/10.
 
Bad Trip (2021)

This is pretty much just a vehicle for Eric Andre to prank people. It's an interesting experiment. It is a fictional film, but most (all?) of the supporting cast is made up of real people that Eric and co fuck with in various ways. It accomplishes what the Impractical Jokers movie failed to accomplish: it is both a Jack Ass type film and a functional (fictional) movie. Knoxville tried to do this with Bad Grandpa, but (like Impractical Jokers) it didn't flow right.

This wasn't as funny (or anywhere near as outrageous) as The Eric Andre show, but it definitely had its moments.

I give it a generous 7/10
 
I just revisited the classic film Harry and the Hendersons. After rewatching with fresh eyes, I found myself in disbelief that I once found this movie charming.

None of the narrative made sense to me: a Bigfoot being ran over by a family twice; the Bigfoot befriends a family and heartwarmingly makes them a stonger family, instead of tearing them to pieces immediately.

I was a kid when I first saw this movie in the theater. It made me want to go out and find my own Bigfoot in our surrounding woods. I’m glad I never did! Looking back,I was always creeped out by Harry’s weird giant head and ridiculous teeth and mouth.

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This is even more pronounced today with all of the realistic CGI animations. I question a lot of those pre CGI moves for creeping me out. I found out later that same studio that gave us Harry the Bigfoot, Amblin Entertainment, Inc. also brought us that equally frightening testicle monster, E.T.

I give this movie a solid B.

🧙‍♂️
I never equated ET with testicles; I cant imagine where your personal reference was borne from but - maybe its the glowing red abdomen/ finger along with leathery skin and some type of rash you encountered..perhaps? ;)
 
Awww man you guys, I watched The Grand Budapest Hotel the other day. Definitely Wes Anderson's best film by leaps and bounds. I can't recommend it enough. Describing the plot would be difficult, just go watch this film and laugh your ass off!

9/10
 
Parker (2013) <Netflix>

Jason Statham does minimal Jason Statham action. J-Lo plays a simple local, and does it quite well. If you want a Statham action film, this isn't it, really. There's only a few action sequences. If you want to see J-Lo, she gets down to her underwear (looks more like a bikini to me) which is meh. There are a couple of boob shots of Emma Booth portraying Statham's girlfriend. Oh, and there's a story line that partially involves a very old, very overweight Nick Nolte. Premise is that Nolte used to be a thief, and Statham is dating his daughter and is also a thief and they know about each other professionally and are on good terms. Nolte talks Statham into 'one more job' for an easy $200k with a team of guys Statham doesn't know. Job gets done, badly, then the team turns on Statham and leave him for dead. He's not, he connects with Nolte to track them down then sets about his vengeance. J-Lo gets rolled in as a local real estate agent in the area the team is hiding out whom Statham leans on for help. Ok, I'm going to stop there. Action earns 3/10, Babes earn 4/10, non-star actors earn 1/10 while the stars earn 5/10, story earns another 4/10. Averages out to about a 4/10 and not worth your time even if you are a Statham fan. If you are a J-Lo fan, I'm not sure what's wrong with you, but you will also be disappointed.
 
Army of the Dead (2021) <Netflix>

Batista in the lead role of a zombie flick. I liked the premise, though the opening was a bit of a headslap for me in that the first 15-20min went one direction then the rest of the film felt like it jumped a different way than I was being led. Maybe that's on my and my limited brain power at the time. Anyway, the opening had Batista and some friends saving people at the point in time a zombie apocalypse breaks out in Vegas. We're treated to some pretty good eye candy of explosions and zombie killing to set things up, and it continues throughout the film. Early on we establish that Vegas got over run with zombies, walled up to keep them in, and the rest of the nation is waiting as the President decides to nuke Vegas to rid us of the infection. In steps a casino owner to hire Batista and a team to go in and recover $200m in the casino basement (he's been paid by the insurance, so this is free money of which Batista and team get to keep $50m if they can get it). Along the way we have some old crew of his involved, his estranged daughter who is a volunteer nearby helping refugees, and a handful of others added in for body count and plot twists (nothing major or surprising). You know from the beginning the money isn't the real goal, but we're dragged through a thin plot with lots of action to get to the very mild twist. I'd recommend this for the action, not the dialogue or story or characters. It's a cheap escape and a decent spend of time but not something you need to seek out. 5.5/10.
 
Godzilla vs. Kong (2021) <In Theatre>

I went in expecting big monster fights, and got them. However, there was more to it that just action and monsters. We have a lead female scientist tending to Kong in an enclosed artificial world to simulate Skull Island as history has shown if two titans exist and are aware of one another they will fight to the death, and folks are worried Godzilla will show up and end him. We throw in a deaf mute Inuit girl adopted by the Kong scientist, but she has a role in the film and isn't just there to pull on heart strings. Meanwhile, we have Millie Bobby Brown (11 from Stranger Things) from the earlier Godzilla film working to protect him while her father appears to be crisis manager for global Godzilla attacks. Recall, in the last film, Godzilla was the protector of the people, we became his pets. The story picks up with Kong showing displeasure at being held captive, even if it is for his own good and is a simulated home for him. We then switch to Godzilla launching an attack on a science station for unknown reasons. The 'people in charge' then bring forth a theory (apparently it's been around awhile) about a 'Hollow Earth' and that at the center of Earth there is a habitable world from which these titans came, and they believe they can get Kong to lead them back to this place so they can tap the energy that created the titans in order to get Godzilla in check. Not to spoil it, but we have a few Kong-Godzilla fights which are good in their own right. Then, we do get into Hollow Earth and find out Kong's role there....meanwhile Godzilla is tearing another science facility apart in Hong Kong. The two get into some throwback city stomping, then in the final act we have a new villain titan appear, to change the dynamics of the fight. I wasn't expecting this villain, but it fit very well with the story. Support and lead characters aren't great, and some sidekicks are a bit annoying, but overall they carry the story and allow us to have a true Kong v Godzilla film. Worth seeing on the big screen. 7.5/10
 
I tried to watch Godzilla vs Kong and made it about 10/15 minutes in before I turned it off. What an absolute pile of shit. The plot is unbearably stupid. This is one of those films that even the actors know it sucks so bad that they can't bring themselves to deliver their lines with any conviction.

It's astonishingly bad. The worst film I've seen for years.

This is coming from somebody who loves monster films. I liked Godzilla (2014) and Kong: Skull Island. Loved Pacific Rim... but this film is dogshit.

@TheLoveBandit


What are you fucking crazy? ;)
 
What are you fucking crazy? ;)

In my 50-ish years, I think I've stopped only 1-2 films short. The pain and suffering makes me know I'm alive, that I can appreciate when it is done.

But yeah, I like this one. I also haven't' been in a theater in 18mo, and I used to go frequently. But I liked it enough I'd watch again. In a theater.
 
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