Re: What were your TOP 5 MOVIES of 2013?
I have, and Jodie Foster was just as bad if not worse.
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I have, and Jodie Foster was just as bad if not worse.
I completely disagree. Although I didn't think she was anything above mediocre, she didn't take me out of the movie and make me wonder if I was hallucinating like the shit in The Happening.
I was (mostly) rolling with Elysium just fine until the third act, when it went right off the rails. None of the payoffs made sense and I couldn't help but start thinking of all sorts of better ways to go with them.
And the final ta-dah! completely undercut the entire premise by showing that the central issue that drove the entire plot could have been easily solved from the very beginning.
I'd go into detail, but I'm hoping Elysium will be very high on our to-do list when we re-convene after the holiday so we can really get into it.
I was (mostly) rolling with Elysium just fine until the third act, when it went right off the rails. None of the payoffs made sense and I couldn't help but start thinking of all sorts of better ways to go with them.
And the final ta-dah! completely undercut the entire premise by showing that the central issue that drove the entire plot could have been easily solved from the very beginning.
I'd go into detail, but I'm hoping Elysium will be very high on our to-do list when we re-convene after the holiday so we can really get into it.
Although I don't think the third act specifically paid off what it was previously setting up, I did enjoy the payoffs. I thought the whole thing with Kruger's Crew versus everyone was a nice twist and pretty entertaining. I wanted to see Kruger and his boys get their shit destroyed by Max, so I consider it a success in that regard. And although the whole situation could have been easily solved, it wasn't, because everyone up on Elysium were a bunch of cunts without empathy for anyone on Earth, which I think was the point. Also, I really liked the action scenes in the third act, with the exception of a few shaky cam moments here and there. I mean shit, regardless of how dumb any movie could be, if it features stuff like this in the third act, I'm going to be entertained:
I just have a major soft spot for r-rated sci-fi action, regardless of the logistics of why it's happening.
Except the r-rated action is exactly what the movie completely drops the ball on.
Your sci-fi movie's big climax is a shakycam fist-fight on a level platform? That's all you got? What's the point of having them in exo-suits if that doesn't even factor into the fight in any way? At least put them on a moving platform, or give me something unique.
Compare to Total Recall, which has like 7 different memorable action sequences, Elysium has got 1, maybe 2 if you're being real charitable.
It's incredibly forgettable as an action movie, and a major step-down from District 9 (gravity gun pig, exploding heads, alien hacker kid) in that department.
Everything with Kruger in the third act is dumb and terrible. The whole "twist" is there for the sake of having a twist, even though there's NOTHING before that to indicate that he would ever do what he does.
Yeah, the movie made a fatal error right from the beginning by
Which means that the "bad guys" literally are just being bad guys for the pure fuck of it because they have no reason to deny Earth people access to medpods. I mean, why NOT let an occasional shuttle fly up to Elysium, in order to let some sick kids get their cancer cured in three minutes? This is the worst kind of screenwriting, where the bad guys have no justification for what they do other than just being mean.
A lot of the stupid in the premise could have been fixed by establishing medpods as an extremely rare luxury. Of course then the movie couldn't have its magic beany ending where suddenly everyone gets a medpod, yay.
I still like it but in my defense, I had just watched The Lone Ranger and Jack The Giant Slayer in the same day, so....
Wow. That's like the selection at Hell's Triplex.
Coming next week: After Earth
Yeah, the movie made a fatal error right from the beginning by
SPOILERestablishing that medpods can do anything, instantly, with no apparent "cost" of any kind. It only got worse at the end when it was revealed that Elysium is equipped with hundreds of the things in storage, ready to fly down to Earth on a moment's notice.Which means that the "bad guys" literally are just being bad guys for the pure fuck of it because they have no reason to deny Earth people access to medpods. I mean, why NOT let an occasional shuttle fly up to Elysium, in order to let some sick kids get their cancer cured in three minutes? This is the worst kind of screenwriting, where the bad guys have no justification for what they do other than just being mean.
A lot of the stupid in the premise could have been fixed by establishing medpods as an extremely rare luxury. Of course then the movie couldn't have its magic beany ending where suddenly everyone gets a medpod, yay.
Not to mention the INSANE stupidity of
Oh, and while we're on the subject, Jodie Foster's whole plan is to use the code to install herself as president. That doesn't make sense, because if I hack the White House website and change every instance of "Barack Obama" to my name, that doesn't make me the president. But then they make it even stupider in the third act, when she declares a state of emergency, which the law dictates gives her presidential power! WHY WOULD YOU BOTHER WITH THE CODE BULLSHIT? It's apparently super easy to get all that power so there's no point in doing anything with the code.
Based on the reactions here, I'm likely to love the shit out of Elysium. The Mrs and I might watch it tonight.
Not to mention the INSANE stupidity of
SPOILERthe shit with the Elysium source code.
Well, it wasn't going to be just any Western, it was going to be a JERRY BRUCKHEIMER western. This is a guy who probably couldn't make a romcom for less than 150 million.
I finally got around to watching Lone Ranger just last week, and after all the hate I found it wasn't AS bad as I was braced for. Don't get me wrong, it's not GOOD either.
btw, I'd been hearing a lot of talk about the awesome "train crash scene" and when it happened right at the very beginning I thought, yeah, pretty spectacular. As anyone who has seen the movie already knows, that wasn't the big train crash scene, which comes at the finale.
So it's not hard to see how the thing cost 250 million. It's just hard to understand why.
The Lone Ranger was two good action scenes book-ending one boring hour of shite.
Hoo boy, you ain't kidding. Also, the choice to make the Lone Ranger
I will admit that the moment when he gets hit with an arrow and screams like a girl was hilarious, but in context of the entire movie, completely wrong.
It's possible the Lone Ranger character simply IS too old-fashioned and quaint to work nowadays - but their attempt to make him wacky certainly didn't work either.
all this talk about the lone ranger... Now i want to watch it...
I've actually wanted to see it for awhile. It seems to me like a case of people dog-piling on a movie that's a lot better and has more of a stamp on it than the usual forgettable non-sense. Say what you will about Verbinski, but he knows how to construct a great set-piece, even if he's bad at maintaining a plot thru-line.
I suspect it will play a lot better on video where you can fast-forward through the dull bits. As a big fan of Westerns, visually it looked pretty great from the trailers.
I sit here, and read this thread and go, "Wow. I didn't watch a lot of movies this past year." Now I know why.
I was not on board with the Lone Ranger, even a little bit, and I am a big fan of Bruckheimer and his work. But, the whole premise has to be done more straight than the execution was, especially with the type of character he is supposed to be. Personally, I would take a "Captain America" approach to it and let it feel more like a Western/period piece than what it turned in to.
It actually bums me out that real Spaghetti Western's don't get made anymore (Django Unchained doesn't really count). Like, even semi-recent stuff like Tombstone and the 3:10 To Yuma remake, they're westerns, but not in the Leone style. Did that whole genre die when he did? I really miss that kind of movie.
It actually bums me out that real Spaghetti Western's don't get made anymore (Django Unchained doesn't really count). Like, even semi-recent stuff like Tombstone and the 3:10 To Yuma remake, they're westerns, but not in the Leone style. Did that whole genre die when he did? I really miss that kind of movie.
Westerns (like pirate movies) are considered "risky" to studios nowadays. The Coens only got True Grit made because...well, they're the Coens, and it was a remake with plenty of marketable stars. And True Grit did pretty damn well if I recall correctly. But Spaghetti Westerns have such an esoteric style that it's hard to play them straight for American audiences. You risk coming off as too goofy.
I seem to be far less critical of movie than most of you folk. As I said, I enjoyed Elysium and you know what, I enjoyed Lone Ranger too. Liked Oblivion, Really liked World's End even though it took it a while to warm up.
Not saying you guys are wrong. Just saying I'm glad that apparently I can enjoy more movies.
(Also this probably makes me the enemy or something for paying for and encouraging this "crap". Sorry/notsorry?)
paulou wrote:Her. Go see Her. Best piece of science fiction in the last decade, easy.
Not according to Jezebel.
Oh great, another movie about a dude who's SO DESERVING OF LOVE but just can't his shit together enough to date a real woman.
Well, that's Jezebel for you. They're like the kind of feminist that most feminists wish would just shut up because really, they're not helping.
Last edited by Boter (2013-12-23 05:39:52)
I seem to be far less critical of movie than most of you folk. As I said, I enjoyed Elysium and you know what, I enjoyed Lone Ranger too. Liked Oblivion, Really liked World's End even though it took it a while to warm up.
Not saying you guys are wrong. Just saying I'm glad that apparently I can enjoy more movies.
(Also this probably makes me the enemy or something for paying for and encouraging this "crap". Sorry/notsorry?)
Ewing wrote:paulou wrote:Her. Go see Her. Best piece of science fiction in the last decade, easy.
Not according to Jezebel.
Oh great, another movie about a dude who's SO DESERVING OF LOVE but just can't his shit together enough to date a real woman.
Well, that's Jezebel for you. They're like the kind of feminist that most feminists wish would just shut up because really, they're not helping.
Oh, boy. This...I don't see it ending well.
When it comes to The Lone Ranger, I feel that in today's cinema, Westerns just don't draw the way sci-fi or fantasy does now. I don't think there was a true way to make this film a monetary success in today's movie industry. I think this movie should've followed the path the movie Dredd did, where playing the film more seriously like in 2012's Dredd as opposed to the Stallone incarnation could have lead to a more critically successful film. I'm unsure as to what changes could have turned it into the blockbuster the studio thought it could've been, that's why I'm not a movie exec. I'm also not convinced Hammer can be a lead, but to me he wasn't what was the main reason for its failure.
Anyway, here's my Top 5 (haven't yet seen: Blue is the Warmest Colour, Her, and The Wolf of Wall Street)
1. Gravity
2. Prisoners
3. American Hustle & Act of Killing (tie)
4. All Is Lost
5. Dallas Buyers Club
Honorable Mention: Side Effects, Oblivion, Blackfish, Inside Llewyn Davis, The To-Do List, This is the End
Top 5 Worst:
1. Movie 43
2. After Earth & The Mortal Instruments (tie)
3. Elysium
4. Jack the Giant Slayer & Warm Bodies (Nicholas Hoult your terrible)
5. The Lone Ranger
Next Top 5 Worst (yeah its that kinda year)
6. Star Trek Into Darkness
7. Kick Ass 2
8. Identity Thief
9. The Host
10. Disney's Planes
Dishonorable Mention: Paranoia
However, this year I think gave us a lot of interesting possible WAYDM Candidates, some of which I'd be interested in are for good or bad:
1. The World's End
2. Pacific Rim
3. Elysium
4. Hunger Games: Catching Fire
5. Man of Steel
6. World War Z
7. Monsters University
8. The Purge
Lastly, I think this would be more fitting for the Are Video Games Art? thread, but if we could include them, I'd put the story told in "The Last of Us" in my Top 5. The script Neil Druckmann penned for this PS3 exclusive game follows a number of zombie/apocalyptic tropes and subverts some along the way. With the occasional comedic relief to lighten the mood, the game carries a sense of dread that is inescapable, with every death along the way (infected or not) having weight to it as if you feel the impact of taking every life. You can tell that Druckmann is well versed in the art of screenwriting, as setups are paid off largely through the narrative. The story of weaved between the two main characters and the complex relationship shared between them only begins to engrossing you the longer you play, learning the nuances of characters and watching them grow closer only leads to a greater potential sense of loss. What makes the game phenomenal is the fact they can convey so much emotion so subtly without much/if an dialogue during some scenes. It's a game where you could argue that the cutscenes are better than the gameplay itself.I'm not going to spoil any part of the game for anyone who hasn't had the benefits of experiencing The Last of Us, but to say the beginning & ending of the game left me speechless, would be an understatement. I've read some video game articles claiming TLoU has given video games, "The citizen Kane moment in gaming", I wouldn't go that far but if you have a PS3 (or a generous friend who'd allow you to borrow theirs) and about 13-15 hours to dedicate to this story, it's an experience that will stick with you long after you've put the controller down.
Okay, I've seen pretty much every movie I wanted to see this year. Except Her, but that's not out near me until the 10th. Here's my final (probably) top 10.
1) Inside Llewyn Davis
2) 12 Years a Slave
3) All Is Lost
4) The Wolf of Wall Street
5) Upstream Color
6) Frances Ha
7) Blue is the Warmest Color
8) Short Term 12
9) Nebraska
10) Side Effects
Last edited by Doctor Submarine (2013-12-28 03:42:37)
I know several people who thought they had their best-of list all sorted out--and then they saw HER. I've seen it twice already. It's a good one, friends.
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