Re: Last movie you watched
Time Crimes is a very clever film
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Time Crimes is a very clever film
Rewatched The Croods last night (on the job, what can I say), and having the chance to sit down with it again, I think I may have been a little flippant with my remarks last time about the story. There's no denying that on paper it is a very by numbers sort of family fare, but it WORKS, it works DAMN WELL. And I was thinking about it, trying to figure out why this works so well when so many others don't, and all I could come up with is that The Croods does it unironically and sincerely. They don't try to sneak in all those little nods to the audience and self aware bs that seems to be all the rage. It just commits to the story it's going to tell and then does it, and does it good.
And weirdly, that kinda feels refreshing. There's none of the weird little plot twists of whatever that the filmmakers felt they needed to add to make it "fresh" or "modern", it embraces what it is and puts all it's effort into doing it awesomely. And it felt good.
But yeah, otherwise, world design is still amazing, Belt is still cute as hell and for some reason the audience felt the need to start cutting large amounts of onions right around the end of the movie, not sure what was up with that.
Still a thumbs up, and definitely a little higher than I gave it credit for on first viewing.
Uh oh, I think we know who's getting kicked out of the Cool Guy Club at the next meeting. For shame.
Last edited by BigDamnArtist (2013-08-22 16:08:26)
Ooo. How was Mysterious Skin? I've been wanting to see that.
It was alright. Gregg Araki's direction is typically ham-handed at times, especially during the scenes of sexual molestation and violence, but the acting by JGL, Michelle Trachtenberg, et al. rise above the director's worst tendencies. At its best, though, the film exhibits moments of real sensitivity, which is enhanced by the ambient/dream pop score by Harold Budd and Robin Guthrie and songs by Slowdive, Cocteau Twins and Ride.
The soundtrack and the performances are honestly the best things about Mysterious Skin.
Allow me to second the recommendation for Triangle, it's an outstanding little trippy horror flick, very much in the Primer and Timecrimes headspace. The lead performance by Melissa George is great, the story structure is really cool, and its got an excellent score as well
The World's End - Fun ride, enjoyed myself the whole way through. These guys have a knack for making perfect movies. So many random setups that I hardly ever noticed (including simple lines of dialogue), followed by subtle and witty payoffs on down the line, without ever missing a beat or slowing the pace.
Last edited by Sam F (2013-08-25 21:59:39)
John Cusack is one of those actors I've not seen alot of. Grosse Point Blank and Con Air, that's about it.
John Cusack is one of those actors I've not seen alot of. Grosse Point Blank and Con Air, that's about it.
I liked him in Con Air and Grosse Point Blank, but more so in Con Air. I think I liked him because he had a good foil in Colm Meany (Chief O'Brian!). However, I really haven't gotten in to anymore of his stuff, though reviewing his IMBD page makes me want to watch "The Raven"
Nobody should want to watch The Raven. Try The Ice Harvest (directed by Harold Ramis), The Sure Thing (directed by Rob Reiner) or The Grifters (directed by Stephen Frears).
Nobody should want to watch The Raven. Try The Ice Harvest (directed by Harold Ramis), The Sure Thing (directed by Rob Reiner) or The Grifters (directed by Stephen Frears).
Fireproof gets a like for mentioning Cheif O'brien. That is all.
TechNoir wrote:John Cusack is one of those actors I've not seen alot of. Grosse Point Blank and Con Air, that's about it.
I liked him in Con Air and Grosse Point Blank, but more so in Con Air. I think I liked him because he had a good foil in Colm Meany (Chief O'Brian!). However, I really haven't gotten in to anymore of his stuff, though reviewing his IMBD page makes me want to watch "The Raven"
Ohh yeah, I saw that aswell. I thought it was a fairly decent thriller. It held my interest throughout. Though considering the director I was hoping for slightly more.
Fireproof gets a like for mentioning Cheif O'brien. That is all.
Too kind, sir.
Quick funny note: my wife owns the entire series of Dr. Quinn: Medicine Woman. In the series pilot, Colm Meany plays the town barber, and kind of a rough around the edges kind of guy. Sadly, he was not kept for the series proper, but seeing him in the pilot still cracks me up.
As SF Debris put it in his "Encounter at Farpoint" review, "They are joined on the battle bridge by a curly haired guy. Don't worry, he's not important."
Jimmy B wrote:Nobody should want to watch The Raven. Try The Ice Harvest (directed by Harold Ramis), The Sure Thing (directed by Rob Reiner) or The Grifters (directed by Stephen Frears).
The Raven isn't a very good film. Is that enough explaining?
Nobody should want to watch The Raven. Try The Ice Harvest (directed by Harold Ramis), The Sure Thing (directed by Rob Reiner) or The Grifters (directed by Stephen Frears).
Docked a point for forgetting to mention Say Anything (directed by Cameron Crowe)
Two more points lost for also omitting One Crazy Summer and Better Off Dead.
/I WANT MY TWO DOLLARS
EDIT: The Sure Thing especially is a semi-forgotten gem that deserves a much higher position on the "Best '80s Comedies Evar" List than it tends to get. One of my faves.
I haven't seen Say Anything, One Crazy Summer and Better Off Dead. Give me my points back!
EDIT: The Sure Thing especially is a semi-forgotten gem that deserves a much higher position on the "Best '80s Comedies Evar" List than it tends to get.
Absolutely.
fireproof78 wrote:Jimmy B wrote:Nobody should want to watch The Raven. Try The Ice Harvest (directed by Harold Ramis), The Sure Thing (directed by Rob Reiner) or The Grifters (directed by Stephen Frears).
The Raven isn't a very good film. Is that enough explaining?
Isn't a very good film or a bad film? I like John Cusack and am a fan of Edgar Allan Poe so it sounds like an interesting play on his work...
I haven't seen Say Anything, One Crazy Summer and Better Off Dead. Give me my points back!
Oh my goodness. You need to drop everything you're doing now, immediately, and get a copy of Say Anything. I agree that The Sure Thing is really underappreciated, and Say Anything has a similar kind of vibe, but in my opinion Say Anything is just on a different level. An absolutely wonderful, sincere, honest film that utterly transcends the "teen romantic comedy" genre.
And Trey's right, you need to see Better Off Dead too. It's your standard teen romantic comedy of the era, but with this (totally unexpected) large dollop of surrealism. Plus it's got claymation.
"Now that's a real shame when folks be throwin' away a perfectly good white boy like that."
Django Unchained... I liked it very much, it has the same sort of tension building play-like sensibility of Inglorious Basterds, which I also liked a lot, with a bit of the cool factor of Kill Bill thrown in.
I love InnerSpace, one of my favourites growing up.
Jimmy B wrote:fireproof78 wrote:
The Raven isn't a very good film. Is that enough explaining?
Isn't a very good film or a bad film? I like John Cusack and am a fan of Edgar Allan Poe so it sounds like an interesting play on his work...
Well, watch it and form your own opinion on it.
I love InnerSpace, one of my favourites growing up.
It's a lot of fun, I'm a fan of Dante overall. He 'favourited' one of my Tweets last night, it made my day
42.
Somebody please give me a real Jackie Robinson movie. I feel like I deserve it after what I just sat through, which was 2 hours of nothing but shallow goop. I did learn something new though. Did you guys know? Back in the 40s, no black person ever did anything wrong. And in fact, Jackie Robinson is our infallible Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Oh, and Branch Ricky (Harrison Ford) is God the Father, also infallible. Seriously, in the beginning of the movie, Ricky said to Robinson, "LIKE OUR SAVIOR, you've gotta have the guts to turn the other cheek." Then later on, "You're living the sermon. In the wilderness, 40 days, all of it. Only you."
Oh, and this is the song they played during the credits, along with pictures of Robinson and whatnot…
So, the Bible is about a baseball game, with Jackie-I-mean-"Jesus standing at the home plate."
Even the action was screwy. Not the cinematography, but the editing. The main facet of Robinson's game they were trying to highlight was his ability to steal bases. In the movie, every time he stole he got a terrible jump on the pitch. The pitcher had just about released the ball before he even started to take off; yet he was never thrown out. So either he had supernatural speed (*cough* Jesus), or all the major league catchers sucked. But that's not nearly the most disappointing aspect of the movie.
There was no depth to it, no realism whatsoever. Some white people were good, most were evil, and all black people were perfect. Seriously, not one black person made a single wrong decision in the entire movie. And the lines just sounded rehearsed. There was no depth to any of the relationships. Every little conversation from start to finish had to do with Jackie and race issues. I get that's what the movie's about but come on, these guys are real people. That's not all they ever talked about. As a result the characters were very bland and hardly relatable. Everyone had to be either pure evil, or absolutely flawless at heart. Nowhere in between.
No complaints about the acting, I thought it was very good. Too bad the movie was completely uninspiring.
Last edited by Sam F (2013-08-27 15:55:40)
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