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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Silver Linings Playbook is a horrific piece of shit that should have been pumped full of in sulfuric acid In Utero.

In real life the paranoid delusional would be horrified and possibly violent at his family for executing strange conspiracy against him, and nobody should have gotten an Oscar.

--
One Time @ Bland Camp...

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Jdubs wrote:

Silver Linings Playbook is a horrific piece of shit that should have been pumped full of in sulfuric acid In Utero.

I thought it was rather overrated myself. Some of the performances were good. The screenplay seemed basically good (it was adapted from a novel that I have not read), but the nominations for direction David O. Russell received kind of baffle me. Also somewhat baffling to me was all the kudos the film received for being a realistic depiction of mental illness. Seemed more like a slightly romanticized depiction of mental illness.

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Having been one who has gone through a bit of a mental illness phase (manic depression. fun while it lasted) not unlike what Bradley Cooper's character went through (less violence, more paranoia), I enjoyed the film as an accurate depiction of the day-by-day steps one goes through on that first recovery after the initial breakdown.

His idea of having this (unrealistic) goal of 'everything with my ex-wife will be fine if I can just do this' is a very real thing. The arguments with his seemingly overbearing parents who take every action of his to be a sign of regression were very familiar and Chris Tucker's character? I totally knew that guy.
What isn't real is the encounters with the unbelievably hot (yet equally troubled) girl who does everything she can to involve herself in his life. That just plain didn't happen.

Also, the relapse. You don't just get cured because you do a dance routine. That stuff takes years to fully cope with, with added time for each following occurrence, but whatever, it's a movie. The dance is healthy though, having routine in one's life, regular exercise and diet, familiar places and friends is very important for clearing one's head and getting your feet back on the ground. I didn't have a dance routine, I had lightsaber duels.  big_smile
I just wish my feet could've landed somewhere a little closer to Jennifer Lawrence's...
Anyway, the cast still gave great performances and I support Lawrence taking home the Oscar for it.

Last edited by Vapes (2013-10-30 16:34:48)

"Defending bad movies is VaporTrail's religion."
-DorkmanScott

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I'm likely giving up too much here..but it's out there to find elsewhere so...

I have grappled with manic depression for probably over two decades, and spun out so bad at one point that I went inpatient for a short period of time...and I find the film gives pretty dangerous advice.

One person recovering from a spin out dating another person recovering from a spin out is going to almost always result in two simultaneous and much more dangerous spin outs. The main character being surrounded by his basically insane and subtly, but persistently, abusive family would only compound the problem. Even his therapist is fairly dangerous, and the film doesn't really dive into any of the steps a person would really have to take to pull their life together after a psychological break so intense that it lead to physical violence and involuntary commitment.

The message seems to be that the cure to serious mental illness is to surround yourself with superstitious lunatics, cave into their psychosis, and then get into a dance off with an equally insane person (who he has no business dating, and was manipulated into dating) to cure mental illness...which is offensively oversimplified to.me, as it sets up the main character to have a child with his equally crazy lover before either of them have fixed their issues, and perpetuate the cycle.

(It also avoids looking to deep at the issue that my generation is seemingly abnormally full of 30 somethings crippled by mental illness to the point of moving back in with their parents...but obviously that is beyond the movies scope. )

I'd love to read some early drafts of this thing to see how it became this...thing...it seems more like a madlib than a movie to me.

I hate this movie more than Dorkman hates Good Will Hunting. and would gladly sit on the couch and dice it to fucking pieces if the opportunity presented.

(The exercise is good advice, I will give it that.)

--
One Time @ Bland Camp...

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Dorkman hates Good Will Hunting?!

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

It's not his fault.

--
One Time @ Bland Camp...

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I prefer to think of Good Will Hunting as an elaborate prequel that chronicles Dr. Erik Selvig's stint as an award-winning mathematician before he migrated to the Marvel universe and started monkeying with that damn tesseract.

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We need to have a WAYDM on that movie posthaste, then, because now I'm desperate to know how someone with such good taste can hate such an amazing film.

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

No movie is so amazing that it can't annoy the fuck out of at least someone.

I write stories! With words!
http://www.asstr.org/~Invid_Fan/

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This is true.

Last edited by Abbie (2013-10-30 23:32:46)

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Darth Praxus wrote:

Dorkman hates Good Will Hunting?!

This is news to me as well. Did I say that in an episode?

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Invid wrote:

No movie is so amazing that it can't annoy the fuck out of at least someone.

Unless it's the Princess Bride.

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Invid wrote:

No movie is so amazing that it can't annoy the fuck out of at least someone.

I want to put that on a demotivational poster and hang it up.

Dorkman wrote:
Darth Praxus wrote:

Dorkman hates Good Will Hunting?!

This is news to me as well. Did I say that in an episode?

This is in my Top 5 favorite films, so I certainly hope he's wrong. Though, it would be a landmark in defining how different our taste is.

Last edited by Vapes (2013-10-31 02:59:35)

"Defending bad movies is VaporTrail's religion."
-DorkmanScott

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Dorkman wrote:
Darth Praxus wrote:

Dorkman hates Good Will Hunting?!

This is news to me as well. Did I say that in an episode?

I thought for sure it was you who took issue with the "It's not your fault" scene, calling it lazy screenwriting, but I could be wrong.

--
One Time @ Bland Camp...

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Ah, that's William Goldman's view, and why he rejects rumors that he did a polish on the script (he never would've allowed that scene). Perhaps I was quoting him and it seemed like I was expressing my own opinion. The movie didn't make enough of an impression for me to bother forming one, honestly.

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Vapes wrote:
Invid wrote:

No movie is so amazing that it can't annoy the fuck out of at least someone.

I want to put that on a demotivational poster and hang it up.

If I quickly whip something up and put it in my Cafe Press store, would you be my first customer? smile

I write stories! With words!
http://www.asstr.org/~Invid_Fan/

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Haha, depends on the image you use I guess.

"Defending bad movies is VaporTrail's religion."
-DorkmanScott

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Dorkman wrote:

Ah, that's William Goldman's view, and why he rejects rumors that he did a polish on the script (he never would've allowed that scene). Perhaps I was quoting him and it seemed like I was expressing my own opinion. The movie didn't make enough of an impression for me to bother forming one, honestly.

well, then my original statement is still accurate i suppose.

--
One Time @ Bland Camp...

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

ShadowDuelist wrote:

Episode 1 is still bad even if it isn't a star wars movie.

The one good thing about Episode 1 is that it prepared us for further disappointments when other classic franchises are resurrected. Crystal Skull. The Hobbit. Terminator Salvation. Predators. Prometheus. Pirates 4.

Now we KNOW that anything fantastic from the past that is dusted off and milked for more is virtually guaranteed to suck. We can all dial our expectations way down for Jurassic Park 4, Episode 7, etc.

not long to go now...

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Dave wrote:
Invid wrote:

No movie is so amazing that it can't annoy the fuck out of at least someone.

Unless it's the Princess Bride.

Nope.  I saw it once years ago and found it unbearably smarmy and utterly charmless.  Infinitely less clever than it seemed to think it was.  Annoyed the fuck out of me is exactly what it did.  (Prob'ly should revisit it for this thread, actually.)

For the next hour, everything in this post is strictly based on the available facts.

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

http://www.lotustalk.com/forums/attachments/f68/90005d1220492322-costco-needs-bring-back-big-bags-popcorn-popcorn_10000.jpg

Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Ok, done.  I'll take the Pepsi Popcorn Challenge with The Princess Bride.  I haven't seen it in more than 20 years, mind, and maybe I was just in a bad mood, but it seems like anything less than total adoration will make it appropriate for this thread. 

I'll get back to you by the end of the day.

For the next hour, everything in this post is strictly based on the available facts.

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

avatar wrote:
ShadowDuelist wrote:

Episode 1 is still bad even if it isn't a star wars movie.

The one good thing about Episode 1 is that it prepared us for further disappointments when other classic franchises are resurrected. Crystal Skull. The Hobbit. Terminator Salvation. Predators. Prometheus. Pirates 4.

Now we KNOW that anything fantastic from the past that is dusted off and milked for more is virtually guaranteed to suck. We can all dial our expectations way down for Jurassic Park 4, Episode 7, etc.

*ahem*

It's called Jurassic World wink
http://www.jurassicworld-movie.com/images/jurassicpark4movielogo2.png

God loves you!

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

I'm not that big a fan of The Matrix. I love the plethora of references I can make to it, and I love Agent Smith, but I'm rather "meh" on the film itself. Maybe it's just because I'm getting tired of Chosen Ones and the Hero's Journey, maybe because I've seen too many later films with derivative effects and camera moves to be impressed by its innovations. I think it's a perfectly decent film, but it's not one of the greats in my book.

Slight tangent: as I've mentioned before, I think maybe one other reason it didn't hit me right is that I saw The Formula years before I finally saw The Matrix this summer, and thus had no idea that all of the Matrix references in that film (save the obvious alleyway scene) were references. Thus, when I finally saw The Matrix, I was watching it and seeing references to The Formula. I know it came first, but I can't divorce my experiences from my brain in this particular case, so it creates this weird feeling.

Last edited by Abbie (2013-10-31 21:16:31)

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

I felt the same way, but I saw Matrix in late '03, so I'v had time and numerous viewing since then to set things straight in my head.

Boter, formerly of TF.N as Boter and DarthArjuna. I like making movies and playing games, in one order or another.