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  1. #706

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    Bird Box

    This movie is garbage. The main reason I saw it is cause I like Sandra Bullock movies, and this is one I hate.
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    Looks like I'll have to move past gameplay footage

  2. #707
    Astonishing Member Soubhagya's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jim Kelly View Post
    I've seen pretty much all of Tarkovsky's movies and my favourite one is NOSTALGHIA (1983), which he made in Italy (unlike his other Russian movies), but I would be at a loss to explain the plot of the movie. I found this movie quite inspiring and it seemed like being in Italy and not having to make a movie for the Soviet Union had freed Tarkovsky to explore more of his spirituality. Yet I felt let down by his final movie, THE SACRIFICE (1986), which is just as Swedish and NOSTALGHIA is Italian. The sacrifice in NOSTALGHIA is self-abnegating while the sacrifice in THE SACRIFICE is self-indulgent.

    It seems like every male director has a fetish. In Tarantino's case it's feet; for Tarkovsky it was the back of a woman's head, with the hair gathered in a bun. I think this was something to do with his mother, who must have had her hair that way. The first Tarkovsky movie I saw was MIRRORS (1975), which is loosely autobiographical, and you can see there his obsession with his mother and the back of her head.
    Interesting. I have seen three of his films. Mirror, Stalker and Solaris. Out of the rest of his films i thought The Sacrifice sounded the most interesting. Maybe i shall look for Nostalghia next. Tarkovsky is a weird director. Its hard to recommend his films to someone unless he or she is a film buff. I thought Solaris was a slow film. And then i watched Stalker. Man if someone else was doing such a film i would say the director is trolling the audience. Challenging the audience to go to sleep while he is having a laugh. I loved Mirror and Solaris though. And Stalker is quite interesting to revisit sometime.

  3. #708
    Astonishing Member Soubhagya's Avatar
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    Watched a couple of films within the last week.

    Jurassic World: I am unable to see why this one gets a lot of hate. I really liked it. It was fun. At the same time i have to admit its among the dumbest films i have watched. The characters are so stupid. The plot is stupid. But i had a lot of fun watching it.

    Far From Home: When i watched it in the theaters i did not like it that much due to a mid film twist as i was enjoying the character a lot till then. And the last action sequence seemed a bit easy, even though it was great action. Now i enjoyed it a lot more.

    Stalker: A sci-fi film from Russian film director Tarkovsky. I don"t think i have seen a film like this. A long and slow film with a lot of interesting ideas. I wish to see it more, if nothing, just for the 'atmosphere'. I don't think i can explain what that really means, but i think the director almost makes the viewer a character in the movie. He does not cut the uninteresting parts and so its as if we are inside the zone: An unexplained site created by a meteorite crash, which is cordoned off by the military and said to have a room which can make wishes come true.

    Suspiria: The original by Daria Argento. I think the plot and characters are a bit simplistic. But it is pure eye candy. I haven't a horror movie which looks so beautiful. Most films aren't this beautiful. Music is also great. While it has some great horror scenes i did not find it very scary. But a very good movie. It would very easily slide into a list of my favorite horror films. Loved it.
    Last edited by Soubhagya; 09-29-2019 at 04:49 AM.

  4. #709
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    NOSTALGHIA is slow, but it's kind of like a meditation. THE MIRROR (or MIRRORS as I call it, because that's what it was when I first saw it) is probably the hardest Tarkovsky movie to understand, because a lot of it is just camera movements and switching film stocks within scenes--so you're constantly trying to figure out where it is and what is happening. Ironic that this was the first of his movies I saw.

    Peter Greenaway movies are also quite difficult. But a lot of fun.

    Watched another DVD that I got as a gift and was still in the plastic because I never wanted to see it. TROY from 2004. I remember feeling insulted when I got this DVD as a present. Whoever gave it to me must have got it from the bargain bin and didn't respect me enough to give me a good movie. I assumed it was pretty bad from all the press it got at the time.

    It's actually not as bad as I expected. Although, for me, having read the ILIAD and studied ancient Greek literature at university, the liberties that the movie takes are quite galling. It makes it seem like the Trojan War took less than a month; whereas, the thing about that war is that it dragged on for years and years with neither side winning an advantage for long. It's the tedious human misery and the constant loss of life over a prolonged period that made it such a compelling drama for the Greeks.

    The movie is directed by Wolfgang Petersen, from a screenplay by David Benioff. And you can see how Benioff would go on to do GAME OF THRONES--taking liberties with another literary work. There are even GOT alumni in the movie like Sean Bean and Julian Glover.

    That Benioff doesn't care about the original material is shown by the significant characters he kills off--which means that some of the greatest Greek dramas could never have happened, if those characters truly did die when they did. And he gives more significance to Rose Byrne's character, just so her relationship with Brad Pitt can seem a romantic love story with Achilles--when really it's the relationship of a slave to her rapist.

    But I admired how most of the movie was filmed in actual locations, with physical sets and thousands of extras. It had a greater sense of reality than if it had been done with a lot of CGI--the way current movies are done. However, some of the sets looked they had just been built and the plaster wasn't even dry--Troy didn't have that lived-in look.

  5. #710
    Astonishing Member Arfguy's Avatar
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    Watched a lot of stuff on Netflix, while on vacation:

    Instant Family
    The Blind Side
    Sinister
    Ip Man 2 & 3

    Also watched: Flight of the Phoenix (2004)
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  6. #711
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    Dark Phoenix - pretty crappy. The deviance from the original story was a bore. Just another Jean mildly flips out.

  7. #712

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    Mortal Engines

    An interesting movie with terribly constructed story and confused internal logic.
    Quote Originally Posted by Arfguy View Post
    Watched a lot of stuff on Netflix, while on vacation:

    Instant Family
    The Blind Side
    Sinister
    Ip Man 2 & 3
    First one is the only movie in this list I have not seen nor heard of. I liked the rest of these movies to varying degrees.
    TRUTH, JUSTICE, HOPE
    That is, the heritage of the Kryptonian Warrior: Kal-El, son of Jor-El
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  8. #713
    Astonishing Member Arfguy's Avatar
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    Well, I'm Canadian, so maybe Netflix movies catalogue may differ a little from yours. Instant Family is a family comedy starring Mark Wahlberg and Rose Byrne, about a couple who adopt 3 kids. I had watched it once by myself and really loved it. When I went on vacation to visit my sister, she wanted to watch something and I recommended Instant Family. She liked it a lot.

    Just watched Warrior on Blu-ray a couple of nights ago and Jack Reacher while it was on TV.
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  9. #714
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    Watched WICKER PARK (2004) directed by Paul McGuigan, starring Josh Hartnett, Diane Kruger, Rose Byrne. But after watching that, I found out it's a remake of the French movie, L'APPARTEMENT (1996) written and directed by Gilles Mimouni, starring Vincent Cassell, Monica Bellucci, Romane Bohringer. So I watched that, also.

    The American movie is almost exactly the same as the French one--with the same scenes and even sometimes the same visuals and shots--except for the very end where the two movies diverge significantly. There's a mystery, several twists and lots of flashbacks--which I can't talk about without spoiling the movie, although I figured out most of the mystery a third of the way through the American version--and maybe that's just because I've watched so many movies by now, I know all the tricks. However, the French movie truly surprised me at the end, because I was expecting it to turn out exactly like the remake and it pulled the rug right out from under me.

    The original version has the feeling of a Hitchcock film, with the way it's shot and the soundtrack (that sounds like Bernard Hermann but it's actually Peter Chase doing a good impersonation). And the American remake has some inventive cinematic techniques--the flashbacks are indicated in a split screen effect and there are several other uses of split screen and shots with multiple images of the same character (as in reflections or video screens), which all together supports the ideas of the movie about how we all have multiples personas. The American movie ends in a romantic way, where the French one is very unromantic, and yet because of the cinematic style, the dialogue and the acting, I didn't really believe the remake was romantic.

    Apparently, the remake of L'APPARTEMENT went through several directors (even Spielberg) before it came to McGuigan. It's strange that, in the end, it remained so similar to the French, with the exception of the story's conclusion. And maybe they changed the ending because they knew that American audiences wouldn't accept such a disconcerting conclusion--they had to give audiences what they wanted. Yet McGuigan so subtly suggests that not everything is as we think it should be, that maybe the final shot isn't really romantic after all.

    It's interesting and sometimes annoying that American audiences are so insulated that they never watch foreign language movies, nor even British movies, and those movies have to be remade to be seen in the U.S.A.

  10. #715
    Invincible Member Kirby101's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Speed Force League Unlimited View Post
    Mortal Engines

    An interesting movie with terribly constructed story and confused internal logic.
    I saw this last night. I agree with your assessment. It seemed like a movie of story ideas and character sketches with really good video game effects. I know it is based on a novel. not a game. But it had the feel of a game world, rather than some cinematic post apocalypse.
    There came a time when the Old Gods died! The Brave died with the Cunning! The Noble perished locked in battle with unleashed Evil! It was the last day for them! An ancient era was passing in fiery holocaust!

  11. #716

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    Rocky (1976)

    I dug it.

  12. #717
    Invincible Member Kirby101's Avatar
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    The Wind Rises. Sweet and sad and masterful. Not what I expected, except I expected greatness from Miyazaki. And it was.
    There came a time when the Old Gods died! The Brave died with the Cunning! The Noble perished locked in battle with unleashed Evil! It was the last day for them! An ancient era was passing in fiery holocaust!

  13. #718
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    Joker

    Got in as a happy man, got out and wanted to jump from a 10 story building

  14. #719
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    Oh yeah, JOKER. It impressed me, but it didn't depress me. I had a lot of feels. I got goose-bumps several times. Some genuinely frightening scenes. But I left the theatre feeling good about the movie--actually welled up at the end, because it was such a masterpiece of movie-making. It's a hard movie to go back and see a second time--I want to, but gotta put myself in the right mindset to go through that again.

  15. #720
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    Rewatched THE 40 YEAR OLD VIRGIN (2005). Next time I binge THE OFFICE, I should put this movie in the order between season 1 and season 2, because it explains a lot how Michael Scott's character evolved. In hindsight, there are several actors I can appreciate better, given what they've done since--and it's surprising to see Mindy Kaling and Jonah Hill pop up in bit parts. Some of the humour is pretty bad, but the best part of the whole movie is the very end with the fantastic musical sequence that involves the whole cast. That was a great ending and left me with a smile on my face long after.

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