list/discuss/rate - your recently watched movies |
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The T
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^That is a good short description of the film
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SaltyJon
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One of my favorites. |
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Henry Plainview
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I watched The Final Cut of Bladerunner too as the first and only version of that movie I've seen. It needed to make more sense. But I hated the book for the same reason, so I guess that shouldn't surprise me. Nice visuals though. |
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if you own a sodastream i hate you
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Atavachron
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^ yeah I saw the final cut in a theater years ago and felt the same; it made a little more sense, which is to say not much
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stonebeard
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You definitely need to see Blade Runner more than once for it to make sense. You should also see the Director's Cut and maybe even the theatrical cut to fully appreciate what's going on, because the meaning you get from the movie changes between versions. The thing is, it has such deep meaning and philosophical backgrounds--easily one of the best "sci-fi as applied philosophy" movies. Such a rich movie visually and otherwise.
But then, Ridley Scott wanted to do Dune before deciding to pick this one up, but that didn't work out. Imagine if it did though. God, I don't know which one I'd want more.... Only the Star Wars trilogy rivals Blade Runner for my favorite sci-fi "movie." And one can't separte just one movie out of the trilogy. Nonsense. This of course only applies until they make a good adaptation of Dune or Neuromancer. Those would be forces of nature. Edited by stonebeard - January 23 2010 at 20:33 |
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Atavachron
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I've seen 'em and each one has merits, it's just by then the magic had passed and I just didn't care much anymore ..and as for Dune I still haven't seen a production I like, it may be one of those stories only possible within the written word
I agree about Star Wars and would include all six films to be appreciated as a whole.. much hate for the prequels but I liked them very much and think the entire saga would benefit if viewed (hypothetically) as a single movie |
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Henry Plainview
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I'm pretty sure I caught the philosophical implications of what it "means to be human", but maybe not! Maybe I'll watch another version later, but it seems like the voice over would have made it even more annoying.
Speaking of philosophy, I am taking a philosophy class, and when does it stop being a game of semantics? I don't give a sh*t about what the "substance" of an abstract idea is!
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if you own a sodastream i hate you
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SaltyJon
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Even though it wasn't (even close to) perfect, I really enjoy Lynch's adaptation of Dune. I feel like if he had his way it would have been done a lot better, but I hear he was artistically limited in the making. Still, I do hope we sometime get a better adaptation which manages to stick to the book...of course that would end up being somewhere around 5 hours long or more to get everything in correctly. |
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A Person
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I haven't read Dune yet (soon though) but the Lord of the Rings trilogy was what, over 9 hours long(I think the extended edition is over 11)? And they still made a lot of (unforgivable) cuts and additions to the story. Anyway, it takes a long time to tell a story that keeps relatively true to the original. For a good contrast, watch the mangled Harry Potter series, if you hate yourself. |
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Atavachron
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it did, and turned out to be quite unnecessary.. same goes for John Carpenter's The Thing: the original release (and most versions shown on tv) has a really monotonous voice-over by Wilford Brimley for us idiots in the audience that couldn't figure out something as complex as an alien species poised to take over humanity.. yeah that's a real stumper.. the original un-dubbed version is on the DVD if I recall |
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SaltyJon
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Yeah, the Dune movie (Lynch's, haven't seen the TV movie) had even more chopped out of the story than the LotR movies, a lot more, really.
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SaltyJon
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You recall correctly, the DVD version of The Thing doesn't have any voice-over. |
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stonebeard
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Oops, I forgot.
Actually I think Ghost in The Shell/Ghost in the Shell: Innocence do the philosophy thing better than Blade Runner. But I need some humanity, which is why Blade Runner still gets high marks. (Also it was earlier by a long shot). Still, those movies are amazing. |
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Atavachron
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Eye of the Needle
Creepy old-school spy thriller with Donald Sutherland as a German agent stranded on a small British island with a woman and her family during WW ll. |
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harmonium.ro
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Actually I like Alien more than Blade Runner, but when I think of Ridley Scott I think of him as the director with the best debut "trilogy": The Duelists, Alien and Blade Runner. None of my favourite directors can beat that.
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harmonium.ro
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Cloudy With A Chance Of Meatballs - 3D animation with simplistic story but exceptionally well done and with tons of funny references to other films, from Aliens to Tornado to Lord Of The Rings etc.7/10.
Edited by harmonium.ro - January 24 2010 at 17:17 |
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Tarquin Underspoon
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Well I had a bit of an interesting movie experience yesterday.... Black Sheep.
This satirical (or at least intentionally funny) horror/gore movie from New Zealand did not have me as entertained as I would have hoped. This movie was aimed to make people laugh through not only its totally ridiculous levels of gore and over-the-top "horror movie gags", but also its traditional verbal gags. Thing is....it really wasn't funny or entertaining until the last 30 minutes of the movie. It was just horribly boring, frankly. I can't say I was overly tickled or grossed out to the point of Pythonesque ridiculousness more than about once or twice. I don't know what I was expecting, though, because this is my first little excursion into the realm of this kind of film.
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"WAAAAAAOOOOOUGH! WAAAAAAAUUUUGGHHHH!! WAAAAAOOOO!!!"
-The Great Gig in the Sky |
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manofmystery
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 26 2008 Location: PA, USA Status: Offline Points: 4335 |
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I found this film to be a jolly good laugh myself, in the fine NZ tradition of Peter Jackson's Dead Alive and Bad Taste
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Time always wins. |
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Atavachron
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Fire and Ice
One of those soulless budget numbers from the SyFy network about a kingdom terrorized by a fire dragon. Not so terrible actually, with John Rhys-Davies as an inventor years ahead of his time and his dragonslaying cohort. |
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Tarquin Underspoon
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This exquisite little slice of 1980s Charles Bronson action earns 5 incredibly sarcastic stars from Tarquin "Ebert" Underspoon.
Edited by Tarquin Underspoon - January 28 2010 at 23:33 |
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"WAAAAAAOOOOOUGH! WAAAAAAAUUUUGGHHHH!! WAAAAAOOOO!!!"
-The Great Gig in the Sky |
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