list/discuss/rate - your recently watched movies |
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Icarium
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^ i really liked it, it took me three viewings to finnish it but i felt like it was worth while and all rhe Fourth World tie ins and Flashpoint referances are really tempting herrings.
I really like the Wonder Woman theme, one of the best themes made i think, i also liked some of the stoner doom riffage in the battle scenes, Ben Affleck is freaking awesome as Batman, stoic as a mountain and the two scenes featuring Martian Manhunter i screemed (inwardly) like a teenage girl. Edited by Icarium - March 23 2021 at 06:23 |
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TCat
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin Joined: February 07 2010 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 11612 |
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The Night Eats the World (2018) - 8/10 A really great and well-acted French zombie movie (in English by the way) with very little dialog. Anders Danielsen Lie is the main actor and keeps the viewer intrigued and entertained through it all, which he has to do since he is the one solo actor through most of the movie. His character isn't always the most likable or smart person but you always end up cheering for him. I wonder how many of us would behave much differently if it happened in real life. Being alone can drive you mad. It's quite an interesting slant on the zombie genre. Highly recommended.
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Shadowyzard
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 24 2020 Location: Davutlar Status: Offline Points: 4506 |
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I've watched about 15 more movies after I last posted here. Most are 7/10 movies; as real surprises are rare in life and I recently prefer not to take the risk of watching movies with low ratings, out of which may come amazing movies but with paying a bitter price: having to watch some real garbage till you meet a misunderstood or underrated gem...
One of those gems was Koko-di koko-da (Sweden/Denmark). A 10/10 movie for me. But together with it, there came some really awful "art movies" in the package; so till my next emotional phase, I'll watch the types of movies which I most likely will enjoy but not be blown away. Like I enjoyed watching Life (2017) a couple of days ago and As Above, So Below (2014), around a day ago. Edited by Shadowyzard - March 30 2021 at 18:53 |
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Hiram
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 30 2009 Location: Finland Status: Offline Points: 2084 |
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Austin Powers (1997) - Great fun when you're in the right mood. Will have to see the sequels again soon.
Tetsuo II: Body Hammer (1992) - While it certainly has its flaws in many departments, director's manic surreal visionary obsession carries the film. You, the Living (2007) - One of the better things I've seen since ages. More surrealism here and delightfully bleak yet humane comedy. Ratatouille (2007) - I watched this with my 8-year old and we both had excellent time. Superb animation and lots of action and fun. If you're into fine dining and French cuisine (I'm not), I'm sure there's still another level to enjoy. Frankenweenie (2012) - Watched this one with the kid, too, and with same results. Also superb animation, but in a different way. More references to old horror movies than you can count.
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progaardvark
Collaborator Crossover/Symphonic/RPI Teams Joined: June 14 2007 Location: Sea of Peas Status: Offline Points: 51071 |
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I just watched this two weeks ago and completely agree with your assessment.
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i'm shopping for a new oil-cured sinus bag that's a happy bag of lettuce this car smells like cartilage nothing beats a good video about fractions |
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richardh
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 18 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 28070 |
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Mission Impossible Fall Out . Big dumb action movie with Tom Cruise squeezing out every last ounce he can out of the tired formula. Its basically very expensive moving wallpaper with big set piece action scenes in London , Paris and Kashmir. No sense of style or of the ridiculous. At least Bond normally has a decent baddie. Sean Harris is criminally underused in that role (pun intended) as Cruise hugs as much of the screen as possible. 4/10
Run . Just come onto Netflix. Fairly standard thriller set up and no great surprises but still manages to crank up a certain amount of tension. Won't say too much (spoilers) but Sarah Paulsen is good 'fun' as always. 7/10
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JD
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 07 2009 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 18446 |
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The Father 2021 (Anthony Hopkins) A 93 minute insight into the ravages of dementia. Certainly well acted and maybe an Oscar vehicle for Hopkins. I'm glad they kept it brief and didn't drag it out too much. 6/10...maybe a 7/10.
Edited by JD - April 05 2021 at 06:27 |
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Shadowyzard
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 24 2020 Location: Davutlar Status: Offline Points: 4506 |
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Shadowbuilder (1998) - A perfect 90s' horror film of a high calibre like Wishmaster and Warlock. 10/10 for me. How have I missed it till today?..
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Shadowyzard
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 24 2020 Location: Davutlar Status: Offline Points: 4506 |
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One Point O (2004) - The story of a f**ked up man, like the guy in The Machinist (from the same year, 2004). One can see it as a anti-consumerism movie of a conspiracy theory based sort, too. Interesting cast, some "Wow!" references, good acting, haunting atmosphere; but without any intriguing plot. 7/10
Night Watch (2004) & Day Watch (2006) - Well, not very impressive but some really cool scenes here and there. 6/10 (for each) Loft (2008) - A very well done film, but not exactly my type. 6/10 El secreto de sus ojos (2009) - I really couldn't understand the point of this movie. Almost garbage, for me. 4/10 Edited by Shadowyzard - April 11 2021 at 15:55 |
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Shadowyzard
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Sleuth (1972) - Excellent movie. I haven't seen the original play from which it was adapted, yet I'm positive that this shows the merits of a deserving adaptation. Always a delight to watch the great Michael Caine, even more so in such delicate movies. I'm not a movie watcher who always (or regularly) tries to "predict" what will happen, but I effortlessly and unintentionally guessed most of the events before happening. An obvious "dramatic irony" (at least from my perception) was prevalent for a long time, in the film. Funny that Mr Caine had to "play games" with some idiosyncratic persons with dark(ish) skin, again. As in The Magus (1968). Apart from the wondrous entertainment it granted, I also appreciated the undertones of the movie (play). I'll not mention these, or the obvious themes -some of which are really powerful- lest they be spoilers for those who are interested to watch the movie. A 9/10, from me. Perhaps even a 10/10.
Edited by Shadowyzard - April 14 2021 at 17:52 |
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Shadowyzard
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La migliore offerta (2013) - A slow burner (I hate to have to use this term), but one of the most powerful movies that I've ever watched. 10/10
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Shadowyzard
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Edge of Tomorrow (2014) - I don't very much care about the politically driven motives in far more than some American movies, nor do I normally enjoy action-packed films that much. But notwithstanding, this was a terrific movie. There was a "critical" moment when the military commander (of the "good" (?) guys) could make a wise decision and they could easily win the war much earlier, but I'm not surprised he couldn't think of it. On that occasion, it wouldn't be a "movie worthy" plot. Also Tom Cruise = Mission Impossible. Anyhow: 8.5/10
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MortSahlFan
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The Thursday (1964) 7.5/10 |
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ExittheLemming
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the Dark Knight 2008 Directed by Christopher Nolan I'm old enough to remember markets, models, conductors, computers, stars, glue and furry animals, so can't say I ever got super excited about the superhero genre. For me, a masked 'goodie' rescuing us from our own impotence in the face of overwhelming anomie is really just a firefighter for the cremation casket. That said, this is entertainment, not Bruce Wayne in therapy and in that regard it succeeds. Heath Ledger's posthumous Oscar for best supporting actor was clearly apropos but frankly baffling and has tended to overshadow some of the other more deserving performances on show re Gary Oldman's Police Commissioner Gordon as a brilliant and understated portrayal of a man who stands up to the prevailing corruption all around him with a quiet dignity that never descends into woke virtue signalling. In stark contrast, the easier role of Ledger's Joker (who never has to suspend disbelief and convince us he's real) is a Tom Waits intoning as Robert Smith with ADD toddler as makeup artist. This is a hugely engaging performance certainly but strictly panto villain theatrics under the corpse paint all told. Christian Bale's Bruce Wayne comes across as a smarmy playboy with a face like a David Beckham delivery i.e. begging to be attacked (and why does he disguise his voice 'in cossie' when speaking alone to people who already know he's Bruce Wayne?) Michael Caine and Morgan Freeman do what they both do in their well earned walking sleep as Batman's erm...batman and armorer respectively. Aaron Eckhart alas, fails to convince as either 'new broom' DA or hideously disfigured vengeful turncoat 'baddie' but his makeup is pretty cool in a nod to Sam Raimi's Evil Dead. Enjoyably silly, unashamedly escapist and brilliantly made, the Dark Knight is decent but hardly worthy of being described as 'one of the best films of the decade' or 'the best Superhero film of all time'.
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Hiram
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Taxidermia - surreal, gross and pitch black comedy that can only have come from Eastern Europe.
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Gentle and Giant
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Mortal Kombat - Exactly what you'd expect. Good fight scenes, no story.
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Oh, for the wings of any bird, other than a battery hen
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Hiram
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Sabata - spaghetti western from the more entertaining end of the genre. It's funny how the film mocks the main villain's superhuman philosophy while presenting the hero as a typical superhuman western hero character.
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Hiram
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Screwed - latter day film by veteran exploitation director Teruo Ishii, based on a comic by Yoshiharu Tsuge. Already with opening credits you know you're in for something different. The actual film begins as a bleak art drama, but turns more and more disjointed, dream/nightmare-like, surreal and perverted as it progresses.
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JD
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 07 2009 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 18446 |
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Army of the Dead (2021) Zombie movies are never high on my list of movies to watch, more of a time killer if I don't want to be too emotionally or intellectually invested in a movie. There are a few that I've enjoyed...but just a few. This is NOT one of them. This effort by Zack Snyder isn't even redeemable if he did his 4 hour directors cut magic on it. Let's make something clear form the start...zombies don't have emotions, they don't fall in love and they don't grieve. Ant attempt to make a zombie a sympathetic character is totally absurd. Will Smith's I Am Legend proved that, but apparently Zack was out that day. The poor attempt to bring emotional connection with any of these characters sinks this movie to B or even C movie status. No satisfying resolution to the ending and a complete waste of the talents of Tig Notaro with useless sarcasm dialogue makes me wonder what the hell happened here? Lastly, a 2-1/2 hour run time for a zombie movie? Really? Don't waste your time. 3/10
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JD
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The Trial of the Chicago 7 2020 A fantastic retelling of a late 60's court case with the Nixon administration vs the freedom of the people. I was only 10 when this originally took place so I don't have any recollection of details about this case but certainly remember the era and what was 'generally' on the news at the time. 9/10 |
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