list/discuss/rate - your recently watched movies |
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Atavachron
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: September 30 2006 Location: Pearland Status: Offline Points: 65250 |
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^ Maybe it'll bring in the kids
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"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought." -- John F. Kennedy
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ExittheLemming
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 19 2007 Location: Penal Colony Status: Offline Points: 11415 |
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the Last Shift (2014) Directed by Anthony DiBlasi Rookie cop's first day on the force has her assigned to looking after an abandoned Police Station prior to it's permanent closure the next morning. Bored but eager to please her superiors, the likeable and beautiful Officer Loren (Juliana Harkavy) avoids encroaching tedium until things take a distinctly sinister turn and her routine chore turns into a harrowing ordeal. Reference points are fairly easy to spot in the last Shift, from Assault on Precinct 13, the criminally neglected Let Us Prey from the same year, to echoes of the Manson family cult but it's never derivative and manages to exploit its single location/solitary actress budget limitations to telling effect. Some of the imagery is genuinely unsettling so it's not a horror for the feint of heart (and if any are, they ain't worthy of the name) There is also a plot twist at the conclusion I genuinely didn't anticipate which is well worth sticking around for. More psychological thriller with horror elements than standard issue horror, it's a tale of an idealistic young woman's mental disintegration when confronted with ghosts of the past (real or imagined) and a very interesting tangent on how so many otherwise rational and intelligent females somehow get sucked into the black hole event horizons of the likes of Charles Manson, Ian Brady, Richard Ramirez, Jimmy Boyle, David Koresh, Warren Jeffs, Keith Raniere et al. Credibly creepy throughout, choc full of jump scares and with a knack for tourniquet tight suspense, the Last Shift might have a few glaring plot holes here and there but is great value for it's modest outlay in cinematic resources.
Edited by ExittheLemming - February 04 2022 at 22:23 |
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Shadowyzard
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 24 2020 Location: Davutlar Status: Offline Points: 4506 |
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Dead End (France - 2003): Only one thing could save this gosh-awful movie from getting a 1/10, and it happened. 3/10
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Atavachron
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: September 30 2006 Location: Pearland Status: Offline Points: 65250 |
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No Time to Die Not bad, not great, and an unclear future for the Bond franchise. |
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"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought." -- John F. Kennedy
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Argentinfonico
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 05 2021 Location: Argentina Status: Offline Points: 368 |
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The last great film I saw in the last few months was Malcolm X, played by Denzel Washington. There are a lot of great, next-level scenes, and the versatility with which Denzel (for me a number one) pulls off his passionate role is astounding. It's a long film (3h 22m) but for progressive rock fans that's no problem, hahaha.
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Atavachron
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: September 30 2006 Location: Pearland Status: Offline Points: 65250 |
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^ Good movie, and a powerful score from Terrence Blanchard. |
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"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought." -- John F. Kennedy
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JD
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 07 2009 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 18446 |
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Edited by JD - October 25 2021 at 19:32 |
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Thank you for supporting independently produced music
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Atavachron
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: September 30 2006 Location: Pearland Status: Offline Points: 65250 |
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^ And the same freakin' haircut-- what's that all about?
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"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought." -- John F. Kennedy
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 35795 |
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And wasn't Paul 15 or so when he met Chani in the novel? Paul was 15 when the Dune novels starts at least as I recall. Chani might have been 13 at the time. Seen conflicting reports on that. I actually love the Lynch Dune and might go see this new adaptation in the cinema. EDIT: After writing that, I listened to a podcast that compared Frank Herbert's original Dune, the Lynch Dune adaptation and the Villeneuve directed Dune and one of their complaints about the latest Dune film and the 1984 Lynch one is that Paul and Chani both were/ seemed too old for the roles. Interesting to see such different takes from people -- they were basing it on the original source material (the novel), whereas Doug is basing his opinion on Lynch's adaptation, perhaps? I might re-read Dune. I started to a while back, as I haven't read it since I was about 15. I do think some of us should get together and make a podcast or make a few. Edited by Logan - October 26 2021 at 06:16 |
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Shadowyzard
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 24 2020 Location: Davutlar Status: Offline Points: 4506 |
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Ah, movies about teachers... Hello, my previous occupation.
Filantropica (Romania/France - 2002): With a plot with many twists and turns, even twisting the smile of the protagonist at times. That wry smile is priceless, haha. Excellent acting. To all the actors there: 8.5/10 The Emperor's Club (US - 2002): Again an impressive movie, but a bit uneven. Some of the scenes just water down its dramatic effect. It could've been a masterpiece; but alas, it is not. 7/10 Edited by Shadowyzard - October 27 2021 at 15:28 |
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BaldFriede
Prog Reviewer Joined: June 02 2005 Location: Germany Status: Offline Points: 10261 |
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We just watched "ZERO", a German TV-movie from 2021 starring Heike Makatsch (who some may know from her time as moderator at the TV-channel VIVA or the 2002 movie "Resident Evil"). Here a synopsis: Berlin in the near future: Camera drones illegally penetrate a secret meeting of A very interesting, thought-provoking and even frightening movie.
Edited by BaldFriede - October 28 2021 at 09:21 |
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BaldJean and I; I am the one in blue. |
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MortSahlFan
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 01 2018 Location: US Status: Offline Points: 2941 |
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Mort Sahl:The Loyal Opposition - 10/10 I'm devastated over his death, and have watched this 4 times. It only premiered in 1989 on PBS.. The last time I saw Mort in person I asked him about this. He said the director, Bob Weide hadn't cleared the sources, so it couldn't be distributed. I met a girl from Germany at the hostel in SF the next day, and.. it's a long story (PM me if you are interested) but after asking me if I wanted to go to The Whiskey (if she would have asked me to go to hell with her, I would have replied, "What time?") I asked if she wanted to go to The Museum of Radio & Television, which was the only way to view this (Paley Center), but it was my last full day, and we didn't go, but instead walked around North Beach. When we went to Vesuvio's, she went and got some tea, and I look out the window, and I see the "hungry i" where Mort got his start.. You don't have to be an American to enjoy this. Just a human. It's funny. It's an amazing time capsule. It's so well done. I think you would all love it. |
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https://www.youtube.com/c/LoyalOpposition
https://www.scribd.com/document/382737647/MortSahlFan-Song-List |
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BaldFriede
Prog Reviewer Joined: June 02 2005 Location: Germany Status: Offline Points: 10261 |
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We watched "Der Seelenkreis" ("The Soul Circle") yesterday, a 2021 TV-movie and the 13th episode in the crime series "Die Toten vom Bodensee" ("The Dead of Lake Constance"). The series started in 2014; the episodes are shown at irregular intervals about every six months. It features a male German and a female Austrian cop cooperating (Lake Constance is on the border of Germany, Austria and Switzerland). The cases deal with old legends, occult rituals, old family secrets and the likes. The female cop has the Asperger syndrome (like Jean and I), which often makes the partnership a bit complicated. In this episode a woman suffering from fibromyalgia and her partner kidnapped a woman who as three months pregnant half a year ago to perform a ritual for metempsychosis in the night of the full moon after the baby is born because according to a text from the Thirty Years' War the mother becomes a vessel for soul migration in the time between the birth of the baby and the next full moon.
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BaldJean and I; I am the one in blue. |
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ExittheLemming
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 19 2007 Location: Penal Colony Status: Offline Points: 11415 |
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Await Further Instructions (2018) Directed by Johnny Kervokian For at least 70 minutes this emanates a cramped, skewed and menacing paranoia you only usually meet in something like English playwright Harold Pinter. I think Grant Masters' resemblance to Michael Jayston circa the Homecoming from 1969 may have forged this connection in my mind. As a sci-fi parable on fake news, social media, Brexit, xenophobia, and blind devotion to strong leaders no matter how monstrous, the jury is still out but as a meditation on that petri-dish of neuroses called 'British family life' it succeeds brilliantly. A Christmas family reunion for the Milgrams* soon opens more wounds than it closes. The racist Grandpa who taunts his son as 'an effeminate clerk' who in turn bullies his spouse and offspring by way of sublimated revenge. The equally racist (and by implication) feckless daughter, pregnant with 'Jock' partner's child, who abuses her brother Nick's Indian girlfriend. All this makes for a very tense Xmas dinner where the only creature in attendance safe from further torment is probably the turkey. The late Johnny Kervokian, a Cypriot born filmmaker raised in the UK, would have encountered first hand the racist insecurity at the heart of the British psyche and he handles his cast and themes with deft assurance and objectivity throughout. Things do tend to fall apart thereafter alas, and the ending has certainly polarised many movie goers. For me, you could hack off the w.a.n.k.y techno/apocalyptic ending entirely and still have a compelling and unflinching family psychodrama. *They ain't called the Milgrams for nothing. The Milgram experiments measured the willingness of study participants from a diverse range of occupations with varying levels of education, to obey an authority figure who instructed them to perform acts conflicting with their personal conscience. Participants were led to believe they were assisting an unrelated experiment, in which they had to administer electric shocks to a 'learner'. These fake electric shocks gradually increased to levels that would have been fatal had they been real. In the movie, the family receive similar instructional messages from their TV which is being controlled by some unknown predatory entity (not Rupert Murdoch but slightly better looking all told)
Edited by ExittheLemming - February 04 2022 at 22:23 |
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Shadowyzard
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 24 2020 Location: Davutlar Status: Offline Points: 4506 |
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Welcome all, to the bazaar of the bizarre!
Teknolust (UK/Germany/US - 2002): 4 Tilda Swintons? Why not?.. It was really bizarre, and after watching half of it and giving a break, I saw the Metaverse thing of the Facebook. Uncanny coincidence! 8/10 Lavirint (Federal Republic of Yugoslavia - 2002): A fairly decent European thriller. The last quarter was really thrilling. 7/10 Anything for Jackson (Canada - 2020): Sorta ridiculous. Not impressed. If I were a satanist, I would be offended. 5/10 The Evil Within (US - 2017): Gollum would love this. It doesn't have a focal point so as to create a profound dramatic effect. Grotesque and gritty; psychotic and supernatural. Everything seems all over the place. Directing and camera work was impressive, so is acting. With a good screenplay, it could have been astonishingly nightmarish. 6/10 |
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Shadowyzard
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 24 2020 Location: Davutlar Status: Offline Points: 4506 |
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L'homme du train (2002 - France/UK/Germany/Japan): I had already decided that my hunt for the movies from the auspicious year 2002 would be over with this movie. And this turned out to be a tantalizing masterpiece. I appreciated the ending, but I would wish it weren't providential. So: 9/10
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Shadowyzard
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 24 2020 Location: Davutlar Status: Offline Points: 4506 |
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Pickman's Muse (2010 - US): One of the best Lovecraft adaptations I've ever seen. Thrilled to discover this overlooked precious gem of a movie!!! The amalgamation of the psychotic and the occult was spectacular. Easily 9/10
On a side note, I don't seek faithfulness in adaptations. So, some others can see this as a frustrating failure too. Haunter of the Dark is one of HPL's best stories IMO, and methinks this is a deserving adaptation. |
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Shadowyzard
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 24 2020 Location: Davutlar Status: Offline Points: 4506 |
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El incidente (2014 - Mexico): What have I just watched?.. An overblown mess, I guess. (I'll check its reviews out to see if I miss something.) Some good music and moderately interesting scenes kept me engaged enough to finish the film. I'll rate it with 5/10
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richardh
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 18 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 27995 |
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Finch 2021
well just released to coincide with COP26 I presume. We have a familiar post apocalypse scenario where the ozone layer has been burnt away and gamma radiation has destroyed most life. Tom Hanks plays a scientist called 'Finch' making his way in this desolate world with only a robot and a dog for company. A very slight film in terms of any action, it does bear some resemblance to one of his his previous films Cast Away and also the seventies sci-fi classic Silent Running. One of his robots is even given the same name as one of those in Silent Running! I quite enjoyed it without really loving it. Lacked a bit of emotional impact and quite 'cold' in some respects. Solid film fare but largely forgettable. 7/10
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Shadowyzard
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 24 2020 Location: Davutlar Status: Offline Points: 4506 |
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A Classic Horror Story (2021 - Italy): Not a complete mess, but a mixed bag. The Italians disappointed me, which happens rarely in horror. Pales in comparison to The Ritual (2017), which was a similar movie (but this Italian movie differently has a flimsy ending). All these aside, the protagoness (palinpropism) did a stellar job here. 6/10
Edited by Shadowyzard - November 09 2021 at 15:27 |
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