Sconch
Footballguy
Haven't they put out like 30 of them just in the last 5-7 years?Seriously? I find that inconceivable.
I'm not sure I can name 30 superhero movies total.
Haven't they put out like 30 of them just in the last 5-7 years?Seriously? I find that inconceivable.
I'm not sure I can name 30 superhero movies total.
It only feels that way.Haven't they put out like 30 of them just in the last 5-7 years?
"I really loved On the Waterfront, but it's no Vanilla Sky."
"The most blatant case of fraudulent advertising since my suit against the film The Never Ending Story"Not really a fan of The Neverending Story. Seems to go on & on forever.
This is one of those I'll get stuck on whenever it pops up on t.v., even though I own the disc.#32 - Glory
:setsdvr:#26 - The Shawshank Redemption
"...and for the briefest of moments every last man at Shawshank felt free."
Red: We sat and drank with the sun on our shoulders and felt like free men. Hell, we could have been tarring the roof of one of our own houses. We were the lords of all creation. As for Andy - he spent that break hunkered in the shade, a strange little smile on his face, watching us drink his beer.
Trivia:
Andy and Red's opening chat in the prison yyar took nine hours to shoot. Morgan Freeman pitched that baseball for the entire nine hours without a word of complaint. He showed up for work the next day with his arm in a sling.
After the film gained popularity, Ted Turner sold the television rights to TNT, his own network, for much lower than normal for such a big film. Because it is so inexpensive to show, the film is broadcast on TNT extremely often.
In Stephen King's original story, Red was written as a white Irishman. In the movie, they left the line, "Maybe it's 'cause I'm Irish," in as a joke, even after they had cast Morgan Freeman as Red.
Shocked it is this low.#26 - The Shawshank Redemption
"...and for the briefest of moments every last man at Shawshank felt free."
Red: We sat and drank with the sun on our shoulders and felt like free men. Hell, we could have been tarring the roof of one of our own houses. We were the lords of all creation. As for Andy - he spent that break hunkered in the shade, a strange little smile on his face, watching us drink his beer.
Trivia:
Andy and Red's opening chat in the prison yyar took nine hours to shoot. Morgan Freeman pitched that baseball for the entire nine hours without a word of complaint. He showed up for work the next day with his arm in a sling.
After the film gained popularity, Ted Turner sold the television rights to TNT, his own network, for much lower than normal for such a big film. Because it is so inexpensive to show, the film is broadcast on TNT extremely often.
In Stephen King's original story, Red was written as a white Irishman. In the movie, they left the line, "Maybe it's 'cause I'm Irish," in as a joke, even after they had cast Morgan Freeman as Red.
Well, this just seems like a waste of time and resources.Trivia:
The final shot of the collapsing credit bank buildings was designed by Richard 'Dr.' Baily, who worked on the shot for over 14 months straight. According to director David Fincher, there are almost 4 million separately animated digital elements in the shot.
Along with Karate Kid, just a movie that reminds me of being a kid.#25 - The Terminator
I dunno. It's a pretty awesome shot.Well, this just seems like a waste of time and resources.
Deserved to be higher my friend. But regardless, continue the excellent work.#25 - The Terminator
Done on a shoestring budget and using guerrilla filmmaking techniques, this movie was a surprise hit even to Cameron. He viewed it as more of a horror/slasher type movie than an action film. Fortune favors the foolish, I guess.
Having a female hero broke new ground. The stop motion effects were old-school. And it all comes together in spite of Brad Fiedel's truly awful musical score (except for the main theme, of course). It also captured a dual zeitgeist score with fear of technology and the Cold War nuclear annihilation .
Trivia:
Arnold Schwarzenegger's famous debut line 'I'll be back' was originally scripted as 'I'll come back'.
Filming of the final shot, with Sarah Connor driving off into the distance, was interrupted by a policeman asking if the crew had a permit (which they didn't). Special effects supervisor Gene Warren Jr. lied that the production was his son's student film. Also, Sarah Connor wasn't being played by Linda Hamilton but by a double.
The tanker truck that explodes at the end is a model, not a real truck. It was filmed twice because the wire pulling the truck tugged too hard initially, pulling the front axle off and ruining the shot.
Much higherTerminator 2 should be around here as well, right?
Love it. I would have it higher as I am a big fan#25 - The Terminator
Done on a shoestring budget and using guerrilla filmmaking techniques, this movie was a surprise hit even to Cameron. He viewed it as more of a horror/slasher type movie than an action film. Fortune favors the foolish, I guess.
Having a female hero broke new ground. The stop motion effects were old-school. And it all comes together in spite of Brad Fiedel's truly awful musical score (except for the main theme, of course). It also captured a dual zeitgeist score with fear of technology and the Cold War nuclear annihilation .
Trivia:
Arnold Schwarzenegger's famous debut line 'I'll be back' was originally scripted as 'I'll come back'.
Filming of the final shot, with Sarah Connor driving off into the distance, was interrupted by a policeman asking if the crew had a permit (which they didn't). Special effects supervisor Gene Warren Jr. lied that the production was his son's student film. Also, Sarah Connor wasn't being played by Linda Hamilton but by a double.
The tanker truck that explodes at the end is a model, not a real truck. It was filmed twice because the wire pulling the truck tugged too hard initially, pulling the front axle off and ruining the shot.
In this film, Schwarzenegger has only 14 lines.
Arnold Schwarzenegger's iconic catchphrase almost became "I will be back" because he thought it sounded more machine-like without a contraction; he also felt "I'll" sounded too feminine. It was the one major disagreement between Schwarzenegger and James Cameron, and all Cameron had to say to that was "I don't tell you how to act, so don't tell me how to write".
The scene where the Terminator breaks into a station wagon was the very last thing shot and it was added a few weeks before the film's release. The scene was filmed in 2 hours by James Cameron and Arnold Schwarzenegger alone. Due to insufficient funds, Cameron had to pay for the scene himself, but could not afford a police permit. As such, another set of Arnold's clothes was placed behind the wagon trunk and Cameron told him to change the moment the scene was deemed finished.
Stay is probably in my top 10 right now at least. Potentially one or two more. But the current avatar is more a life's work tribute to a dead genius. I may go back to Hrundi V. Bakshi at some point (The Party is probably a top 10 movie for me, I haven't thought that list through much though). You've been Andy Dufresne your entire run here.Is your favorite song a Bowie song?
I like the character. Doesn't make the movie he's in better than the ones in my top ten.Stay is probably in my top 10 right now at least. Potentially one or two more. But the current avatar is more a life's work tribute to a dead genius. I may go back to Hrundi V. Bakshi at some point (The Party is probably a top 10 movie for me, I haven't thought that list through much though). You've been Andy Dufresne your entire run here.
Nothing wrong with it, it was just a surprise, I figured it would end up top 10 at least given your username/avatar. Incidentally, I think it's a top 10 film myself, but that's not the nature of my surprise at the ranking.I like the character. Doesn't make the movie he's in better than the ones in my top ten.
What's wrong about being in the top 25? That's way up there.
#25 - The Terminator
Done on a shoestring budget and using guerrilla filmmaking techniques, this movie was a surprise hit even to Cameron. He viewed it as more of a horror/slasher type movie than an action film. Fortune favors the foolish, I guess.
Having a female hero broke new ground. The stop motion effects were old-school. And it all comes together in spite of Brad Fiedel's truly awful musical score (except for the main theme, of course). It also captured a dual zeitgeist score with fear of technology and the Cold War nuclear annihilation .
Trivia:
Arnold Schwarzenegger's famous debut line 'I'll be back' was originally scripted as 'I'll come back'.
Filming of the final shot, with Sarah Connor driving off into the distance, was interrupted by a policeman asking if the crew had a permit (which they didn't). Special effects supervisor Gene Warren Jr. lied that the production was his son's student film. Also, Sarah Connor wasn't being played by Linda Hamilton but by a double.
The tanker truck that explodes at the end is a model, not a real truck. It was filmed twice because the wire pulling the truck tugged too hard initially, pulling the front axle off and ruining the shot.
Ever seen the movie Pet Semetary?
An old friend of mine worked on that film. It was his first job in Hollywood, he was an assistant propmaster. He was new to town, had a young family, and was hungry for work and eager to make a good first impression. The director assigned him what he was told was a very important job: they had a young child in the movie, and they couldn't always use him on set, so they needed a perfect 'double' doll of the kid for some shots.
My friend took this job very seriously. He worked extremely hard on making it absolutely perfect. Measured and weighed the kid, took a ton of photos, got copies of his clothes. Lovingly hand-carved a face for the doll that was practically indistinguishable from the kid. He spent weeks on it. He cut his own child's hair and used it on the doll to make it look perfect. He put his heart and soul into this double.
Finally, he took it to set and showed the director. The director took one look at it and said, "It's perfect!" My buddy got the validation that all his hard work was worth it. Then the director continued... "Get it in the street so we can run it over with the truck!"
It's in the movie for about one second, visible through the truck window as it kills the kid.
#23 - Apollo 13
<snip>
Ron Howard stated that, after the first test preview of the film, one of the comment cards indicated "total disdain"; the audience member had written that it was a "typical Hollywood" ending and that the crew would never have survived.
Top 5 for me. Love this movie. I read the King story long before the movie came out (Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption).#26 - The Shawshank Redemption
"...and for the briefest of moments every last man at Shawshank felt free."
Red: We sat and drank with the sun on our shoulders and felt like free men. Hell, we could have been tarring the roof of one of our own houses. We were the lords of all creation. As for Andy - he spent that break hunkered in the shade, a strange little smile on his face, watching us drink his beer.
Trivia:
Andy and Red's opening chat in the prison yyar took nine hours to shoot. Morgan Freeman pitched that baseball for the entire nine hours without a word of complaint. He showed up for work the next day with his arm in a sling.
After the film gained popularity, Ted Turner sold the television rights to TNT, his own network, for much lower than normal for such a big film. Because it is so inexpensive to show, the film is broadcast on TNT extremely often.
In Stephen King's original story, Red was written as a white Irishman. In the movie, they left the line, "Maybe it's 'cause I'm Irish," in as a joke, even after they had cast Morgan Freeman as Red.
Houston, we have a problem.This page contains 2 DvD's that I have lent out to someone and have never gotten them back. Gladiator is in Dallas, and I don't know where Fight Club is. I've never watched Apollo 13.
They asked me to stir the damned tanks, and I stirred the tanks!Houston, we have a problem.
As a kid I couldn't read enough about the Mercury and Apollo programs. The accomplishments of NASA in the time frame dictated by Kennedy is simply phenomenal.#23 - Apollo 13
The space program is the coolest thing we've ever done.
they pulled power from the LEM before jettison!As a kid I couldn't read enough about the Mercury and Apollo programs. The accomplishments of NASA in the time frame dictated by Kennedy is simply phenomenal.
One of my favorite moments that most, who aren't NASA junkies, aren't aware of is John Aaron's SCE to AUX call that saved the Apollo 12 mission. It's amazing that he was able to recall that obscure switch from a previous simulation and apply it to what happened to the Apollo 12 launch scenario.
SCE to AUX
Related to Apollo 13 Aaron was the guy Kranz put in charge of the Lunar Module's power supply. Aaron was in charge of rationing the spacecraft's power during the return flight and devised an innovative power up sequence that allowed the Command Module to reenter safely while operating on limited battery power.
The guy proved he mettle on two consecutive missions.
In my top 10. While I know we had the Internet for a few years before The Matrix came out, I feel like this was one of the last big movies that wasn't affected by the Internet, either with spoilers or previews or 24/7 production diaries.#29 - The Matrix
Before our smartphones and social media updating really did enslave us to our technology the Wachowski siblings caught lightning in a bottle with this little bit of zeitgeist. Too bad the sequels sucked the life out of the idea - although I think I could edit one good movie out of Reloaded/Revolutions.
Still bugs me today every time I catch it.#21 - Jurassic Park
And why didn't Tim pick up the shotgun and shoot the raptor at the door instead of hopping up and down like an idiot as his sister hacks the 'UNIX' system?) WE'RE TALKING DINOSAURS HERE!
Fantastic movie experience. I was all in on Jurassic Park when it came out. It was my schtick with friends that if we were at a convenience store, or something like they, I would buy some random JP junk (like a jaw breaker the size of an organge, dinosaur egg I guess). I still remember hearing the T-Rex footsteps, seeing the puddle ripple, and feeling the vibrations in the theater and thinking this was groundbreaking stuff. Classic popcorn flick of the first degree.#21 - Jurassic Park
Who cares about the plot holes and inconsistencies (why is there now a huge drop off where the T-Rex was just standing not five minutes ago? And why didn't Tim pick up the shotgun and shoot the raptor at the door instead of hopping up and down like an idiot as his sister hacks the 'UNIX' system?) WE'RE TALKING DINOSAURS HERE!
Everyone knew that moviemaking had changed forever when they got their first look at the Brachiosaurus on its hind legs eating from a tree. It...was...AMAZING!
And the two main themes are some of John Williams' best work.
Trivia:
Spielberg made $250 million from this movie's theatrical run.
Ariana Richards' audition consisted of standing in front of a camera and screaming wildly. Director Steven Spielberg "wanted to see how she could show fear." Richards remembers, "I heard later on that Steven had watched a few girls on tape that day, and I was the only one who ended up waking his sleeping wife off the couch, and she came running through the hallway to see if the kids were all right."
Less time separates humans from T-Rex than T-Rex from Stegosaurus.