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Recently viewed movie thread - Rental Edition (5 Viewers)

Akira is a top 5 anime film. Worth watching.
among anime genre, "akira" is at or near the head of the class. that said, anime is a pretty tired genre.
Yes to all of that.
Yes but Akira holds up and was the shniz long before anime became tired. And I wouldn't necessarily say anime has become stale but the ultra-violent, futuristic, sci-fi mecha stuff hasn't had much to offer for a long time. However there is still some very good stuff being made and as long as Studio Ghibil is producing features I like the prospects for anime.
I remember loving Robotech and Star Blazers as a teen. But at 45, I think I am a bit old for the genre.
I tried to revisit the American import of Robotech a few years ago. While I love giant robots fighting it was pretty much a hot mess story wise. I think we lost a lot in the translation.But there is still good anime out there. Spirited Away is probably one of the 10 best films of the past decade IMO.
I saw My Neighbor Totoro. That was good.
 
Yes but Akira holds up and was the shniz long before anime became tired. And I wouldn't necessarily say anime has become stale but the ultra-violent, futuristic, sci-fi mecha stuff hasn't had much to offer for a long time. However there is still some very good stuff being made and as long as Studio Ghibil is producing features I like the prospects for anime.
i would say that "akira" is the first anime film that tried to inject some maturity into the genre. it maybe upped the intended audience from 14 to 18. the studio ghibli stuff - miziyaki especially - might be lone exception to a genre largely dedicated to the adolescent teen boy.
 
Akira is a great movie. love the visuals and story

another good anime is metropolis- very good story

theres another one on netflix right now but i cant remember what its called.
Ghost in the Shell?
That one is great, too. :thumbup:
It's better to look at than watch, IMO. And there are actually two versions.The 2nd one is remastered with some CGI.
You need a chalkboard to keep track of everything going on, for sure, but it is beautiful.
 
Akira is a top 5 anime film. Worth watching.
among anime genre, "akira" is at or near the head of the class. that said, anime is a pretty tired genre.
Yes to all of that.
Yes but Akira holds up and was the shniz long before anime became tired. And I wouldn't necessarily say anime has become stale but the ultra-violent, futuristic, sci-fi mecha stuff hasn't had much to offer for a long time. However there is still some very good stuff being made and as long as Studio Ghibil is producing features I like the prospects for anime.
I remember loving Robotech and Star Blazers as a teen. But at 45, I think I am a bit old for the genre.
I tried to revisit the American import of Robotech a few years ago. While I love giant robots fighting it was pretty much a hot mess story wise. I think we lost a lot in the translation.But there is still good anime out there. Spirited Away is probably one of the 10 best films of the past decade IMO.
I saw My Neighbor Totoro. That was good.
Totoro is terrific. I highly recommend exploring Miyazaki's work. A lot of it on the IMDB top 250. They typically pull together excellent voice actors for the American dubs and put a lot of effort into good translations.

Spirited Away #45 - Lauren Holley, Michael Chicklis, John Ratzenberger (the king of animation voices), David Ogden Stires (okay this one doesn't have an A-list cast but it's an A-list movie)

Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind #239 - Shia LaBoeuf, Uma Thurman, Edward James Olmos, Patrick Stewart, Allison Lohman

Princess Mononoke #98 - Billy Cruddup, Billy Bob Thornton, Gillian Anderson, Claire Danes, Keith David, Minni Driver

Howl's Moving Castle #208 - Christian Bale, Lauren Bacall, Blythe Danner, Emily Mortimer, Billy Crystal

It's tremendous stuff. Miyazaki is the Japanese Walt Disney.

 
Another anime film that is very much worth checking out, although it's not Miyazaki, is Grave of the Fireflies which deals with the survival of a brother and sister in the aftermath of the American fire bombing of Tokyo during WWII. Very powerful stuff.

 
Akira is a great movie. love the visuals and story

another good anime is metropolis- very good story

theres another one on netflix right now but i cant remember what its called.
Ghost in the Shell?
That one is great, too. :thumbup:
It's better to look at than watch, IMO. And there are actually two versions.The 2nd one is remastered with some CGI.
Is this a sequel or the original with updated animation?
 
Ponyo is a childish story but the animation is gorgeous.
Ponyo is beautiful to watch but it didn't do much for me.More great voice work though: Kate Blanchett, Liam Neeson, Lilly Tomlin, Matt Damon, Betty White & Tina Fey.People line up to associate themselves with Miyazaki's work.
 
Ponyo is a childish story but the animation is gorgeous.
Ponyo is beautiful to watch but it didn't do much for me.More great voice work though: Kate Blanchett, Liam Neeson, Lilly Tomlin, Matt Damon, Betty White & Tina Fey.People line up to associate themselves with Miyazaki's work.
I love all of Miyazaki's movies, but I passed out on Ponyo. Probably will revisit when our newborn gets a little older.
 
Ponyo is a childish story but the animation is gorgeous.
Ponyo is beautiful to watch but it didn't do much for me.More great voice work though: Kate Blanchett, Liam Neeson, Lilly Tomlin, Matt Damon, Betty White & Tina Fey.

People line up to associate themselves with Miyazaki's work.
I love all of Miyazaki's movies, but I passed out on Ponyo. Probably will revisit when our newborn gets a little older.
Good call. Ponyo, like Totoro and Kiki's Delivery Service (Kirsten Dunst, Debbie Reynolds, Phil Hartman, Edie McClurg, Janeane Garofalo) are geared to families with younger children.
 
Akira is a top 5 anime film. Worth watching.
among anime genre, "akira" is at or near the head of the class. that said, anime is a pretty tired genre.
Yes to all of that.
Yes but Akira holds up and was the shniz long before anime became tired. And I wouldn't necessarily say anime has become stale but the ultra-violent, futuristic, sci-fi mecha stuff hasn't had much to offer for a long time. However there is still some very good stuff being made and as long as Studio Ghibil is producing features I like the prospects for anime.
I remember loving Robotech and Star Blazers as a teen. But at 45, I think I am a bit old for the genre.
I tried to revisit the American import of Robotech a few years ago. While I love giant robots fighting it was pretty much a hot mess story wise. I think we lost a lot in the translation.But there is still good anime out there. Spirited Away is probably one of the 10 best films of the past decade IMO.
I saw My Neighbor Totoro. That was good.
Totoro is terrific. I highly recommend exploring Miyazaki's work. A lot of it on the IMDB top 250. They typically pull together excellent voice actors for the American dubs and put a lot of effort into good translations.

Spirited Away #45 - Lauren Holley, Michael Chicklis, John Ratzenberger (the king of animation voices), David Ogden Stires (okay this one doesn't have an A-list cast but it's an A-list movie)

Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind #239 - Shia LaBoeuf, Uma Thurman, Edward James Olmos, Patrick Stewart, Allison Lohman

Princess Mononoke #98 - Billy Cruddup, Billy Bob Thornton, Gillian Anderson, Claire Danes, Keith David, Minni Driver

Howl's Moving Castle #208 - Christian Bale, Lauren Bacall, Blythe Danner, Emily Mortimer, Billy Crystal

It's tremendous stuff. Miyazaki is the Japanese Walt Disney.
:thumbup: Those movies have been on my radar for a long time.

 
Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides - Or as I like to call it: Spaceballs II The Search for More Money

I don't know which is worse: 1) This horrible claptrap of a film 2) The fact that it made around $800 million net or 3) The fact that I sat through the whole thing. I get the whole suspending disbelief thing, I am more than happy to do that when the need arises but this film was pretty much insulting from start to finish. No suspense, no tension, no drama just one inexplicable moment of derring-do followed by another without a second thought towards writing an even remotely decent story around it. How does a film like this gross over a billion dollars? Are we really nothing more than a bunch of mindless mouth breathing primates satisfied with little more than a mindless visual feast? (rhetorical question) I can't imagine paying money to see something like this.
My cousin's movie is MUCH better in the theater in 3D and, even then, it sucks. The 3D is a great deal of the reason. It feels like they skipped the writing and went straight to the storyboarding. Nothing connects here except what's needed to make the scenes look cool - with Rob's musical-theater sense of action scenes as "numbers" complicating matters. I cant imagine how awful it must be on plain DVD. Hate it to say, but i think Rob's stilted picture of what happens between men & women - we knew he was gay when he was 4yo - really hurts his work, giving the "romance" a cartoonish unicornity that just dont play. Same thing hurt his previous picture, "Nine", exhibiting a complete misunderstanding of the inner struggle of a roué, kind of important when he's the central character.

I'm hoping his next, "Thin Man" - with Johnny Depp and a yet unchosen (i voted Scarlett Johansson, he replied "too young") Nora - is cartoonish enough on its own merits not to be affected this way.
I am sure it was a visual feast in 3D. It was also a crappy movie. And I am pretty sure Jack Sparrow is gay, or at least he is in Rob's mind.
We not only saw it in 3D, but in those D-something seats that move around and rumble and stuff. The gadgetry and the 3d made for an interesting experience at the theater, but I cannot fathom watching it on tv. THe mermaid stuff was really cool, but ended up being more wasted opportunity than realized concept.
 
Akira is a top 5 anime film. Worth watching.
among anime genre, "akira" is at or near the head of the class. that said, anime is a pretty tired genre.
Yes to all of that.
Yes but Akira holds up and was the shniz long before anime became tired. And I wouldn't necessarily say anime has become stale but the ultra-violent, futuristic, sci-fi mecha stuff hasn't had much to offer for a long time. However there is still some very good stuff being made and as long as Studio Ghibil is producing features I like the prospects for anime.
I remember loving Robotech and Star Blazers as a teen. But at 45, I think I am a bit old for the genre.
I tried to revisit the American import of Robotech a few years ago. While I love giant robots fighting it was pretty much a hot mess story wise. I think we lost a lot in the translation.But there is still good anime out there. Spirited Away is probably one of the 10 best films of the past decade IMO.
I saw My Neighbor Totoro. That was good.
Totoro is terrific. I highly recommend exploring Miyazaki's work. A lot of it on the IMDB top 250. They typically pull together excellent voice actors for the American dubs and put a lot of effort into good translations.

Spirited Away #45 - Lauren Holley, Michael Chicklis, John Ratzenberger (the king of animation voices), David Ogden Stires (okay this one doesn't have an A-list cast but it's an A-list movie)

Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind #239 - Shia LaBoeuf, Uma Thurman, Edward James Olmos, Patrick Stewart, Allison Lohman

Princess Mononoke #98 - Billy Cruddup, Billy Bob Thornton, Gillian Anderson, Claire Danes, Keith David, Minni Driver

Howl's Moving Castle #208 - Christian Bale, Lauren Bacall, Blythe Danner, Emily Mortimer, Billy Crystal

It's tremendous stuff. Miyazaki is the Japanese Walt Disney.
I reviewed IMDB Top 250 lists before and I am certain that there is a disproportionate number of teenaged boys voting
 
Akira is a top 5 anime film. Worth watching.
among anime genre, "akira" is at or near the head of the class. that said, anime is a pretty tired genre.
Yes to all of that.
Yes but Akira holds up and was the shniz long before anime became tired. And I wouldn't necessarily say anime has become stale but the ultra-violent, futuristic, sci-fi mecha stuff hasn't had much to offer for a long time. However there is still some very good stuff being made and as long as Studio Ghibil is producing features I like the prospects for anime.
I remember loving Robotech and Star Blazers as a teen. But at 45, I think I am a bit old for the genre.
I tried to revisit the American import of Robotech a few years ago. While I love giant robots fighting it was pretty much a hot mess story wise. I think we lost a lot in the translation.But there is still good anime out there. Spirited Away is probably one of the 10 best films of the past decade IMO.
I saw My Neighbor Totoro. That was good.
Totoro is terrific. I highly recommend exploring Miyazaki's work. A lot of it on the IMDB top 250. They typically pull together excellent voice actors for the American dubs and put a lot of effort into good translations.

Spirited Away #45 - Lauren Holley, Michael Chicklis, John Ratzenberger (the king of animation voices), David Ogden Stires (okay this one doesn't have an A-list cast but it's an A-list movie)

Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind #239 - Shia LaBoeuf, Uma Thurman, Edward James Olmos, Patrick Stewart, Allison Lohman

Princess Mononoke #98 - Billy Cruddup, Billy Bob Thornton, Gillian Anderson, Claire Danes, Keith David, Minni Driver

Howl's Moving Castle #208 - Christian Bale, Lauren Bacall, Blythe Danner, Emily Mortimer, Billy Crystal

It's tremendous stuff. Miyazaki is the Japanese Walt Disney.
I reviewed IMDB Top 250 lists before and I am certain that there is a disproportionate number of teenaged boys voting
With the exception of Princess Mononoke I can't imagine teenage boys voting for any of these films. And it is unlikely IMO that many teenage boys see the title "Princess Mononoke" and choose to explore whether or not they might enjoy it.
 
Akira is a top 5 anime film. Worth watching.
among anime genre, "akira" is at or near the head of the class. that said, anime is a pretty tired genre.
Yes to all of that.
Yes but Akira holds up and was the shniz long before anime became tired. And I wouldn't necessarily say anime has become stale but the ultra-violent, futuristic, sci-fi mecha stuff hasn't had much to offer for a long time. However there is still some very good stuff being made and as long as Studio Ghibil is producing features I like the prospects for anime.
I remember loving Robotech and Star Blazers as a teen. But at 45, I think I am a bit old for the genre.
I tried to revisit the American import of Robotech a few years ago. While I love giant robots fighting it was pretty much a hot mess story wise. I think we lost a lot in the translation.But there is still good anime out there. Spirited Away is probably one of the 10 best films of the past decade IMO.
I saw My Neighbor Totoro. That was good.
Totoro is terrific. I highly recommend exploring Miyazaki's work. A lot of it on the IMDB top 250. They typically pull together excellent voice actors for the American dubs and put a lot of effort into good translations.

Spirited Away #45 - Lauren Holley, Michael Chicklis, John Ratzenberger (the king of animation voices), David Ogden Stires (okay this one doesn't have an A-list cast but it's an A-list movie)

Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind #239 - Shia LaBoeuf, Uma Thurman, Edward James Olmos, Patrick Stewart, Allison Lohman

Princess Mononoke #98 - Billy Cruddup, Billy Bob Thornton, Gillian Anderson, Claire Danes, Keith David, Minni Driver

Howl's Moving Castle #208 - Christian Bale, Lauren Bacall, Blythe Danner, Emily Mortimer, Billy Crystal

It's tremendous stuff. Miyazaki is the Japanese Walt Disney.
I reviewed IMDB Top 250 lists before and I am certain that there is a disproportionate number of teenaged boys voting
With the exception of Princess Mononoke I can't imagine teenage boys voting for any of these films. And it is unlikely IMO that many teenage boys see the title "Princess Mononoke" and choose to explore whether or not they might enjoy it.
I was referring to the overall list, not your excepts (of which I have seen none).
 
I was referring to the overall list, not your excepts (of which I have seen none).
Perhaps. It doesn't seem too egregious. I can see having The Dark Knight, Inception & The Matrix in the top 20 as possibly being driven by younger votes. And I have zero explanation for how The Avengers checks in at #26 but otherwise I am just not seeing that.I also don't think two Star Wars and two LotR films in the top 20 indicates younger voters. Maybe that's just me.
 
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'TexanFan02 said:
Chronicle: When the tagline is '3 teens get superpowers' my expectations plummet. Shockingly, it was actually pretty decent. I liked the first-hand video and that it stayed away from using shaky-cam like Blair Witch and Cloverfield. It didn't follow the typical love each other, hate each other, love each other plot. Had some good action and the finale scene was well done. Run-time is a tight 1:20. Could have used some more explanation behind their powers. 3.5/5
At the risk of raising Chaka's ire, I'll say that I liked that movie the first time I saw it, when it was called Akira.
:confused: Never seen Chronicle but I am looking forward to it. I am always hopeful for super power films, even if they often disappoint. Loved Akira too.
It was decent. I kept waiting for it to slip into sucks, but it never really did. Worth watching.
I plan to watch it when it comes to DVD in a couple weeks. If for no other reason than it's got Wallace in it.Poor Wallace.
He was one of the few actors who was actually good in this, but I really enjoyed it despite subpar acting overall for a variety of reasons.youngin Wallace has turned into a pretty good actor.

 
I was referring to the overall list, not your excepts (of which I have seen none).
Perhaps. It doesn't seem too egregious. I can see having The Dark Knight, Inception & The Matrix in the top 20 as possibly being driven by younger votes. And I have zero explanation for how The Avengers checks in at #26 but otherwise I am just not seeing that.I also don't think two Star Wars and two LotR films in the top 20 indicates younger voters. Maybe that's just me.
I have not looked at it in at least a year, so maybe its different now. I'll review later. I just remember last time I looked, there were a number of wtf entries. And I think their movie rating numbers are consistently the least valuable.
 
A Serious Man - this is not the typical movie i would like, but i really really liked this movie. I loved what i felt was the underlying theme throughout the movie. To me it was about having faith. The movie was based around the jewish faith, but i look at it as just 'faith' in general. The guy is 'A Simple Man' yet quite dramatic things happen to him. I think everyone at times has the feelings of 'I didn't do anything... so why is this happeneing to me'. Combined with the idea that you never really find out.

There were also elements that show people are not always who you think they are. There were just a lot of little things that stuck out to me about this movie that I liked. I guess one of the big things I liked is that... it kind of had a buddhist thing going on. Buddhists teach that life is suffering, and once you are willing to accept that, even really bad things are much easier to get through because it's expected. Overall, i think it was the lack of drama that i liked the most. The guy struggled and struggled, but never really lost his head... and i really liked that.

I feel like I could go on, and that ive probably read way to much into it then was there, but I don't want to give too much away. I'm not a big 'cinematography' guy, but I really liked the look of a lot of the scenes. There is something about the picture perfect scenes of suburbs in that era that just get me. Especially the fresh cut grass, big lawns, and the cars. And although the ending was one of those open ended / open to interpretation type endings, i felt like that just re-enforced what the movie was about. That type of ending, one i normally hate, seemed to actually fit and have a purpose with this movie.

 
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Conan - stayed true to what Conan always has been, Barbarian swashbuckling with scantily clad women and impressive action. I expected a loose story, lots of action and eye candy, some roll your eye moments, and to be entertained. :thumbup:

This is a popcorn flick, not high art. Enjoy it for what it is, fun.

 
Killing Zoe....Been awhile since Ive seen this under the radar heist movie, but loved it as much as I remember, if not more. Dont recall thinking this specifically before, but I loved how this film is set up around Eric Stoltz's character, who somehow is almost a moral compass. Its really a 3 act downward spiral for him going from a euphoric night with call girl Zoe, to a whirlwind drug binge in the slums of Paris, to a hastily attempted bank robbery on Bastille Day that transpires over the last half of the film. Paralleling Stoltz's character story arc is his childhood friend and leader of the group, played by Jean-Hugues Anglade, whose conflicted character slowly descends into madness, willing to do whatever it takes to leave the bank rich. Its a great performance from him that really carries the film. Gritty, uncompromising, and disturbingly fun with a subtle ending that is more open to conversation and tragic than the viewer might realize at first....4.5/5
this is one of my favorite movies from my video store days. i haven't seen this in years but it sticks with me. anglade does steal the show because he's really the only actor in it with any oomph. it's hammy but necessary acting in this film. i wanted to credit roger avary here, as writer-director, for showing he had more in him following his work with QT on "Pulp Fiction". i expected him to have a career more like his contemporary john dahl ("red rock west", "last seduction") but he's gone a different way. still a good film with delpy (who i used to adore) and stotlz.
 
Conan - stayed true to what Conan always has been, Barbarian swashbuckling with scantily clad women and impressive action. I expected a loose story, lots of action and eye candy, some roll your eye moments, and to be entertained. :thumbup:

This is a popcorn flick, not high art. Enjoy it for what it is, fun.
Wow, I couldn't disagree more. Nice boobs. IMO everything else, every single aspect, was turrible.
 
Ides of March: Not sure if the analogy should be premature ejaculation or impotence. Regardless, a disappointment.
 
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The Barbarian Invasions - Excellent French Canadian film that won best foreign language film in 2004 (while I loved The Twilight Samurai I can't argue with TBI winning the Oscar). Story of a terminally ill father whose diverse group of family and friends rally to be with him in his final weeks. While it is without question a witty (very funny at times) and thoughtful portrayal of a deeply flawed man questioning the meaning of his life during his final days it is also a pretty strong indictment of the Canadian health care system including the notion of euthanasia.

Good film, worth watching.

 
The Barbarian Invasions - Excellent French Canadian film that won best foreign language film in 2004 (while I loved The Twilight Samurai I can't argue with TBI winning the Oscar). Story of a terminally ill father whose diverse group of family and friends rally to be with him in his final weeks. While it is without question a witty (very funny at times) and thoughtful portrayal of a deeply flawed man questioning the meaning of his life during his final days it is also a pretty strong indictment of the Canadian health care system including the notion of euthanasia.

Good film, worth watching.
keep yer politics outta this thread, pal.
 
The Barbarian Invasions - Excellent French Canadian film that won best foreign language film in 2004 (while I loved The Twilight Samurai I can't argue with TBI winning the Oscar). Story of a terminally ill father whose diverse group of family and friends rally to be with him in his final weeks. While it is without question a witty (very funny at times) and thoughtful portrayal of a deeply flawed man questioning the meaning of his life during his final days it is also a pretty strong indictment of the Canadian health care system including the notion of euthanasia.

Good film, worth watching.
keep yer politics outta this thread, pal.
:lmao: Not my politics, the movie deals with it directly and I am reviewing the movie.Good film, worth watching.

 
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The Barbarian Invasions - Excellent French Canadian film that won best foreign language film in 2004 (while I loved The Twilight Samurai I can't argue with TBI winning the Oscar). Story of a terminally ill father whose diverse group of family and friends rally to be with him in his final weeks. While it is without question a witty (very funny at times) and thoughtful portrayal of a deeply flawed man questioning the meaning of his life during his final days it is also a pretty strong indictment of the Canadian health care system including the notion of euthanasia.

Good film, worth watching.
Loved this movie. Although I can't remember why it's a strong indictment of the Canadian health care system.
 
The Barbarian Invasions - Excellent French Canadian film that won best foreign language film in 2004 (while I loved The Twilight Samurai I can't argue with TBI winning the Oscar). Story of a terminally ill father whose diverse group of family and friends rally to be with him in his final weeks. While it is without question a witty (very funny at times) and thoughtful portrayal of a deeply flawed man questioning the meaning of his life during his final days it is also a pretty strong indictment of the Canadian health care system including the notion of euthanasia.

Good film, worth watching.
Loved this movie. Although I can't remember why it's a strong indictment of the Canadian health care system.
there is no such thing as a "strong indictment" of *anything* in canada. they're nation built on laws. french laws mainly.
 
The Barbarian Invasions - Excellent French Canadian film that won best foreign language film in 2004 (while I loved The Twilight Samurai I can't argue with TBI winning the Oscar). Story of a terminally ill father whose diverse group of family and friends rally to be with him in his final weeks. While it is without question a witty (very funny at times) and thoughtful portrayal of a deeply flawed man questioning the meaning of his life during his final days it is also a pretty strong indictment of the Canadian health care system including the notion of euthanasia.

Good film, worth watching.
Loved this movie. Although I can't remember why it's a strong indictment of the Canadian health care system.
It opens with the deplorable conditions in the Canadian hospital where the father has been admitted (rampant overcrowding, beds with the sick and dying lining the halls, missing ceiling tiles, inadequate lighting etc). It then shows how the son has to bribe the union bosses to get anything done, including recovering his own laptop which was part of a theft ring run by the staff. The doctors repeatedly don't know the name of the patients they are examining. There is more but I am forgetting it right now.
They portray the entire system in a horrible light.

 
The Barbarian Invasions - Excellent French Canadian film that won best foreign language film in 2004 (while I loved The Twilight Samurai I can't argue with TBI winning the Oscar). Story of a terminally ill father whose diverse group of family and friends rally to be with him in his final weeks. While it is without question a witty (very funny at times) and thoughtful portrayal of a deeply flawed man questioning the meaning of his life during his final days it is also a pretty strong indictment of the Canadian health care system including the notion of euthanasia.

Good film, worth watching.
Loved this movie. Although I can't remember why it's a strong indictment of the Canadian health care system.
It opens with the deplorable conditions in the Canadian hospital where the father has been admitted (rampant overcrowding, beds with the sick and dying lining the halls, missing ceiling tiles, inadequate lighting etc). It then shows how the son has to bribe the union bosses to get anything done, including recovering his own laptop which was part of a theft ring run by the staff. The doctors repeatedly don't know the name of the patients they are examining. There is more but I am forgetting it right now.
They portray the entire system in a horrible light.

:lol: That doesn't sound embellished at all.

 
The Barbarian Invasions - Excellent French Canadian film that won best foreign language film in 2004 (while I loved The Twilight Samurai I can't argue with TBI winning the Oscar). Story of a terminally ill father whose diverse group of family and friends rally to be with him in his final weeks. While it is without question a witty (very funny at times) and thoughtful portrayal of a deeply flawed man questioning the meaning of his life during his final days it is also a pretty strong indictment of the Canadian health care system including the notion of euthanasia.

Good film, worth watching.
Loved this movie. Although I can't remember why it's a strong indictment of the Canadian health care system.
It opens with the deplorable conditions in the Canadian hospital where the father has been admitted (rampant overcrowding, beds with the sick and dying lining the halls, missing ceiling tiles, inadequate lighting etc). It then shows how the son has to bribe the union bosses to get anything done, including recovering his own laptop which was part of a theft ring run by the staff. The doctors repeatedly don't know the name of the patients they are examining. There is more but I am forgetting it right now.
They portray the entire system in a horrible light.
:lol: That doesn't sound embellished at all.

I don't know to what extent it is an accurate portrayal of the Canadian health care system. I am only pointing out what happens in the film (which is exactly as I described) not making a statement on the reality of the system.
 
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The Barbarian Invasions - Excellent French Canadian film that won best foreign language film in 2004 (while I loved The Twilight Samurai I can't argue with TBI winning the Oscar). Story of a terminally ill father whose diverse group of family and friends rally to be with him in his final weeks. While it is without question a witty (very funny at times) and thoughtful portrayal of a deeply flawed man questioning the meaning of his life during his final days it is also a pretty strong indictment of the Canadian health care system including the notion of euthanasia.

Good film, worth watching.
Loved this movie. Although I can't remember why it's a strong indictment of the Canadian health care system.
It opens with the deplorable conditions in the Canadian hospital where the father has been admitted (rampant overcrowding, beds with the sick and dying lining the halls, missing ceiling tiles, inadequate lighting etc). It then shows how the son has to bribe the union bosses to get anything done, including recovering his own laptop which was part of a theft ring run by the staff. The doctors repeatedly don't know the name of the patients they are examining. There is more but I am forgetting it right now.
They portray the entire system in a horrible light.
:lol: That doesn't sound embellished at all.
I don't know to what extent it is an accurate portrayal of the Canadian health care system. I am only pointing out what happens in the film (which is exactly as I described) not making a statement on the reality of the system.From my experience, it is a horrendous portrayal.
 
The Barbarian Invasions - Excellent French Canadian film that won best foreign language film in 2004 (while I loved The Twilight Samurai I can't argue with TBI winning the Oscar). Story of a terminally ill father whose diverse group of family and friends rally to be with him in his final weeks. While it is without question a witty (very funny at times) and thoughtful portrayal of a deeply flawed man questioning the meaning of his life during his final days it is also a pretty strong indictment of the Canadian health care system including the notion of euthanasia.

Good film, worth watching.
Loved this movie. Although I can't remember why it's a strong indictment of the Canadian health care system.
It opens with the deplorable conditions in the Canadian hospital where the father has been admitted (rampant overcrowding, beds with the sick and dying lining the halls, missing ceiling tiles, inadequate lighting etc). It then shows how the son has to bribe the union bosses to get anything done, including recovering his own laptop which was part of a theft ring run by the staff. The doctors repeatedly don't know the name of the patients they are examining. There is more but I am forgetting it right now.
They portray the entire system in a horrible light.
:lol: That doesn't sound embellished at all.
I don't know to what extent it is an accurate portrayal of the Canadian health care system. I am only pointing out what happens in the film (which is exactly as I described) not making a statement on the reality of the system.
From my experience, it is a horrendous portrayal.Okay.Good movie. Worth watching.

 
The Barbarian Invasions - Excellent French Canadian film that won best foreign language film in 2004 (while I loved The Twilight Samurai I can't argue with TBI winning the Oscar). Story of a terminally ill father whose diverse group of family and friends rally to be with him in his final weeks. While it is without question a witty (very funny at times) and thoughtful portrayal of a deeply flawed man questioning the meaning of his life during his final days it is also a pretty strong indictment of the Canadian health care system including the notion of euthanasia.

Good film, worth watching.
Loved this movie. Although I can't remember why it's a strong indictment of the Canadian health care system.
It opens with the deplorable conditions in the Canadian hospital where the father has been admitted (rampant overcrowding, beds with the sick and dying lining the halls, missing ceiling tiles, inadequate lighting etc). It then shows how the son has to bribe the union bosses to get anything done, including recovering his own laptop which was part of a theft ring run by the staff. The doctors repeatedly don't know the name of the patients they are examining. There is more but I am forgetting it right now.
They portray the entire system in a horrible light.

Ok. Except that I thought Canadians were mostly happy with their healthcare :shrug:
 
The Barbarian Invasions - Excellent French Canadian film that won best foreign language film in 2004 (while I loved The Twilight Samurai I can't argue with TBI winning the Oscar). Story of a terminally ill father whose diverse group of family and friends rally to be with him in his final weeks. While it is without question a witty (very funny at times) and thoughtful portrayal of a deeply flawed man questioning the meaning of his life during his final days it is also a pretty strong indictment of the Canadian health care system including the notion of euthanasia.

Good film, worth watching.
Loved this movie. Although I can't remember why it's a strong indictment of the Canadian health care system.
It opens with the deplorable conditions in the Canadian hospital where the father has been admitted (rampant overcrowding, beds with the sick and dying lining the halls, missing ceiling tiles, inadequate lighting etc). It then shows how the son has to bribe the union bosses to get anything done, including recovering his own laptop which was part of a theft ring run by the staff. The doctors repeatedly don't know the name of the patients they are examining. There is more but I am forgetting it right now.
They portray the entire system in a horrible light.
:lol: That doesn't sound embellished at all.
I don't know to what extent it is an accurate portrayal of the Canadian health care system. I am only pointing out what happens in the film (which is exactly as I described) not making a statement on the reality of the system.
From my experience, it is a horrendous portrayal.
Okay.Good movie. Worth watching.

Yeah, watch it.
 
Melancholia.

I found the first part of the movie embarrissingly bad for all the great talent assembled. I can handle Dunst being nutso but their are like 3-4 other people who are also completely bizarre. It was preposterous and made it difficult to get into the movie. It was just silly.

The second act was a lot better. I don't understand all the Dunst love though. Thought she was blown off the screen by the actress playing her sister. The sister felt like a real person going through a nightmare, on many fronts, while Dunst was just spouting really bad dialogue.

Their was a good movie there in the second half and probably would have been if they had focused on the sister and her struggle from the start. The shots of the planet coming didn't reinvent the wheel or anything but I was still mesmerized by them and wished they were in a better movie.

1.5 out of 4 stars. Would not recommend to anyone.

 
Melancholia.I found the first part of the movie embarrissingly bad for all the great talent assembled. I can handle Dunst being nutso but their are like 3-4 other people who are also completely bizarre. It was preposterous and made it difficult to get into the movie. It was just silly.The second act was a lot better. I don't understand all the Dunst love though. Thought she was blown off the screen by the actress playing her sister. The sister felt like a real person going through a nightmare, on many fronts, while Dunst was just spouting really bad dialogue.Their was a good movie there in the second half and probably would have been if they had focused on the sister and her struggle from the start. The shots of the planet coming didn't reinvent the wheel or anything but I was still mesmerized by them and wished they were in a better movie.1.5 out of 4 stars. Would not recommend to anyone.
I've been avoiding this movie, and this is not helping.
 
Melancholia.

I found the first part of the movie embarrissingly bad for all the great talent assembled. I can handle Dunst being nutso but their are like 3-4 other people who are also completely bizarre. It was preposterous and made it difficult to get into the movie. It was just silly.

The second act was a lot better. I don't understand all the Dunst love though. Thought she was blown off the screen by the actress playing her sister. The sister felt like a real person going through a nightmare, on many fronts, while Dunst was just spouting really bad dialogue.

Their was a good movie there in the second half and probably would have been if they had focused on the sister and her struggle from the start. The shots of the planet coming didn't reinvent the wheel or anything but I was still mesmerized by them and wished they were in a better movie.

1.5 out of 4 stars. Would not recommend to anyone.
I've been avoiding this movie, and this is not helping.
My link FWIW :shrug:
 
Melancholia.

I found the first part of the movie embarrissingly bad for all the great talent assembled. I can handle Dunst being nutso but their are like 3-4 other people who are also completely bizarre. It was preposterous and made it difficult to get into the movie. It was just silly.

The second act was a lot better. I don't understand all the Dunst love though. Thought she was blown off the screen by the actress playing her sister. The sister felt like a real person going through a nightmare, on many fronts, while Dunst was just spouting really bad dialogue.

Their was a good movie there in the second half and probably would have been if they had focused on the sister and her struggle from the start. The shots of the planet coming didn't reinvent the wheel or anything but I was still mesmerized by them and wished they were in a better movie.

1.5 out of 4 stars. Would not recommend to anyone.
I've been avoiding this movie, and this is not helping.
My link FWIW :shrug:
I remember. This is the very quote that had me interested:
For those Lars von Trier fans who were permanently put off by Antichrist (which I am still happy to have never seen) I think it's worth giving him another chance with this film.
 
Melancholia.

I found the first part of the movie embarrissingly bad for all the great talent assembled. I can handle Dunst being nutso but their are like 3-4 other people who are also completely bizarre. It was preposterous and made it difficult to get into the movie. It was just silly.

The second act was a lot better. I don't understand all the Dunst love though. Thought she was blown off the screen by the actress playing her sister. The sister felt like a real person going through a nightmare, on many fronts, while Dunst was just spouting really bad dialogue.

Their was a good movie there in the second half and probably would have been if they had focused on the sister and her struggle from the start. The shots of the planet coming didn't reinvent the wheel or anything but I was still mesmerized by them and wished they were in a better movie.

1.5 out of 4 stars. Would not recommend to anyone.
I've been avoiding this movie, and this is not helping.
My link FWIW :shrug:
I remember. This is the very quote that had me interested:
For those Lars von Trier fans who were permanently put off by Antichrist (which I am still happy to have never seen) I think it's worth giving him another chance with this film.
I will add that it is a film that I occasionally find myself mentally revisiting over the past six weeks. Either a theme or a particular shot (particularly the opening sequence which is filled with spectacular imagery). It's slow and has some flaws (mostly in that it shows many actions that a true depressive might commit over time but condenses them into one evening, something which would be highly unlikely to ever occur, and that can make the whole sequence feel implausible to viewers) but it is a very good film IMO.

 
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'Chaka said:
'jdoggydogg said:
'Chaka said:
Melancholia.

I found the first part of the movie embarrissingly bad for all the great talent assembled. I can handle Dunst being nutso but their are like 3-4 other people who are also completely bizarre. It was preposterous and made it difficult to get into the movie. It was just silly.

The second act was a lot better. I don't understand all the Dunst love though. Thought she was blown off the screen by the actress playing her sister. The sister felt like a real person going through a nightmare, on many fronts, while Dunst was just spouting really bad dialogue.

Their was a good movie there in the second half and probably would have been if they had focused on the sister and her struggle from the start. The shots of the planet coming didn't reinvent the wheel or anything but I was still mesmerized by them and wished they were in a better movie.

1.5 out of 4 stars. Would not recommend to anyone.
I've been avoiding this movie, and this is not helping.
My link FWIW :shrug:
I remember. This is the very quote that had me interested:
For those Lars von Trier fans who were permanently put off by Antichrist (which I am still happy to have never seen) I think it's worth giving him another chance with this film.
I will add that it is a film that I occasionally find myself mentally revisiting over the past six weeks. Either a theme or a particular shot (particularly the opening sequence which is filled with spectacular imagery). It's slow and has some flaws (mostly in that it shows many actions that a true depressive might commit over time but condenses them into one evening, something which would be highly unlikely to ever occur, and that can make the whole sequence feel implausible to viewers) but it is a very good film IMO.
:thumbup:
 

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