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Recently viewed movie thread - Rental Edition (2 Viewers)

Bob Magaw said:
krista4 said:
The Killing: Very early Kubrick film noir/heist film. Amazing that this was made over 50 years ago. Holds up well and keeps you enthralled from beginning to end. Great character development as well. 4.5/5
this had some cool editing (seeing the same scene from different perspectives, sort of like rashomon & tarantino)... paths of glory is another great "early" kubrick movie not as well known as strangelove, 2001, clockwork, etc...
i am not especially find of those early kubrick films. "paths of glory" and "the killing" feel really obvious somehow. they just don't work for me. i recognize the fact that they are better than much of the standard hollywood fare from the period though. for me, kubrick didn't really hit his stride until "dr strangelove..." and followed it up with three more genre defining films. yes, i really like "barry lyndon".
 
NCCommish said:
Just watched Constantine. I had pretty low expectations and was pleasantly surprised. I'd give it a 7 out of 10 I think.
kind of the same for me. i think it really benefited from superb casting as much as anything. everyone seems to be relishing their roles. it makes the ridiculous script easier to swallow. cool concept too.
 
Rob Zombie's Halloween turned out to be better than I expected. I like how they showed what a horrible life the kid was having to begin with.

 
NCCommish said:
Just watched Constantine. I had pretty low expectations and was pleasantly surprised. I'd give it a 7 out of 10 I think.
kind of the same for me. i think it really benefited from superb casting as much as anything. everyone seems to be relishing their roles. it makes the ridiculous script easier to swallow. cool concept too.
Ok Serious question.I could never decide if Tilda Swinton was horribly ugly or just creepy.

IMDB PIC



 
NCCommish said:
Just watched Constantine. I had pretty low expectations and was pleasantly surprised. I'd give it a 7 out of 10 I think.
kind of the same for me. i think it really benefited from superb casting as much as anything. everyone seems to be relishing their roles. it makes the ridiculous script easier to swallow. cool concept too.
Ok Serious question.I could never decide if Tilda Swinton was horribly ugly or just creepy.

IMDB PIC

she's just really specific in terms of her look. she looks "english". i have been a fan of her work since "orlando". that's such a fantastic film.
 
Bob Magaw said:
krista4 said:
The Killing: Very early Kubrick film noir/heist film. Amazing that this was made over 50 years ago. Holds up well and keeps you enthralled from beginning to end. Great character development as well. 4.5/5
this had some cool editing (seeing the same scene from different perspectives, sort of like rashomon & tarantino)... paths of glory is another great "early" kubrick movie not as well known as strangelove, 2001, clockwork, etc...
Yeah, I kept thinking of Rashomon while watching it.And saintfool, I agree that it was sort of obvious, but I was still kept entertained.

 
Bob Magaw said:
krista4 said:
The Killing: Very early Kubrick film noir/heist film. Amazing that this was made over 50 years ago. Holds up well and keeps you enthralled from beginning to end. Great character development as well. 4.5/5
this had some cool editing (seeing the same scene from different perspectives, sort of like rashomon & tarantino)... paths of glory is another great "early" kubrick movie not as well known as strangelove, 2001, clockwork, etc...
Yeah, I kept thinking of Rashomon while watching it.And saintfool, I agree that it was sort of obvious, but I was still kept entertained.
when it comes to caper films from the period, i think of a different sterling hayden film. mine is vastly superior.
 
Bob Magaw said:
krista4 said:
The Killing: Very early Kubrick film noir/heist film. Amazing that this was made over 50 years ago. Holds up well and keeps you enthralled from beginning to end. Great character development as well. 4.5/5
this had some cool editing (seeing the same scene from different perspectives, sort of like rashomon & tarantino)... paths of glory is another great "early" kubrick movie not as well known as strangelove, 2001, clockwork, etc...
Yeah, I kept thinking of Rashomon while watching it.And saintfool, I agree that it was sort of obvious, but I was still kept entertained.
when it comes to caper films from the period, i think of a different sterling hayden film. mine is vastly superior.
Yours?
 
Kelly's Heroes- Just watched this over the weekend. Great war movie. Donald Sutherland is very amusing as Oddball. Kinda like he was in Mash. Clint Eastwood is well.....Clint Eastwood....and Telly Savalas and Don Rickles really bring everything together. Some really great war scenes and strategy and really liked the Shermans blasting what sounded like AbbA.

 
Mr. Mojo said:
jdoggydogg said:
Mr. Mojo said:
Just saw Smokin' Aces. Meh. They should have made it funnier as itwas the perfect set up for humor.But the highlight was Alicia Keys who I know think is smoking hot. :no:
I said the same thing. The comedic stuff worked. The drama? Ehhhhhhhhhh...not so much.
Didn't it seem like they could have made it hilarious like Lock, Stock and 2 Smoking Barrels?The ending with the crying was just lame.
Exactly. This movie clearly took a lot of queues from Lock, Stock. So why the director and the writer chose to veer it into high drama is beyond me.
 
NCCommish said:
Just watched Constantine. I had pretty low expectations and was pleasantly surprised. I'd give it a 7 out of 10 I think.
kind of the same for me. i think it really benefited from superb casting as much as anything. everyone seems to be relishing their roles. it makes the ridiculous script easier to swallow. cool concept too.
Ok Serious question.I could never decide if Tilda Swinton was horribly ugly or just creepy.

IMDB PIC
She seems smart. That, plus the red hair equals hot.
 
Gone Baby Gone - kept me interested. Fairly original idea. I'd give it 4/5

The Golden Compass - It wasn't my favorite movie, but I was somewhat entertained. 3.5 / 5

 
The Killing: Very early Kubrick film noir/heist film. Amazing that this was made over 50 years ago. Holds up well and keeps you enthralled from beginning to end. Great character development as well. 4.5/5
this had some cool editing (seeing the same scene from different perspectives, sort of like rashomon & tarantino)... paths of glory is another great "early" kubrick movie not as well known as strangelove, 2001, clockwork, etc...
i am not especially find of those early kubrick films. "paths of glory" and "the killing" feel really obvious somehow. they just don't work for me. i recognize the fact that they are better than much of the standard hollywood fare from the period though. for me, kubrick didn't really hit his stride until "dr strangelove..." and followed it up with three more genre defining films. yes, i really like "barry lyndon".
i don't like his earlier work as much his more mature work, either (willie mays no doubt got better, but he was still a great player when he was young)... but i still like just about any kubrick movie over 99% of the dreck that is out there...didn't look at the noir link... HAS to be asphalt jungle... definitely a great noir (& movie, period)... sterling hayden was an underrated actor... he had almost a facial resemblence & similar stoic countenance to another noir actor, robert ryan... hayden was in another sort of neo-noir... altman's post-noir take on raymond chandler's the long goodnight (or goodbye?), with elliot gould...

not a caper movie, but imo the quintessential noir is out of the past (robert mitchum & kirk douglas... leading back to paths of glory :sleep: )...

 
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yes, i really like "barry lyndon".
One time, my parents came to visit, and my dad was looking through my mountain of movies. "Look dear, he has Barry Lyndon." Then, I got to hear all about how they went to see it in the theater when it was out, and how they left early, and it was the worst movie they had ever seen. I think I was adopted.
 
Into The Wild

I liked it a lot. Excellent movie. I'd be interested in hearing your comments about this movie.
I really liked it too - would probably be in my top 5 movies of last year. My feeling from the boards was the FFA was pretty lukewarm on the film. I think a lot of people really couldn't relate to the main character and thought he came off as a whiny rich kid that pissed away everything. I saw him more as somebody that just wanted to find himself and see what else there is in the world - albeit in an extreme way, and wish I had the balls to do something like that when I was his age (not that my parents where rich, etc.. just to take off on a self-discovery tour). I still found the lack of communication with his parents sad, as he could've as least sent a postcard/letter or 2 to tell them he was alive at least. Overally still loved the movie though, and liked it better than other movies that were showing up in critic's top 5 movies like M.Clayton, TWBB, and Juno.
 
Into The Wild

I liked it a lot. Excellent movie. I'd be interested in hearing your comments about this movie.
I really liked it too - would probably be in my top 5 movies of last year. My feeling from the boards was the FFA was pretty lukewarm on the film. I think a lot of people really couldn't relate to the main character and thought he came off as a whiny rich kid that pissed away everything. I saw him more as somebody that just wanted to find himself and see what else there is in the world - albeit in an extreme way, and wish I had the balls to do something like that when I was his age (not that my parents where rich, etc.. just to take off on a self-discovery tour). I still found the lack of communication with his parents sad, as he could've as least sent a postcard/letter or 2 to tell them he was alive at least. Overally still loved the movie though, and liked it better than other movies that were showing up in critic's top 5 movies like M.Clayton, TWBB, and Juno.
I loved the cinematography. It was a beautifully shot movie. But, I had read the book first, and I had no sympathy for the main character. He was either mentally ill or just stupid. I think in the book it mentioned that there were fully stocked Ranger cabins within 2 or 3 miles, and if he'd taken the effort to find those he would have been fine. That said, I'm kind of biased against Krakauer, the writer, because I read Into Thin Air first. That's a novel about an Everest climb that went really bad. Krakauer was a participant. He blamed the tour guides. However, he freely admits that he went back to his tent to sleep and basically never did anything to help anyone, even when there were people dying about 50 yards from him. He printed some of the angry letters from the relatives of the tour guides he trashed, and I found them to be more compelling than his narrative.

 
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The Killing: Very early Kubrick film noir/heist film. Amazing that this was made over 50 years ago. Holds up well and keeps you enthralled from beginning to end. Great character development as well. 4.5/5
this had some cool editing (seeing the same scene from different perspectives, sort of like rashomon & tarantino)... paths of glory is another great "early" kubrick movie not as well known as strangelove, 2001, clockwork, etc...
i am not especially find of those early kubrick films. "paths of glory" and "the killing" feel really obvious somehow. they just don't work for me. i recognize the fact that they are better than much of the standard hollywood fare from the period though. for me, kubrick didn't really hit his stride until "dr strangelove..." and followed it up with three more genre defining films. yes, i really like "barry lyndon".
i don't like his earlier work as much his more mature work, either (willie mays no doubt got better, but he was still a great player when he was young)... but i still like just about any kubrick movie over 99% of the dreck that is out there...didn't look at the noir link... HAS to be asphalt jungle... definitely a great noir (& movie, period)... sterling hayden was an underrated actor... he had almost a facial resemblence & similar stoic countenance to another noir actor, robert ryan... hayden was in another sort of neo-noir... altman's post-noir take on raymond chandler's the long goodnight (or goodbye?), with elliot gould...

not a caper movie, but imo the quintessential noir is out of the past (robert mitchum & kirk douglas... leading back to paths of glory :shrug: )...
i became a fan of his after watching "the set-up" as a kid. doing "the wild bunch" only helped cement my affection for him. speaking of peckinpah, i watched "straw dogs" the other night. dustin hoffman and his pretty wife move to her hometown in rural scotland. he's an academic in retreat from the culture of violence in the united states, especially during the war protest and civil rights flare ups of the time. his wife becomes the object of desire to some of the local men. when he and his wife are threatened, he discovers something within himself.

kind of a hard movie to get a sense of. there are some parts that are classic peckinpah. there are some parts that really feel dated and rather ugly. it works enough of the time for me to appreciate what it was going for.

 
Into The Wild

I liked it a lot. Excellent movie. I'd be interested in hearing your comments about this movie.
I really liked it too - would probably be in my top 5 movies of last year. My feeling from the boards was the FFA was pretty lukewarm on the film. I think a lot of people really couldn't relate to the main character and thought he came off as a whiny rich kid that pissed away everything. I saw him more as somebody that just wanted to find himself and see what else there is in the world - albeit in an extreme way, and wish I had the balls to do something like that when I was his age (not that my parents where rich, etc.. just to take off on a self-discovery tour). I still found the lack of communication with his parents sad, as he could've as least sent a postcard/letter or 2 to tell them he was alive at least. Overally still loved the movie though, and liked it better than other movies that were showing up in critic's top 5 movies like M.Clayton, TWBB, and Juno.
I didn't see him as whiny at all. "Pissed away everything" pretty much misses the point. What did he piss away? Money? Success? These material goals are ultimately empty and mean nothing. Materialism is destructive to the psyche, and will never lead to happiness. We are born into this world to lose everything we have. And the only way to happiness is to seek out goodness in people, art, and nature.That kid and Thorough had it right: we are wasting our lives in a technology-tainted world with no connection to natural world.

 
Into The Wild

I liked it a lot. Excellent movie. I'd be interested in hearing your comments about this movie.
I really liked it too - would probably be in my top 5 movies of last year. My feeling from the boards was the FFA was pretty lukewarm on the film. I think a lot of people really couldn't relate to the main character and thought he came off as a whiny rich kid that pissed away everything. I saw him more as somebody that just wanted to find himself and see what else there is in the world - albeit in an extreme way, and wish I had the balls to do something like that when I was his age (not that my parents where rich, etc.. just to take off on a self-discovery tour). I still found the lack of communication with his parents sad, as he could've as least sent a postcard/letter or 2 to tell them he was alive at least. Overally still loved the movie though, and liked it better than other movies that were showing up in critic's top 5 movies like M.Clayton, TWBB, and Juno.
I didn't see him as whiny at all. "Pissed away everything" pretty much misses the point. What did he piss away? Money? Success? These material goals are ultimately empty and mean nothing. Materialism is destructive to the psyche, and will never lead to happiness. We are born into this world to lose everything we have. And the only way to happiness is to seek out goodness in people, art, and nature.That kid and Thorough had it right: we are wasting our lives in a technology-tainted world with no connection to natural world.
The world is too much with us late and soonGetting and spending we lay waste our powers

Little we see in Nature that is ours;

We have given our hearts away, a sordid boon!


 
Into The Wild

I liked it a lot. Excellent movie. I'd be interested in hearing your comments about this movie.
I really liked it too - would probably be in my top 5 movies of last year. My feeling from the boards was the FFA was pretty lukewarm on the film. I think a lot of people really couldn't relate to the main character and thought he came off as a whiny rich kid that pissed away everything. I saw him more as somebody that just wanted to find himself and see what else there is in the world - albeit in an extreme way, and wish I had the balls to do something like that when I was his age (not that my parents where rich, etc.. just to take off on a self-discovery tour). I still found the lack of communication with his parents sad, as he could've as least sent a postcard/letter or 2 to tell them he was alive at least. Overally still loved the movie though, and liked it better than other movies that were showing up in critic's top 5 movies like M.Clayton, TWBB, and Juno.
I didn't see him as whiny at all. "Pissed away everything" pretty much misses the point. What did he piss away? Money? Success? These material goals are ultimately empty and mean nothing. Materialism is destructive to the psyche, and will never lead to happiness. We are born into this world to lose everything we have. And the only way to happiness is to seek out goodness in people, art, and nature.That kid and Thorough had it right: we are wasting our lives in a technology-tainted world with no connection to natural world.
The world is too much with us late and soonGetting and spending we lay waste our powers

Little we see in Nature that is ours;

We have given our hearts away, a sordid boon!

:confused:
 
Watched Before the Devil knows your dead:

Two words:

Marisa Tomei :rolleyes: :rolleyes: :rolleyes:

My Castanza moved.

 
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Casino RoyaleFirst of all, that's BY FAR the best opening credits sequence I've ever seen. It's almost worth watching for that alone.But the movie itself also rocks hard, except for getting bogged down in the middle a bit. Still, it's a HUGE movie with a ton of interesting locations, and Daniel Craig does make a good Bond.8/10
The poker stuff was a joke, but that first chase scene was about as good as an action sequence gets.
Just caught this on Showtime this past weekend (yeah, I'm way behind) I agree with the opening scene being one of the best evah. The rest seemed to be missing something for me though. I mean, it wasn't terrible, but it just didn't blow me away. It was just OK for me.7/10 for me
 
Watched Leningrad Cowboys go America and liked it. Nice movie if you like their music and this kind of humor, otherwise, it can be very annoying

 
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Cassandra's Dream -- :thumbup: I'm sure I'll take #### for this but Woody Allen is COMPLETELY overrated.
nah, woody's been coasting for the last 10-15 years. kind of like de niro in that regard, i think. his middle period films - say from "annie hall" through "bullets over broadway" - are filled with his best work.
 

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