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Recently viewed movie thread - Rental, Streaming, Theater etc (8 Viewers)

The drunk scenes between Stewart, Hepburn, Grant and company in the Philadelphia Story might be the funniest scenes ever.

 
Watched part of Gilda last night before falling asleep. Fun to see the iconic opening Hayworth scene... but otherwise was kinda disinterested in all of it. wanted better use of b/w visuals for a so-called Noir.

 
Watched part of Gilda last night before falling asleep. Fun to see the iconic opening Hayworth scene... but otherwise was kinda disinterested in all of it. wanted better use of b/w visuals for a so-called Noir.
very uneven flick, but that villain guy's my favorite villain. movies these days needs an oldworld sophisticated psychopath likat.

 
The Jungle Book (2016)

Really enjoyed this movie.  Good mix of humour. Great villain. Thought Mawgli was superb and the integration of him with the CGI was really well done. very entertaining film i thought.

4/5

Alien Covenant

Surprised this had decent rotten tomatoes rating and imdb was not terrible. So hard to ignore the stupid and totally unrealistic choices made by the crew. Can't see any real person making some of these decisions unless that person was told to to follow a script that needed to be followed. patient zero goes from perfectly healthy to death warmed over in about 15 minutes but ya sure we'll take him back on board and put him in confinement. Riiight!

1.5/5 only due to some neat kills

 
oh right... we watched something on Netflix called What Happened to Monday. felt like a mashup of distopian future scifi films like Children of Men, Orphan Black and Blade-runner... with overpopulation as a central theme. somewhat fascinating conceit of an under-lying story-line, but ultimately lacked something. I don't think I bought the premise (population control people running a militaristic fascist police state with checkpoints literally everywhere, and that drives much of the action in the movie. some other head-scratching plot turns and decisions... but if that doesn't bother you, the story moves along and you get a decent Orphan Black style performance from Noomi Rapace playing several roles (and baring quite a lot in what felt like an oddly out of place sex scene). strange to see Glenn Close so slightly used here, as well as Willem Defoe. 

it's not perfect by any stretch, but it's an ok watch especially if you like sci-fi/distopian futurist stuff.

eta: I think this is on Netflix

 
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Watched part of Gilda last night before falling asleep. Fun to see the iconic opening Hayworth scene... but otherwise was kinda disinterested in all of it. wanted better use of b/w visuals for a so-called Noir.
I agree that it's a bit uneven. It has some really good parts- anything with Rita- but overall it's just ok. The director doesn't appear to have directed anything else of too much significance. 

 
Ghost World

Hadn't seen this in years. ‎Terry Zwigoff directed two of my favorite comedies: Bad Santa and Ghost World. I love these movies. Zwigoff taps into the angst of young people in a way that's authentic, bittersweet, and hilarious. Every scene in this movie works for me. Just a perfect example of what a great director can do with a tiny budget and a fantastic script. Most teen comedies are pathetic in comparison.

 
Rough Night... yes it was, watching that movie. No redeeming qualities like humor or  eye candy, just nothing. Stay away.

 
Ghost World

Hadn't seen this in years. ‎Terry Zwigoff directed two of my favorite comedies: Bad Santa and Ghost World. I love these movies. Zwigoff taps into the angst of young people in a way that's authentic, bittersweet, and hilarious. Every scene in this movie works for me. Just a perfect example of what a great director can do with a tiny budget and a fantastic script. Most teen comedies are pathetic in comparison.
Love Ghost World as well, and that is going to be my next Criterion purchase.  Might be my favorite Buscemi too.  So many good characters and scenes and I thought that it captures a lot of the emotions of going from HS to whatever really well, especially if your friends aren't going in the same direction as you.

 
For whatever reason, I seem to need a reboot on my love for movies about the time my kid goes back to school and I can actually watch some.  After I thought about it, I did the same thing last year - rewatched some of my faves I haven't seen for a bit before getting back to my list of ones I haven't seen. 

So far this year it was:  Spinal Tap, Alien, Boogie Nights, and Reservoir Dogs with  Blade Runner and Jaws on tap for the rest of the week. 

 
Oh yeah, if people haven't seen the trailer, Little Evil looks pretty damn funny.  It's by the same director as Tucker and Dale vs. Evil.  I think I saw that it is coming out soon.

 
Love Ghost World as well, and that is going to be my next Criterion purchase.  Might be my favorite Buscemi too.  So many good characters and scenes and I thought that it captures a lot of the emotions of going from HS to whatever really well, especially if your friends aren't going in the same direction as you.
:yes:

And furthermore, I appreciate this movie even more now than I did in 2001.

When Buscemi hurts his back blowing out a birthday candle, that's something only someone over 50 can relate to.

 
For whatever reason, I seem to need a reboot on my love for movies about the time my kid goes back to school and I can actually watch some.  After I thought about it, I did the same thing last year - rewatched some of my faves I haven't seen for a bit before getting back to my list of ones I haven't seen. 

So far this year it was:  Spinal Tap, Alien, Boogie Nights, and Reservoir Dogs with  Blade Runner and Jaws on tap for the rest of the week. 
I own Boogie Nights, Reservoir Dogs, and Blade Runner on DVD, and I find myself watching them at least every couple of years.

 
Oh yeah, if people haven't seen the trailer, Little Evil looks pretty damn funny.  It's by the same director as Tucker and Dale vs. Evil.  I think I saw that it is coming out soon.
That looks like a parody of The Omen - which I'm sure will have plenty of comic fodder. Speaking of parodies, did you hear that Matt Groening is making an animated fantasy series for Netflix? As a huge Game of Thrones and Simpsons fan, I am at maximum geek level. 

 
I need to see this again. It's been years. How do you feel about "High Society"?
It's ok. The music is a solid with Frank, Bing and Louis Armstrong but there's nobody anywhere near as funny in the cast. 

 
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Which is curious considering how good Bing is with Hope in "The Road..." movies. Speaking of, most overrated "Road" film is here. Second place here.
I like Bing and Frank, but they aren't Cary Grant or Jimmy Stewart. Grant is probably the funniest non-purely comedic actor ever. Also while Grace Kelly is wonderful, she's not funny. Hepburn can do funny very well. 

The movie version of the Cormac book was such garbage. I thought the book was just as overrated.

 
Who rated The Road highly? I mean, I'm not saying it's great. But it's a mostly faithful adaptation of a truly great novel.
Actually yeah, it probably was seen as a disappointment, right? Also I did not find the novel great at all. Give me Blood Meridian every time. 

 
A Face in the Crowd. One of my favorite movies, with Andy Griffith playing the "bad guy".


Just saw that a couple months ago. A great indictment on mass media and fame.
State of the Union (1948) was Capra's follow-up to It's a Wonderful Life. It's the story of a wealthy industrialist who gets political aspirations to get the Republican nomination for President.  In his campaigning, he is conflicted by his desire to be honest and speak to the people or make political alliances by abandoning his true self. He starts on a campaign of "drown the politicians" but is guided into the traditional D.C. political web. Like most Capra films, it's a bit corny and rarely seems super serious. Which is a weakness but also a strength because it's actually pretty funny. Some of the characters feel they fell out of a screwball comedy. Good film and the charm of Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn easily carries it. 

It is nowhere as biting, dark or deep as A Face in the Crowd but it's interesting to see a Cold War era take on American politics and especially the rise of a political outsider. 

And another great drunk Hepburn scene as well.

 
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jdoggydogg said:
:yes:

And furthermore, I appreciate this movie even more now than I did in 2001.

When Buscemi hurts his back blowing out a birthday candle, that's something only someone over 50 can relate to.


jdoggydogg said:
I own Boogie Nights, Reservoir Dogs, and Blade Runner on DVD, and I find myself watching them at least every couple of years.
LINK

 
Jaws:

I am late to the game on my love for this one.  Watched it again last night.  Just a fantastic movie.  Scares, score, brilliant monologue, on and on.  As movies like Pulp Fiction slide down my all-time rankings a bit, Jaws keeps climbing up. 

It also occurred to me that some of the movies that I love were made by these guys before they were 30 - Jaws, Reserv. Dogs, Boogie Nights.  Just amazing. 

Also, I pimped it in the podcast thread, but I will bring the podcast up here too - I have really been liking the Cine-files podcast.  I think it's a great blend of bro-ing out with a passion for movies, but also talking about editing, score, character choices, etc.  One is a writer/actor, and one is a teacher/director and they usually have a guest as well.  I would say listen to the Jaws and Die Hard ones to try it out.  The Jaws one was great (listened today), and it kinda makes me want to watch it again tonight to look and listen for some of the things they talked about. 

 
Jaws:

I am late to the game on my love for this one.  Watched it again last night.  Just a fantastic movie.  Scares, score, brilliant monologue, on and on.  As movies like Pulp Fiction slide down my all-time rankings a bit, Jaws keeps climbing up. 

It also occurred to me that some of the movies that I love were made by these guys before they were 30 - Jaws, Reserv. Dogs, Boogie Nights.  Just amazing. 

Also, I pimped it in the podcast thread, but I will bring the podcast up here too - I have really been liking the Cine-files podcast.  I think it's a great blend of bro-ing out with a passion for movies, but also talking about editing, score, character choices, etc.  One is a writer/actor, and one is a teacher/director and they usually have a guest as well.  I would say listen to the Jaws and Die Hard ones to try it out.  The Jaws one was great (listened today), and it kinda makes me want to watch it again tonight to look and listen for some of the things they talked about. 
I listened to 1 or 2 of them and really enjoyed it. Good recommendation. 

 
For whatever reason, I seem to need a reboot on my love for movies about the time my kid goes back to school and I can actually watch some.  After I thought about it, I did the same thing last year - rewatched some of my faves I haven't seen for a bit before getting back to my list of ones I haven't seen. 
You should post a list of your DVD / Bluray collection so we can see how many we have in common.

 
You should post a list of your DVD / Bluray collection so we can see how many we have in common.
I'd have to look and post later. 

Honestly, I have really purged the collection a bit.  A lot of the DVDs are kids movies and comedies.  Usually for BR I have been stopping myself from buying stuff that I don't think is an all-timer or at least 'best of year' (again, mixed with stuff for the family).  I think DVDs are down to about 120 and Blurays are at 50-60 or so.  I have just been using the library for most of my movie watching. 

 
Some Like It Hot and Amadeus.
Nice.  I've been listening to the ones of movies that I have basically memorized like Res.Dogs, Die Hard, Aliens, etc..  I like what they bring so some of the others I haven't seen I will try to watch the movie before listening - ie Amadeus. 

 
Nice.  I've been listening to the ones of movies that I have basically memorized like Res.Dogs, Die Hard, Aliens, etc..  I like what they bring so some of the others I haven't seen I will try to watch the movie before listening - ie Amadeus. 
Oh you've got to see Amadeus. If my memory is correct, you have expressed some interest/enjoyment of classical music, right?

 
Oh you've got to see Amadeus. If my memory is correct, you have expressed some interest/enjoyment of classical music, right?
Amadeus is very close to a perfect movie. The only thing that spoiled it for me is that i'd seen Tim Curry as Wolfie in the play and Tom Hulce just never really captured the torture of genius like Curry had. I've warmed up to the Hulce performance more over the yrs, but...

 
Amadeus is very close to a perfect movie. The only thing that spoiled it for me is that i'd seen Tim Curry as Wolfie in the play and Tom Hulce just never really captured the torture of genius like Curry had. I've warmed up to the Hulce performance more over the yrs, but...
Interesting. I can't imagine Curry in that role. I'm not a big fan of him so I a glad I just have the Hulce performance in my mind. 

 
Just got done watching GotG Vol.2:

No surprise, since I wasn't a big fan of #1, but I was mostly bored during this whole movie.  Couple chuckles, but I am about done with the OMG the whole galaxy is in peril, CGI fests that the Marvel movies are trending towards.  Give me something small scale like Spidey: Homecoming every time. 

On a weird note, I found the gold women to be pretty damn hot. 

 

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