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tw2113 11.09.2023 11:07 PM

Totally Killer https://www.imdb.com/title/tt11426232/


Not sure why, but I'm enjoying this fun time travel/slasher movie

Severian 11.10.2023 06:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tw2113
Totally Killer https://www.imdb.com/title/tt11426232/


Not sure why, but I'm enjoying this fun time travel/slasher movie


Yeah I liked it

Rob Instigator 11.10.2023 10:57 AM

 


fucking AWESOME

_tunic_ 11.11.2023 03:56 AM

 



I don't know, didn't like that much. It's not really Robin Hood

I kept having the musical songs in my head from the Mel Brooks version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bSUrqiU8Azo



 



this one is much better

_tunic_ 11.11.2023 03:58 AM

 



very nice movie

tw2113 12.03.2023 10:57 PM

the original Black Christmas


Cannibal Girls

Severian 12.04.2023 08:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tw2113
the original Black Christmas


Cannibal Girls


Just rewatched the original Black Christmas yesterday. Great movie.

_tunic_ 12.08.2023 11:10 AM


 





James Bond movies are on continuous repeat on TV over here, but never this one.
It's a weird one, seems like everyone was on heavy magic mushrooms when they filmed it ....
It's on Amzon Prime

_tunic_ 12.09.2023 06:20 AM

 



great movie, with amazing cast
it's 2.5 hours long but I thought it was too short

Antagon 12.17.2023 09:19 PM


 



I enjoyed it thoroughly. Great performances by all the main players. It's a classic band of misfits story with a lot of charm and heart. Giamatti and Joy Randolph shine and it's absolutely crazy that this is Dominic Sessa's first film role. He is so confident and authentic in this role.


The script is really well-drafted and the characters are complex. A lot can be read between the lines, there no spoon-feeding. But it also isn't overly obtuse or hazy. The characters feel real. A very atmospheric movie too. Shot digitally, but every care was taken to make it look as film-like as possible - including grain and halation. A lot of the artificial light in the background had those green-ish tints to it that older color filmstock would often produce. The attention to detail was astounding. And all shot in actual locations as well.

choc e-Claire 12.17.2023 11:14 PM

My family's been going through Christmas movies as part of our weekly rotation, since it's the season - Love Actually in the first week of December (which is pleasant enough, even if I was worried it'd make me cry - I've been doing that a lot lately), Violent Night in the second (surprisingly tender and generally fun, although I preferred Cocaine Bear for gratuitously violent recent films), Elf in the third (always outstanding), and this Friday we're watching The Muppet Christmas Carol (possibly the greatest film ever made).

In my own time, though, I watched The Social Network hanging out at a girl's house a few weeks ago, and it's a brilliant film - I respected that there was no build up and it just throws you right into the mess, Eisenberg and (particularly) Timberlake both act really well, the cinematography and score work great together to add to the paranoid vibe throughout. Really compelling, although I admit that some other things took my attention in the last half hour...:rolleyes:

!@#$%! 12.19.2023 08:13 PM

bad santa and brazil are all the holidaze movies i need

actually i can't stand the jonathan pryce character anymore after many years and many rewatches. he's a bit of a bit baby, isn't he? i lose my patience with him.


anyway, i've watched too many movies to count, lately. criterion has a parker posey retrostpective of sorts. some were great, some were a bit shit. josie and the pussycats on criterion? cmon... clockwatchers i didn't like. i was a temp and it was a very different atmosphere. you're supposed to run around jobs while you pursue a more boho lifestyle on the side. temping for permanence... ooof... thn, the house of yes was a bit meh. party girl was absurd but alright as a silly document of the 90s. my favorite one was the two hal hartley ones she was in, henry fool and fay grim, she was great in fay grim. also! the daytrippers was good

i was also rewatching all almodóvar movies on mubi but they took them out at the end of november, fucking bummer. the man is a genius. i was left hanging

oh! for post-christmas, i'll have to watch metropolitan. which is always great

also um fanny and alexander is a great christmas movie if you're into that sort of thing

_tunic_ 01.03.2024 08:06 AM


 



not a very good movie, but Mel Gibson is enjoyable




 





 





 



Working on a theme, it's still in Progress

#1 is OK, actually already forgot what it's about. Think I've seen it before but long time ago.
#2 I didn't like at all. Possibly because John Woo directed it? stupid story, stupid action sequences, especially the car chases are chasing nothing at all
#3 is much better

Severian 01.06.2024 07:06 AM

M:I 2 is fucking atrocious.

Say what you will about J.J. Abrams but he resurrected the shit out of that franchise with 3.

!@#$%! 01.06.2024 05:04 PM

i had a couple of memorable movies in the spirit of christmas. namely,

 



the stendhal syndrome. wherein dario argento films his dotter getting rćped by a murderin' preevert at least a good couple of tymes


and


the turin horse

 


béla tarr's latest? last? final? film. it's fucking hilarious. for me anyway. like if the leningrad cowboys never went america. only fucking worse hahahahahaaaa. i love it

(i know there's the nietzsche excuse. and there's a bit of pseudo nietzschean dialogue in it. but really for me it's about "death, approaches" as rome total war assassins would say)

eta: this film owes a huge debt to chantal akerman's "jeanne dielman...(etc)", btw. at times it's almost a calque/parody of it. he does get more succinct as the days pass though

--

thinking about jeanne dielman makes me want to reread mimesis. one of the few books of literary theory actually worth the time it takes to read it, and then some. it pays back many times

Severian 01.07.2024 07:17 AM

Oppenheimer.

Pretty darn good though perhaps not as amazing as many think.

Could have been at least 30 min shorter.

Still, Nolan is just an excellent filmmaker.

tw2113 01.13.2024 07:56 PM

Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse

Antagon 01.16.2024 05:25 PM

A couple of Trash and B-Movies as presented by MST3K, cause I had their current Forever-athon running in the background from time to time.

tw2113 01.20.2024 10:19 PM

after the surprising anxiety of Frozen, I'm now watching Fall.


If you have fear of heights in general, or freezing, watch neither. Mostly height based.

Beer In Belly 01.25.2024 11:44 AM

Argento's Four Flies on Grey Velvet. This movie is ahead of it's time and features a technology that still hasn't been invented yet. All hail Argento. I will drink a beer for argento and drink a beer for myself while I'm at it

_tunic_ 01.28.2024 04:37 AM

 

tw2113 02.27.2024 10:04 PM

Lust in the Dust


https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0089523/

tw2113 04.28.2024 09:07 PM

My Girl
Sex is a Four Letter Word.

choc e-Claire 05.09.2024 01:51 AM

A month or so ago I watched Fight Club the way it was meant to be experienced - in 720p on a Discord call with someone who hates David Fincher. Really kind of a stupid movie, but some of the best acting out there.

tw2113 05.23.2024 10:29 PM

One Crazy Summer

tw2113 05.26.2024 09:49 PM

The Woman In Red

tw2113 05.26.2024 09:50 PM

*deletes a duplicate*

Antagon 05.27.2024 08:03 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by choc e-Claire
A month or so ago I watched Fight Club the way it was meant to be experienced - in 720p on a Discord call with someone who hates David Fincher. Really kind of a stupid movie, but some of the best acting out there.





The first sentence made me smile :D


To be fair, Fight Club pretty much portrays a fragilely masculine archetype that is massively misguided and yeah, kind of stupid (and, unfortunately, organized). A lot of the stuff that happens in that movie is very much informed by characters of that mindset. Don't really know if I want to hold that against the movie itself though - it is a very thorough and craftily told character study. The jury's still out on whether its stylized way of portraying it may or may not have contributed to the glorification of said archetype. There have been compelling arguments pointing in either direction.


I'd like to see it as a heavily stylized and satirical condemnation of that shallow, violent and chauvinistic attitude by men who feel deprived for whatever reason. But on the other hand, people actually started illegal "fight clubs" after the movie came out and I'm sure, right-leaning film bros love the shit out of it for all the wrong reasons. So yeah, maybe it is stupid. I think I'll watch it again at some point to see it with fresh eyes.

Antagon 05.27.2024 08:37 AM

A couple of movies I've watched and re-watched throughout the last few months with my girlfriend:


Brazil (1985):


Presented it to her as one of my absolute favorite movies. She enjoyed it a lot and was genuinely surprised how much the satirical asides about retro-futuristic corpo-bs are still massively relevant today. I saw my evergrowing distaste for bureaucratic reflected in it once again. Sam Lowry came across as even more of a creep though upon recent viewing. Lots of comical catharsis, also a good bit of sadness. Still a favorite.


Only Lovers Left Alive (2013):


One of her absolute favorites, and I can see why. It's wonderful. Though I do enjoy a good Jarmusch Film, I have to admit that's one of his I hadn't watched up until that point. I was missing out on something. Gorgeously shot, bitterly melancholic but also oddly life-affirming. And the OST: Chef's kiss! Loved it.


Session 9 (2001):


One of the oddball movies I had pitched to her out of a bunch of unusual or atmospheric Horror and Mystery movies. The movie polarized me a lot. I initially loved it, then later on started to pick apart the characters' actions and motivations as well as some plot contrivances. But recently, I came around to loving it again, despite some of its flaws. The location is absolutely amazing, the subtle hints and the tense interpersonal atmosphere between its players are sublime. And the horror hits different - hardly any jumpscares, no supernatural beasties. The events in the movie seem mostly real or potentially plausible, which does make it more eerie in my book. If you can look past it following an asbestos abatement crew that pretty much violates every safety protocol (which seems to be a deliberate decision and not laziness in the writing department), it is a very effective and haunting watch indeed. We both enjoyed it.

tw2113 05.27.2024 12:46 PM

Session 9 is awesome.

Antagon 05.27.2024 04:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tw2113
Session 9 is awesome.





I concur. :D

choc e-Claire 05.27.2024 06:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Antagon
I'd like to see it as a heavily stylized and satirical condemnation of that shallow, violent and chauvinistic attitude by men who feel deprived for whatever reason.


Watching it 25 years on and knowing it as "an important film" might have clouded my attitude somewhat, but: it's just so punishingly, consistently misanthropic and that just bleeds through into the enjoyment of the film itself. And it all feels prompted by an extremely surface-level take on nihilism and consumerism. (I did like the "self-improvement is masturbation" quip, although I was coming at it from a different angle.)

Antagon 05.27.2024 09:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by choc e-Claire
Watching it 25 years on and knowing it as "an important film" might have clouded my attitude somewhat, but: it's just so punishingly, consistently misanthropic and that just bleeds through into the enjoyment of the film itself. And it all feels prompted by an extremely surface-level take on nihilism and consumerism. (I did like the "self-improvement is masturbation" quip, although I was coming at it from a different angle.)





I see your point. I do see it as an in-character kind of lens - the two mains being unreliable and ultimately, despicable people (Phrasing it in a way that doesn't spoil anything to those few who haven't seen it yet, lol) we are meant to see as a cautionary tale/negative example. But there is only so much on-screen vitriol one can take until it taints the overall experience. And oof, is there some vitriol directed towards Marla. I admittedly haven't seen it in years and back when I first watched it as a teen it seemed so over the top and not life-like, I kind of dissociated from the more sociopolitical aspects and focused more on the plot, acting, cinematography, etc. I wonder how it would affect me in my current state.


I feel like the movie might have gotten even more uncomfortable because there are clowns like Andrew Tate out there fishing in a similar pond like Tyler Durden does in the movie. It is in an odd way more timely than it was back then. And that's a definite loss for society.


I think I'll deffo watch it again soon. Maybe it'll hit very different these days.

Antagon 05.29.2024 05:13 PM

I have re-watched Fight Club now and my views are complicated.


Quote:

Originally Posted by choc e-Claire
it's just so punishingly, consistently misanthropic and that just bleeds through into the enjoyment of the film itself



I do have to agree with you on that one to a certain degree. There is very little sincerity, but a hell lot of cynicism in the world the movie presents. That winds up hurting what I believe to be the movie's intended message. Some parts, like that one sequence about Marla's phone call (if you know, you know.) would absolutely not be portrayed like that today. For a good reason. Such themes require a certain care and seriousness.


I stick to my original assessment that I see it as a satirical condemnation of the main players' toxic attitude. It is sprinkled throughout the entire movie - Durden is presented as a cultish charlatan. The movement is portrayed as an oxymoron - claiming to be liberating and anti-corporate, but taking on the form of a national franchise, with business deals here and there acquiring new territories. Not to mention the downright religious connotations and oppressive, highly dictated and regulated methods. Their acts of vandalism and "mischief" are referred to as "homework" - drawing comparisons to children in school.


A lot of the asides about consumerism ring shallow, because they pretty much come from shallow characters. They think themselves clever, but offer no real insight, no viable solution - only further misery and destruction + undying devotion to a self-professed leader.



And I think that's where some of its messaging seems to get muddled - while it does seem to point its fingers at those cautionary tales, it doesn't actually present a better alternative. The movie is a bit too pre-occupied with showing the absolute abyss of that mindset and plays devil's advocate a tad too long. By that point, the world it presents seems completely empty and you're just left with the impression "Thing bad. Don't become bad thing." Or, as some misguided, mostly male viewers took it "World bad and mean to me, I'll try to bend it to my will or follow someone who promises me that."


The closest it ever gets to presenting a more healthy way of dealing with the malaise of modern life is in the beginning when the protagonist allows himself to cry in Bob's arms. It is undercut by the quips and his selfish/callous attitude though. The condemnation and overall message would be allowed to blossom more if some sort of contrast were evident. And that doesn't just apply to the message of the movie, but also the storytelling.


Still a pretty solid character study though.



I'd give it a 7.5/10 these days. Not as deep as many make it out to be. But far from mindless and obviously a project a lot of creativity went into.

tw2113 05.31.2024 09:29 AM

Dredd

_tunic_ 06.16.2024 11:15 AM

 

choc e-Claire 07.04.2024 12:39 AM

Rewatched Romeo + Juliet (1996) to show to a friend. Loved it just as much as I did the first time, cried more than I did the first time (thank you, estrogen)

Antagon 07.15.2024 01:36 AM

 


Bonjour

A not entirely unentertaining addition to the Matrix franchise, that ultimately winds up feeling somewhat empty. Not that there weren't any fresh takes or interesting ideas in it, but the execution feels a bit lackluster. It seems to operate on ideas and amusing, occasionally astute tidbits rather than an intriguing plot. At no point does there seem to be any sense of urgency - a thread that made the first entry so mesmerizing initially. It ain't half bad as a comedic meta-take though. In trying to pair its more sincere previous lore with the new, more irreverent and comedic take, it falters a bit though. Still, a hell lot better than the drab CGI slog that was the third movie.

choc e-Claire 08.14.2024 12:22 PM

 


Jesus fucking christ, this movie cut me to the absolute core. The least spoilery way to describe it is that it's about a shy teenage boy who finds a cheesy TV show to obsess over, and a friend to share that, but then can't take the next and most important step into that obsession.
Would genuinely love to hear a take from someone else on it, ideally with a different life experience to mine (hint, hint).

Edit: also, it's got Fred Durst in it.

Diesel 08.14.2024 12:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by choc e-Claire
[IMG]Edit: also, it's got Fred Durst in it.


I wouldn't exactly say you are selling it


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