12.05.2008, 01:39 PM | #21 | |
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Haha, yes. I love Lifeforce. I tend not to get into those 'so bad they're good' movies that much, but Lifeforce is just so bizarre that it's a definite exception. Oh, and the fact that Mathilda May wanders around nude for much of it doesn't exactly hurt matters. |
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12.05.2008, 02:16 PM | #22 |
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I'm so hard right now.
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12.05.2008, 04:30 PM | #23 |
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I agree
Its my favourite Sci-fi movie too. by far. but its a matter of taste |
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12.05.2008, 04:36 PM | #24 |
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some of my fave sci fi movies
blade runner 5th element Solaris (original russian one) Contact Gattacca Wrath of Khan Soylent Green Hardware the thing with sci fi, or speculative fiction as people like to call it now, is that the movies become dated very quickly. It is hard to understand the immense power to awe and to enlighten and to inspire that a great sci fi movie can have when it is viewed decades later through a prism that includes all new science deevelopments and all the sci fi movies and books influenced by said movie, like blade runner. blade runner was like Soylent Green in that it showed a dystopia, but it was the first movie to show a cyberpunk dystopia, one that takes account f the massive poverty as well as the massive technology, and of all cultures brewing together and cities becoming extended mixed slums where a combination of chinese, spanish, english and indian is spoken.. stuff like that made blade runner an amazing amazing piece of ART, and it still stands up today in my book.
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12.05.2008, 04:40 PM | #25 |
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^^^
I totally agree with you BR is the only Sci-fi movie for me which did almost everything right on so much uncountable layers. and the time is another evidence how strong this movie is. one of the last analog special effects movies and its ruling over almost all digital produced stuff. (< thats just the visual layer) only to write these sentences about it makes me wanna wthc it again, and thats after Ive watched the whole damn 5 disc box last month on one weekend |
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12.05.2008, 04:45 PM | #26 |
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the fact that ridley scott hired people to designe and fabricate nearly every single thing shown in the movie, from tables and chair sets, to the light sockets in the walls, to the items sold in th street vendors..
plus it deals with the one BIG question, the important one. what makes us HUMAN? what makes us ALIVE? I still get deeply moved everytime I see Rutger hauer's character give his speech...
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12.05.2008, 04:57 PM | #27 |
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yes tears in rain, really is moving.
its perfect. |
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12.05.2008, 06:50 PM | #28 | |
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The Dick book Blade Runner is based on, "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?", is ten times better to me.
I like the movie a lot. While it is probably one of my favorite sf films, that seems to show the sad variety off sf films out there=( Quote:
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12.05.2008, 07:34 PM | #29 | |
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12.05.2008, 07:38 PM | #30 |
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I love Blade Runner
but 2001 is way better |
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12.05.2008, 07:53 PM | #31 |
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Why hasn't anyone mentioned alphaville?
I'd probably rank that above Blade Runner as well. I just love how driving down a highway at night with lights flashing past is space travel |
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12.05.2008, 09:21 PM | #32 | |
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There was some really bad stuff added to the final cut though. Like after Roy kills Tyrell they added him saying " I'm sorry Sebastian, come here, come here. " so dumb But Blade Runner rocks your face off, it's hard to follow on the first viewing but it is in no way boring. Harrison Ford gets his ass kicked all over the place in that movie too. Poor guy |
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12.05.2008, 09:22 PM | #33 |
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Dark Star is a quality movie.
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12.05.2008, 09:58 PM | #34 |
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My favorite ten SF movies:
1) The Man Who Fell to Earth 2) Brazil 3) Planet of the Apes (original only!) 4) Liquid Sky 5) 1984 6) Metropolis 7) A Clockwork Orange 8) Star Wars (analog only, and yeah, it's space fantasy and forever wrapped in pop culture in annoying ways, but it was still so damn well done!) 9) Soylent Green 10) A Scanner Darkly I like Blade Runner, but yes, it is really overrated. It did stand up well as far as creating scenery, but nothing compared to Metropolis on that front. |
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12.05.2008, 10:27 PM | #35 |
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The Man Who Fell to Earth is your number 1 sci fi movie? Jeez
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12.05.2008, 11:17 PM | #36 | |
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What do you mean by "Jeez"? I don't think it's the most "significant" SF movie ever made, but yeah, it's my favorite. It's one of my very favorite movies period. Nicholas Roeg's direction, especially cinematography, is really effective and surprisingly true to the Walter Tevis novel (which I realize most people haven't read, but they should, it's quite good). I've never particularly liked Bowie in any other movies, but he's completely convincing as an alien trying to pass for an eccentric rich human (probably because he was in fact the vice versa). And the cynical/satirical comment it makes on relationships in modern society is really amusing. I love the scene with him watching all of the t.v.s at once and his alcoholic human lover trying to get him to look away from the screens to her. |
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12.08.2008, 03:34 AM | #37 |
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I only wish the major studios were as willing today to produce something as eccentric and unashamedly thought provoking as they were when they backed films such as TMWFTE. I love 70s sci-fi almost as much as its 'golden' era in the 50s. Two amazing periods which, if anything, seem all the more remarkable now, at a time when studios seem increasingly incapable of viewing sci-fi audiences as anything other than simple-minded worshippers of thrill-a-minute big budget special effects and witty one-liners.
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12.08.2008, 03:54 AM | #38 |
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YEAH, ALIEN VS. PREDATOR
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12.08.2008, 05:03 AM | #39 |
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Best scifi movie ever = Close Encounters of the 3rd Kind
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12.08.2008, 08:28 AM | #40 |
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Actually, most people don't know that Scanners is the best Sci-fi film of all time.
But seriously... Blade Runner is my personal fave (since Silver Globe and Alien probably don't count). |
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