
- Time
- (Edited)
- Post link
Shadow of a Doubt. Interesting film, said to be Hitchcock's favourite among his own body of work.
Before that, Raiders of the Lost Ark. Before that, The Truman Show.
Shadow of a Doubt. Interesting film, said to be Hitchcock's favourite among his own body of work.
Before that, Raiders of the Lost Ark. Before that, The Truman Show.
Before that?
IT'S MY TRILOGY, AND I WANT IT NOW!
"[George Lucas] rebooted the franchise in 1997 without telling anyone." -skyjedi2005
"Yeah, well, George says a lot of things..." a young 1997 xhonzi on RASSM
"They're my movies." -George Lucas. 19 people won oscars for their work on Star Wars (1977) and George Lucas wasn't one of them.
Shadow always seems a bit too small town-ish to me.
White Heat
VADER!? WHERE THE HELL IS MY MOCHA LATTE? -Palpy on a very bad day.
“George didn’t think there was any future in dead Han toys.”-Harrison Ford
YT channel:
https://www.youtube.com/c/DamnFoolIdealisticCrusader
xhonzi said:
Before that?
Nothing, those were the first movies I've ever seen. ;)
Just saw "Paul". Pretty darn funny
"There's no cluster of midiclorians that controls my destiny!" -Han Solo, from a future revision of ANH
The Empire Strikes Back.
Yogi Bear and The Tourist.
Next up, Let Me In, and The Three Mothers Trilogy(Suspiria, Inferno, Mother of Tears).
Starman.
The Sound of Music. Glad I could revisit an old favorite that ages well.
A Goon in a Gaggle of 'em
Just watched Public Enemies last night, pretty good movie.
The Rookie.
It was okay.
7/10
hairy_hen said:
Shadow of a Doubt. Interesting film, said to be Hitchcock's favourite among his own body of work.
Before that, Raiders of the Lost Ark. Before that, The Truman Show.
Truman Show is one of my favorite movies. So underrated.
Winter's Bone was mine. And it was awesome. 10/10
Before that I watched Large's Ark, L8wrtr's edit of Garden State. A great improvement on the original.
30 Days of Night: Dark Days
Since they're like poetry, what with the rhyming and all, I find that I only need to watch three out of the six films.
A Single Man (2009).
Visually beautiful adaptation of the Isherwood novel.
Some lovely subtle visual effects which are very evocative of the sensation of mood shifts and some well crafted performances.
It's a bit of a downer though (just like real life from a certain point of view).
If you are in the mood for the visual equivalent of a slightly clawing Carpenters song give it a spin.
Die Hard.
Citizen Kane.
Bingowings said:
A Single Man (2009).
Visually beautiful adaptation of the Isherwood novel.
Some lovely subtle visual effects which are very evocative of the sensation of mood shifts and some well crafted performances.
It's a bit of a downer though (just like real life from a certain point of view).
**edit - I was thinking of A Serious Man, the Coen Bros movie, which was amazing. I haven't seen this, although I've always meant to.
Watched The Future of Food last night. Documentary. Highly recommended.
^I was about to do a Iggy Car-rust post until you corrected yourself there Red.
Watch it now.
I admire your enthusiasm but Red may not have access to a copy of the film and as I said, good as it is, it's a mood piece and if you aren't in the mood it may be advisable to...oh...I get ya... ;-)
I actually have it on a hard drive, maybe I'll watch it tonight.
But I just finished dl'ing the first book edition of Lord of the Rings by Kerr, and I'm really excited to watch that, so we'll see
Me and my dad just finished watching Full Metal Jacket.
Since he was in Vietnam way back then, he was pretty critical of the film's not being very realistic to what actually happened.
I think that Kubrick wasn't trying to make it a war film.
It was a character study.
Still, he thought it was okay.
Pop's rating:
6/10
My rating:
10/10 (one of my new favorites)
The King Of Comedy.
Oceans
A very well shot documentary. Beautiful.
Since they're like poetry, what with the rhyming and all, I find that I only need to watch three out of the six films.
Ziggy Stardust said:
Me and my dad just finished watching Full Metal Jacket.
Since he was in Vietnam way back then, he was pretty critical of the film's not being very realistic to what actually happened.
I think that Kubrick wasn't trying to make it a war film.
It was a character study.
Still, he thought it was okay.
Pop's rating:
6/10
My rating:
10/10 (one of my new favorites)
My 1960's History professor, who was in Vietnam, insisted that every Vietnam movie except for We Were Soldiers is complete shit that doesn't capture what it was really like.
He particularly hated Platoon, and hated that people generally think it's realistic because they've been told it is, while he claimed that it was one of the most unrealistic Vietnam movies he'd ever seen.