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Post by ganews on Aug 14, 2024 23:08:49 GMT -5
Deadpool and Wolverine was a very silly and gratuitously violent movie made by and for people with the sense of humor of 12-year-old boys.
I deeply enjoyed it.
"It took literally every element from the first two Deadpool movies and turned it up to 11," I said to my friends. "Is that even possible?" they asked. "Oh, yes," I said.
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Post by Floyd Diabolical Barber on Aug 14, 2024 23:22:20 GMT -5
Deadpool and Wolverine was a very silly and gratuitously violent movie made by and for people with the sense of humor of 12-year-old boys.
I deeply enjoyed it.
"It took literally every element from the first two Deadpool movies and turned it up to 11," I said to my friends. "Is that even possible?" they asked. "Oh, yes," I said. My only disappointment with the movie is that we got there a few minutes late, and apparently I missed the first corpse desecration.
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Post by chalkdevil 😈 on Aug 15, 2024 8:30:10 GMT -5
"It took literally every element from the first two Deadpool movies and turned it up to 11," I said to my friends. "Is that even possible?" they asked. "Oh, yes," I said. My only disappointment with the movie is that we got there a few minutes late, and apparently I missed the first corpse desecration. Same thing happens when I'm late to my family's Thanksgiving dinner.
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Post by The Stuffingtacular She-Hulk on Aug 15, 2024 11:22:11 GMT -5
"It took literally every element from the first two Deadpool movies and turned it up to 11," I said to my friends. "Is that even possible?" they asked. "Oh, yes," I said. My only disappointment with the movie is that we got there a few minutes late, and apparently I missed the first corpse desecration. The only thing I wanted that I didn't get was the Fastball Special.
MY KINGDOM FOR THE FASTBALL SPECIAL
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Post by chalkdevil 😈 on Aug 15, 2024 11:34:32 GMT -5
My only disappointment with the movie is that we got there a few minutes late, and apparently I missed the first corpse desecration. The only thing I wanted that I didn't get was the Fastball Special.
MY KINGDOM FOR THE FASTBALL SPECIAL
I think it would really strain credibility when your Wolverine is like 6' 2". It would totally break the emersion.
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Post by The Stuffingtacular She-Hulk on Aug 15, 2024 12:58:39 GMT -5
The only thing I wanted that I didn't get was the Fastball Special.
MY KINGDOM FOR THE FASTBALL SPECIAL
I think it would really strain credibility when your Wolverine is like 6' 2". It would totally break the emersion. Not with the comics-accurate version we got for three seconds!
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Post by ganews on Aug 15, 2024 14:59:38 GMT -5
My only disappointment with the movie is that we got there a few minutes late, and apparently I missed the first corpse desecration. The only thing I wanted that I didn't get was the Fastball Special.
MY KINGDOM FOR THE FASTBALL SPECIAL
They did that in X3!
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Post by The Stuffingtacular She-Hulk on Aug 15, 2024 16:16:07 GMT -5
The only thing I wanted that I didn't get was the Fastball Special.
MY KINGDOM FOR THE FASTBALL SPECIAL
They did that in X3! But it wasn't FUN. It was X3.
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repulsionist
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Post by repulsionist on Aug 15, 2024 17:55:34 GMT -5
Fire and Ice (1983)
Like, uh, where is the original footage of Cynthia Leake for this?
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Post by Ben Grimm on Aug 15, 2024 19:00:13 GMT -5
The Apple (1980)
My wife had never seen or even heard of it, so we watched the Rifftrax version, and that is such a psychotic fever dream of a movie I'm surprised it hasn't been memed to death like The Room or one of the other bad movie classics. The production values are actually high enough to fool you into thinking it isn't just utterly batshit insane at times. But then literally anything happens and you wonder how anyone thought that this was going to work.
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Post by ganews on Aug 15, 2024 23:01:03 GMT -5
But it wasn't FUN. It was X3. Well, a loose collection of fun scenes has always been the best anyone could hope for from all but a Fox X-Men movie.
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Post by pantsgoblin on Aug 16, 2024 8:01:21 GMT -5
The Apple (1980) My wife had never seen or even heard of it, so we watched the Rifftrax version, and that is such a psychotic fever dream of a movie I'm surprised it hasn't been memed to death like The Room or one of the other bad movie classics. The production values are actually high enough to fool you into thinking it isn't just utterly batshit insane at times. But then literally anything happens and you wonder how anyone thought that this was going to work. It's hard to think of a movie more purely fueled by coke. Speaking of Rifftrax and Colombian marching powder, I caught the rebroadcast of their live riff of Point Break the other day, which I'd never seen. Whoa is that movie a mess. A major plot point is Keanu recognizing a guy's ass.
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Post by Ron Howard Voice on Aug 17, 2024 11:52:11 GMT -5
Enjoyable trash melodrama. Marilyn Monroe and Joseph Cotten are a miserable married couple who want to murder each other at Niagara Falls, if only the pesky hotel guests next door wouldn't stop getting in the way. Great bright Technicolor look, amazing use of the Niagara Falls scenery, some quaint humor. Ultimately, as a drama, it fails because neither Monroe nor Cotten deliver on acting. She isn't given a lot of work to do, and he is given too much: he's asked to play a violent psycho, throwing things and destroying rooms, but he's just too gosh-darned sane and meek as an actor to make it work. (And he doesn't have Hitchcock to urge him onto the genuine creepiness he shows in Shadow of a Doubt.) It feels like you're watching a nice guy be completely irrational, rather than a true villain. Anyway, it's still a super fun watch because it's visually so great. The huge falls themselves, the thrilling climactic scene where two characters are at risk of going over the falls' edge, the bright green springtime colors, Marilyn Monroe in her pajamas... This is a 50-minute documentary about Serbian culture in the US. Though it achieves real depth from its documentation of the political and economic oppression of decades past - they interview mine workers who suffered under the robber barons! - it's mostly just a big ol' hoot full of cool music, funny interview subjects, folk dancing, and kindly thoughts. The brother from the folk band is a real highlight in all his performances and interviews. A little bit sentimental and wonderful. First things first: Glen Powell is the next Brad Pitt. Charming, naturally funny, has acting range, hot but a little bit odd lookin', and absolutely magnetic on the screen no matter what he is doing - this dude's a star. Adria Arjona: kinda ditto, actually. You can't take your eyes off them. The first 43 minutes of this movie are an almost exactly true reprise of the Texas Monthly article about the real Gary Johnson (not the libertarian), who really did teach psychology, have cats named Id and Ego, and double as a fake hit man who helped the police catch dozens of wannabe bad guys. He even really busted a teenage kid who tried to pay him in video game cartridges. But halfway through, the movie transitions to pure Hollywood. As a person who'd read the original article, I was worried about this. But the movie is so charmingly dumb that I rolled with it. It's a dumb movie written and directed by smart people. You know: it's funny, cool, super well-made, horny, twisted, and also completely ridiculous. There's a nice reference to No Country for Old Men. The montages of people he busts are all loads of fun, and feature tons of cool character actors. You can't think about the plot too hard because it's such a close divide between actual true story and absurd fantasy. (The ending is especially absurd.) But the plot goes dark enough and the ride is fun enough that I had a good time. Plus, moving the setting from Houston to New Orleans allowed them to build a stacked soundtrack full of bangers. Perfect afternoon movie with a beer. Certainly, in my unplanned double feature of Movies Where an Accidental Visitor Tries to Prevent a Married Couple From Murdering Each Other in a Gorgeous Tourist Landmark, this is the better-made of the two.
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Post by pantsgoblin on Aug 19, 2024 10:05:47 GMT -5
Double feature for the DNC Medium Cool (1969) Last saw this one in a screening around the 2008 convention. Still a bracing, unsettling look at the national angst of 1968 (if a bit too sentimental with the family of Appalachian innocents adrift in Chicago) and one with additional resonance now that I know more about the Windy City Black Panthers. The last third of Haskell Wexler shooting his female lead fearlessly traversing the tear gas and tanks of the DNC demonstration has lost nothing of its power and the film earns its black-hole-bleak ending. The Best Man (1964) Coincidentally, Haskell Wexler also shot this adaptation of Gore Vidal's 1960 play about a contested Democrat convention. An impressively scummy Cliff Robertson plays an opportunistic Senator taking on the frontrunner, the retiring President's preferred nominee played by Henry Fonda. In a prediction of the McGovern/Eagleton ticket in 1972, Robertson has in his possession a medical history of mental illness in Fonda and he's not afraid to deploy it, leading Fonda to wrestle with unleashing their own personal attack (via a character witness played twitchily by the comedian Shelley Berman). Overall a little too pleased with itself but smartly told and relevant to the Dems' current debate over going high vs. low. Journeyman director Franklin Schaffner would go on to make everything from Planet of the Apes and Patton to Yes, Giorgio.
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Post by Celebith on Aug 21, 2024 22:47:23 GMT -5
Managed to squeeze in a viewing of Deadpool / Wolverine and thoroughly enjoyed it. Glad I avoided spoilers - that one cameo when they get to the wasteland was worth the price of admission.
Also, it's a better Borderlands movie than Borderlands. Which isn't saying much, even if it is true.
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Post by pantsgoblin on Aug 22, 2024 8:46:54 GMT -5
Sherlock Jr. (1924)
Screening with a live accompaniment from a pianist and string quartet as part of a chamber music festival. I had seen a previous such Buster Keaton with a live score a couple of years ago (Seven Chances) but this one was much better. Where Seven Chances is mostly a comedy of manners, Sherlock Jr. is a prime example of the slapstick and special effects that made him a legend--Keaton didn't have a high opinion of the former and actually tried to block it from being restored in the '60s.
This one also had resonance because, just a few hours before the screening, I had a nasty fall onto my right arm while hiking and I was in a ton of pain. One of the stunts--the one where he falls from a railyard water tower in a deluge--fractured his neck vertebrae and he had debilitating migraines for years afterward.
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repulsionist
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Post by repulsionist on Aug 25, 2024 14:21:47 GMT -5
Paul (2011)
"Friends, or more than friends?", is a subtextual question playfully asked a number of times in this film. Frosty square-pegging of round holes in the American Southwest. Rogen as alien feels much like Rogen as local. It did get made. It was released and distributed. Congratulations to all getting this in the can, whatever can that may be.
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Post by pantsgoblin on Aug 26, 2024 8:23:49 GMT -5
Harry Belafonte double feature for no particular reason
The World, The Flesh and The Devil (1959)
Belafonte’s charisma and a smattering of good ideas can only do so much to enliven this flat, sluggish Twilight Zone-esque story. He stars as Ralph, a miner who emerges after a week trapped underground to find all of humanity wiped out from some sort of Cold War MAD event (the film never goes beyond describing it as “atmospheric radiation” nor does it explain why there are no bodies to be found). The movie peaks early showing Ralph temporarily losing his mind while wandering around a silent Manhattan. From there, it shuffles through narrative dead-ends including him encountering 2 other survivors, both of them useless, unlikable drips who Ralph should have just scrapped for parts. An unconvincing “we shall rebuild” conclusion, complete with a title card saying “THE BEGINNING”; this one’s for apocalypse movie completists only.
Odds Against Tomorrow (1959)
Belafonte pulled the strings on this production, bringing in blacklisted screenwriter Abraham Polonsky, and he's top-billed but really this is a love letter to noir stalwart Robert Ryan and it feels like a real-time elegy for the post-war wave of crime thrillers. While nothing earth-shattering, a nicely dirty noir from director Robert Wise and shot in NYC's less savory corners. Jean-Pierre Melville apparently considered it a formative influence on his films.
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Post by pantsgoblin on Aug 26, 2024 9:20:19 GMT -5
Paul (2011) "Friends, or more than friends?", is a subtextual question playfully asked a number of times in this film. Frosty square-pegging of round holes in the American Southwest. Rogen as alien feels much like Rogen as local. It did get made. It was released and distributed. Congratulations to all getting this in the can, whatever can that may be. My father-in-law was an extra on this and you can see him for a split-second. His truck is prominently featured in the town square scenes.
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Post by pantsgoblin on Aug 27, 2024 10:52:01 GMT -5
Harry Belafonte double feature for no particular reason The World, The Flesh and The Devil (1959) Damnit, isn't anyone going to tee up the joke of "shouldn't a Belafonte end-of-the-world movie be called Apocalypso" so I can respond with "Day-O!"?
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Post by NicoNicoRose on Aug 27, 2024 14:30:34 GMT -5
My wife and I watched the 2004 Hideaki Anno live-action Cutie Honey movie and I had a quasi-religious experience not unlike watching a Wachowski Sisters movie. It is a movie that looks like the inside of my brain. The exact blend of silly, goofily horny, and sincere that I adore.
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Post by chalkdevil 😈 on Aug 28, 2024 10:45:38 GMT -5
Alien: Romulus
I went to see this with a buddy in the theater as was pretty thoroughly whelmed. It's some sort of mid-quel, taking place between Alien and Aliens, and it starts out with some fun set design that really captures the 70s sci-fi tech of the original. Then we meet are characters who are young and attractive* indentured servants on a mining colony. "The Company" is screwing them over by extending their years of service so they take it upon themselves to try and salvage some cryopods from a derelict ship in orbit around the planet so they can escape off world. Things go down hill from there, both in terms of the characters' lives and the quality of the movie. It does start out promising. The indentured servant idea is interesting and something that hasn't been really been addressed in this franchise. The main character and obvious final girl (Rain - I think her name is - they say it a million times but they must have used Nolan's sound mixer because a lot of the dialog was hard to decipher) has a android "brother" - because you gotta have an android - who is an old, out of date model who behaves a way that I would say is a pretty heavily Autism coded. He is by far the best character in the movie and the best performance - much like Prometheus/Covenant movies. But it never really amounts to anything as the movie devolves into fan service and soft-reboot territory as it keeps remixing bits from previous movies in the franchise - including a absolutely terrible and unnecessary deepfake that signifies the start of the movies decline. It doesn't do enough to justify it's existence and in no way goes back to the franchise's horror roots. Outside of a few jump scares that rely entirely on ridiculously loud banging sounds to startle people, there is no real tension or fear. The best you get is some creepy creature design, but it's not enough.
* This movie really needed some character actors to vary things up. Everyone being like 24 years old and attractive made it feel like a predictable, post-Scream slasher then a back-to-basics Alien movie.
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Post by ganews on Aug 28, 2024 21:52:18 GMT -5
Airplane Movie Theater - I flew across the world and back so there are a lot of entries.
Challengers They hype was right, it really was good. I don't think even an 18-year-old phenom who looks like Zendaya would be that worldly and confident at 18, but they chose the most plausible actress possible. Too bad the two dudes aren't as good looking. I thought to myself that the monumental final point of "real tennis" that provokes the famous Zendaya reaction still is just what normal pickleball looks like.
Room Goddamn, what a performance. I knew the premise of this but I didn't expect it to include the story of recovery from the trauma, which really made this great.
The Hangover Definitely not my kind of movie, I don't know why I even chose it. I didn't hate it but there wasn't much to like. I forgot that this was every Zach Galfianakis character.
Dicks: The Musical Wacky fun that got even more over the top as it went. I appreciate that the clips over the credits show some of the original sketch production which I feel is how this was meant to be seen, but good for them for getting Nathan Lane to do this (it's certainly a better use of his time than The Gilded Age).
Lisa Frankenstein A brilliant title that the movie cannot quite live up to. This isn't Diablo Cody's version of Frankenweenie, it's her version of Heathers, with Robin Williams' daughter directing a Tim Burton sensibility.
If Junk that I barely paid attention to. John Krasinski rips off "Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends" in every way and directs Ryan Reynolds as a better father figure than him.
Collateral Extremely early 2000s, it even uses "Ready Steady Go" in the soundtrack. Jamie Fox made this the same year as Ray? Tom Cruise runs around and I never heard why the movie has this title. It's Michael Mann, it's fine.
Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story Usually this is my answer to "greatest music biopic every made" (a category that does not include This is Spinal Tap), although it's not as laugh-out-loud funny as the first time I watched it, and I really like Ray. Still good though. Hey that's Jack White as Elvis!
The Ministry on Ungentlemanly Warfare Whereas Ritchie's The Man from U.N.C.L.E. has a very high rewatchability factor, this is merely Inglourious Basterds as written by Guy Ritchie. And boy does he not compare well to Tarantino. It's almost an inversion - one of the Basterds is now a bad guy; it's based on a true story instead of a gleeful alternate fantasy; the men do the heavy lifting instead of being ancillary to actual goal; the woman makes the final kill that provides actual satisfaction though not the actual completion of the mission; and Ritchie's movie makes no time for emotional build.
Problemista I had watched Julio Torres HBO series "Fantasmas" and quite enjoyed it. This had similar comic magical realism themes and a whole lot of Torres' sensibilities and was really good. I think the guy got Tilda Swinton and Isabella Rosselini to do his movie just on the strength of how good he is.
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Post by ganews on Aug 31, 2024 16:28:35 GMT -5
The American Society of Magical Negroes
Actually this was also an airplane watch, but I felt at the time that is deserved its own post. This seemed at first like it was going to be a take-off on Harry Potter, but it came out to be a reasonable entertaining movie in its own right. First of all, it's a secret rom-com as much as a satire of race in America.
The kid from Pokemon Detective Pikachu stars as a struggling visual artist and self-effacing black dude who can't stand up for himself at all. David Alan Grier shows up to say "yer a wizard Harry" and introduce him to the title organization which uses magic to sooth flustered white people everywhere for the betterment of black folks. The first assignment is some hopeless white techbro, whom our protagonist must sooth while also trying not to take the bro's love interest - not easy because he just had a ridiculous meet-cute with said love interest, they work at the same place, and they are way into each other. Our protagonist will have his memory erased if he violates the society rules, which he ultimately does anyway by telling off the bro in front of everybody. David Alan Grier kind of pardons him anyway, he gets the girl, and in the stinger she meets the "Society of Supportive Wives and Girlfriends".
loose thoughts:
It was entertaining, if not epically biting satire. The only harsh line is when the protagonist protests, "but my mom's white!" and Grier retorts, "and I bet that didn't mess you up at all." They make clear reference to The Green Mile if not by name which leads to some laughs. Too bad they didn't reference any of the many other movie examples of the trope. The artist's thing is "yarn sculpture" and it's hilarious because that not only exists but he is really bad at knitting (as evidenced by the sweater he wears during the climax that could have been done by a 6th grader). The movie doesn't have the style, budget, inventiveness, or star power of HBO's "Lovecraft Country" which went in some really interesting directions.
It also didn't have the style, inventiveness, or star power of Sorry to Bother You. However, it's actually much better and more timely in its criticism of capitalism, and its story makes a lot more sense. Sorry to Bother You went gonzo, but this makes its points very clearly. STBY also had some rather disturbing sexist stuff in there (think of Lakeith Stanfield breaking up with Tessa Thompson) that this thankfully lacked.
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Post by Jean-Luc Lemur on Sept 1, 2024 16:19:44 GMT -5
It’s been a while so there’s a fair number, splitting into three:
Prospero’s Books. Wow, like nothing else I’ve ever seen in a good way, a moving Renaissance book or painting in the best possible way (mostly), taking real advantage of the capabilities of film as a visual language. It does help if you remember the plot of The Tempest, though. It’s the story told from the point-of-view of the puppet master, which is a bigger adjustment than you’d think (especially if you don’t remember all the politics of the play and are going off Forbidden Planet to remember the plot). It also loses its momentum around the betrothal of Miranda and Ferdinand. If you look at a painting of a feast you can control how much attention you give to certain parts. Here you’re forced to look at each entrée and gift for a certain amount of time and that’s just not interesting.
The Desperate Hours. A gangster played by Humphrey Bogart holds up an Indianapolis household. Unfortunately the energy’s more Indianapolis than Bogart (and he’s slowed down too—Bogart’s not ancient but it’s also not surprising he only has a couple of years left).
Bernie. Head-and-shoulders above Hit Man
Fist of Fury. Is it weird I was disappointed in this? Enter the Dragon is a masterpiece, Way of the Dragon a solid action-comedy, and Bruce Lee in concession-era Shanghai? That should rock, right? The fights are good—that’s obviously not nothing—but there’s nothing really engaging around them, so they’re just setpieces, not expressions of culminations of anything. I guess it’s understandable because of budget and available actors—there’s a reason they only fight the Japanese plus one white guy, who’s disappointingly “Russian” instead of British/French/American—but concession-era Shanghai is such a big setting, and so primed to be fucked up by Bruce Lee, that I probably went in with impossible expectations.
Dìdi. We might be in entering the age of aughts nostalgia It’s interesting that the character’s a about five years younger than me because so it’s odd to see stuff I remember slightly shifted (e.g. I also had no idea MySpace and AIM held on that long among the sub-college crowd). It’s good but one of the cringiest films I’ve seen in a while—Chris’s character makes choices orders (plural) of magnitude worse than I did as an early adolescent. It was also strange to see Joan Chen here so close after seeing The Last Emperor, though she’s definitely aged well (she’s roughly my mother’s age, so she’s playing someone now who was about my mother’s age in 2008).
Dìdi also made me realize my Chinese has held up better than my French, so…
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Post by William T. Goat, Esq. on Sept 1, 2024 19:47:10 GMT -5
I watched Disney's live-action Aladdin remake this week. Thoughts: Hot take: Will Smith is no Robin Williams. Kind of surprised they went completely CGI instead of just superimposing his real face onto the blue genie's body. The guy playing Aladdin does look shockingly like the cartoon character though. I spent the whole movie wondering why Jasmine's handmaiden looked so familiar. Checked the credits: It's Nasim Pedrad, who I know from SNL. Why is Iago even there if he's not gonna quip? Different ending for the genie, not going to lead to an animated series
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Post by pantsgoblin on Sept 1, 2024 21:18:45 GMT -5
Old (2021)
The first Shyamalan for me since The Visit, which I thoroughly enjoyed and it reinforced my theory that he's a good filmmaker if you force limitations on him. But this is a return to the M. Night trademarks of, um, old: idiosyncratically awful dialogue, otherwise quality actors (Gael Garcia Bernal, Thomasin McKenzie, Rufus Sewell) giving the stiffest performances, key dramatic scenes inexplicably shot from 50 feet away. And even for Shyamalan these are unbelievably stupid twists; scores of missing people all went to the same resort yet nobody had ever put it together before now. Like The Happening, it's undeniably a wretched movie but the stupidity is on a level that circles back to almost brilliant.
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LazBro
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Post by LazBro on Sept 4, 2024 8:56:17 GMT -5
A rare Monday movie night with the kids, since we'd been out of town all weekend and wanted to keep it chill before life restarted on Tuesday. We picked.
Ace Venture: When Nature Calls - I'm pleased to report that for the next generation, 30 years later, the rhino scene still kills.
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Post by pantsgoblin on Sept 9, 2024 8:21:09 GMT -5
The Endless (2017)
Despite opening with a Lovecraft quote, the premise on this sci-fi more resembles early Weird Fiction writer (and key Lovecraft influence) Algernon Blackwood, specifically “The Willows”. Indie filmmakers Justin Benson and Aaron Moorehead direct and play characters with the same names, a pair of brothers who were raised by a culty commune but who fled at some point. A decade later, they temporarily return to the farm based on their unsatisfying lives in the big city and find some time-loop based strangeness afoot. While a bit overlong and stodgy-paced, there’s a refreshing lack of villainy in any character and the dynamic of the brothers (the neurotic control-freak Justin and the sweetly childlike Aaron) feels lived-in. Worth a view.
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Post by pantsgoblin on Sept 15, 2024 13:32:40 GMT -5
Friday the 13th (1980)
Every so often I'll humor Ms. Goblin in seeing the slasher movies--which I almost never like--that her arty family wouldn't allow her to watch as a kid (same with Child's Play). Not bad for one of these. To paraphrase a favorite line from the critic Bill Wyman, slashers were always a dumb idea but it was their dumb idea, so credit where it's due.
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