Movie recommendations

Started by corn02, October 23, 2007, 10:13:39 AM

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leenie

Quote from: Jell 0 Biafra on January 23, 2016, 05:11:42 AM
Quote from: Hereiam on January 23, 2016, 01:01:37 AM
Watched the Big Short. Very very interesting film. I have to say we r fcuked big time.

Great movie.

Reckon I was the only person in the world going "That guy with the beard looks awfully familiar to me...I know I've seen him in something...."

Watched it , v good but a lot of dialogue/ jargon (think I need to watch it again), surprised Steve carrel didn't get a Oscar nod..
I'm trying to decide on a really meaningful message..

general_lee

Dead Pool was a good watch. Usually I am not one for these crap comic book superhero type films but this was something different altogether. If you like Ryan Reynolds' comedy you'll love it.

heffo

Quote from: general_lee on February 14, 2016, 07:54:43 PM
Dead Pool was a good watch. Usually I am not one for these crap comic book superhero type films but this was something different altogether. If you like Ryan Reynolds' comedy you'll love it.

Torrent or cinema

ballinaman

Room 8/10.

Harrowing stuff, quality acting. Gripping 2 hours.

blewuporstuffed

I watched Ex Machina over the weekend and thought it was pretty good.
7/10
I can only please one person per day. Today is not your day. Tomorrow doesn't look good either

Main Street

I found one  version of the (made for tv) 1958 German film It Happened in Broad Daylight being seeded on KAT (with eng subs).
The author who wrote the screen play for the 1958 film, angrily rejected the changes in plot that were imposed.
In response he wrote a book called The Pledge where he outlined his version of the screenplay, his story.
The Pledge 2001 dir Sean Penn was based on this book.

Both films were top heavy with the best actors of their day and very well made.
You might remember the increasingly obsessed Jack Nicholson's last hope to trap the serial killer was foiled by happenstance and he ended up truly deranged, not knowing he was right along.
The german film is different, the original 1958 B&W film is an out and out gripping, classic thriller and imo an improved story..

Walter Cronc

Saw Concussion with Will Smith. 7.5/10 for me. Very enjoyable.

The Iceman

Watched the Revenant in the Cinema and definitely enjoyed it but didn't think it was a masterpiece by any means. I'd give it 7/10
It felt at times like they tried to make an epic film by stealing epic scenes form other films?
Using gunpowder to seal a wound (rambo III)
Falling off a cliff through evergreen tree (Rambo I)
climbing inside the carcass of an animal to shelter form the cold (star wars episode V)
the lost love drifting in and out of dreams and wandering through the trees (braveheart)
escaping down a river from the pursuit of an enemy (too many movies to list)

It was well done. The CGI was fantastic, the bear scene was great but it was still Leo. I thought Hardy did a much better job
I will always keep myself mentally alert, physically strong and morally straight

Tony Baloney

Spotlight v. good bit not great. Dunno what Mark Ruffalo did to merit an Oscar nomination over his co-stars.

gallsman

Quote from: The Iceman on February 22, 2016, 06:58:22 PM
Watched the Revenant in the Cinema and definitely enjoyed it but didn't think it was a masterpiece by any means. I'd give it 7/10
It felt at times like they tried to make an epic film by stealing epic scenes form other films?
Using gunpowder to seal a wound (rambo III)
Falling off a cliff through evergreen tree (Rambo I)
climbing inside the carcass of an animal to shelter form the cold (star wars episode V)
the lost love drifting in and out of dreams and wandering through the trees (braveheart)
escaping down a river from the pursuit of an enemy (too many movies to list)

It was well done. The CGI was fantastic, the bear scene was great but it was still Leo. I thought Hardy did a much better job

Was the bear not the only CGI in the thing?

The Iceman

Quote from: gallsman on February 22, 2016, 10:29:51 PM
Quote from: The Iceman on February 22, 2016, 06:58:22 PM
Watched the Revenant in the Cinema and definitely enjoyed it but didn't think it was a masterpiece by any means. I'd give it 7/10
It felt at times like they tried to make an epic film by stealing epic scenes form other films?
Using gunpowder to seal a wound (rambo III)
Falling off a cliff through evergreen tree (Rambo I)
climbing inside the carcass of an animal to shelter form the cold (star wars episode V)
the lost love drifting in and out of dreams and wandering through the trees (braveheart)
escaping down a river from the pursuit of an enemy (too many movies to list)

It was well done. The CGI was fantastic, the bear scene was great but it was still Leo. I thought Hardy did a much better job

Was the bear not the only CGI in the thing?
the buffalo and the wolves, the horse coming off the cliff, the crow by the river - I thought that was all CGI?
I will always keep myself mentally alert, physically strong and morally straight

gallsman

You must be right I guess, they obviously can't be butchering animals but I thought I'd read that the bear scene was the only CGI in the thing. You're right though, that scene was spectacular. And horrifying.

Main Street

Spotlight ends up winning an Oscar for best film.
ironically written by one of  the sleaziest, most unscrupulous reporters ever to hit our screen, the liar from The Wire, Scott Templeton. 
I thought of it more as a docu drama rather than a film, as it managed to accurately depict most of  the whole picture in regard to the catholic clergy abuse of children and the equally immoral crime of the cover-up (aka pedophile enabling), via the plot line account of the Boston newspaper's investigation.

All the oscar nominated  foreign films and documentaries look to be worthwhile viewing .
I'll be starting  with Cartel Land
http://www.theguardian.com/film/2015/sep/06/cartel-land-review-alarming-account-mexican-drug-vigilantes

johnneycool

Quote from: The Iceman on February 22, 2016, 10:42:37 PM
Quote from: gallsman on February 22, 2016, 10:29:51 PM
Quote from: The Iceman on February 22, 2016, 06:58:22 PM
Watched the Revenant in the Cinema and definitely enjoyed it but didn't think it was a masterpiece by any means. I'd give it 7/10
It felt at times like they tried to make an epic film by stealing epic scenes form other films?
Using gunpowder to seal a wound (rambo III)
Falling off a cliff through evergreen tree (Rambo I)
climbing inside the carcass of an animal to shelter form the cold (star wars episode V)
the lost love drifting in and out of dreams and wandering through the trees (braveheart)
escaping down a river from the pursuit of an enemy (too many movies to list)

It was well done. The CGI was fantastic, the bear scene was great but it was still Leo. I thought Hardy did a much better job

Was the bear not the only CGI in the thing?
the buffalo and the wolves, the horse coming off the cliff, the crow by the river - I thought that was all CGI?
Sat through the revenant the other night and it was a bit meh. Yeah the bear scene was very good, but you'd hardly say Leo got his oscar for the dialogue in the film.


Hound

Quote from: Main Street on February 29, 2016, 10:26:20 AM
ironically written by one of  the sleaziest, most unscrupulous reporters ever to hit our screen, the liar from The Wire, Scott Templeton. 
I'm obviously missing something here. Scott Templeton was a character in the Wire - fictional surely?