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Movies You've Seen Recently |OT| March 2017

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TheFlow

Banned
Floating Weeds (1959) I love this film so much. Are there other Ozu fans on here? Which of his earlier films is worth checking out? He made a ton of stuff between 1927-1950, and I'm sure it isn't all great. Makes me wonder about directors working today that will totally own their craft towards the tail-end of their careers. It might not even be possible anymore the way films are made these days like how Spielberg complains about not being able to find financing to make his films. Anyway, I'm rambling...
Get the filmstruck free trial. All his stuff is on there. Including the lost stuff I believe. Surprinsgly they hold up.



To the other guy how you going to start with the devil backbone before Cronos! pans labyrinth is a great spiritual sequel to devils backbone. Perfect double features
 

Icolin

Banned
To the other guy how you going to start with the devil backbone before Cronos! pans labyrinth is a great spiritual sequel to devils backbone. Perfect double features

I was at my local public library and saw Devil's Backbone and borrowed it on a whim, lol.


And the double feature idea for Devil's Backbone/Pan's Labyrinth sounds neat, I'll try it in the future. They both have a ton of similarities, and GDT has called them companion pieces, so it should work out well.
 
My all-time favorite. That fucking soundtrack is timeless and De Niro in this film is godlike. I watch this film once every year and everytime it's such an experience of dreams, fantasies and good/bittersweet memories.

Most memorable soundtrack ever as far as I'm concerned. Hearing just a few notes of any piece/variation instantly makes me nostalgic and wanting to go to New York.

I (kind of) understand someone who doesn't think this movie is a masterpiece but how anyone would find it boring I can't fathom.
 

crustikid

Member
Get the filmstruck free trial. All his stuff is on there. Including the lost stuff I believe. Surprinsgly they hold up.

Giving filmstruck a year to get their shit together. I tried the free trial back in Jan and it was a mess for me. It really stinks that xfinity won't let me use the TCM app. That alone would sustain me.
 

UrbanRats

Member
20th Century Women (Mike Mills, 2016) - This movie felt like a nice hug.
About halfway through i was fearing it being too meandering, but the characters all came together nicely, and Roger Neill did an amazing job diving home that intense nostalgia for childhood, better than most movies trying the same trick.
Having a movie about teens going through their annoying phase, and having it not be irritating, is in itself an achievement, too.

I'll try to catch Beginners, now.
 
I didn't think they made films like The Space Between Usanymore, honestly. Since YA film adaptations seemed to be flopping all over the shop anyway. But here it is, and it was rubbish. What a shocker.

In a overly explained yet still convuluted sense, a kid is born on a NASA mission to Mars and thus his body is different so he couldn't survive on earth and has to live on a base on Mars, but when he is finally given his chance to go to earth, he immediately bolts from the NASA station and hooks up with the girl he's been chatting with on the internet from Mars cos neither of these children has ever heard of Catfishing and neither has the film, meanwhile the NASA people including Gary Oldman need to get him back for dumb plot reasons and also the most obvious twists imaginable.

So thats a long paragraph, but not only is the story over explained, a lot of stuff is still unexplained and makes no sense in the film. Every character is broadly written to the point of parody and badly acted, it doesn't even look very good considering the material they've got to work with, look at how The Martian made Mars look dang it.

The acting is bad, the music choices and sound effects are bad, the story is bad, and... I dunno. Oldman is good, I guess? Rubbish though overall.
Asa Butter whatever his name is sure is a bad actor.
 

TheFlow

Banned
I was at my local public library and saw Devil's Backbone and borrowed it on a whim, lol.


And the double feature idea for Devil's Backbone/Pan's Labyrinth sounds neat, I'll try it in the future. They both have a ton of similarities, and GDT has called them companion pieces, so it should work out well.

I had to do this until the filmstruck app came out. Libraries are the goat when it comes to criterion movies.
 

Skinpop

Member
Are there other Ozu fans on here? Which of his earlier films is worth checking out? He made a ton of stuff between 1927-1950, and I'm sure it isn't all great.
I'm a huge fan. Personally I hold Ozu as one of the top 3 in film of all time.

Banshun (1949 )is amazing, one of his best so maybe start with that?

Have you seen Sanma no aji? Probably my favorite ozu.
 

MoodyFog

Member
Floating Weeds (1959) I love this film so much. Are there other Ozu fans on here? Which of his earlier films is worth checking out? He made a ton of stuff between 1927-1950, and I'm sure it isn't all great. Makes me wonder about directors working today that will totally own their craft towards the tail-end of their careers. It might not even be possible anymore the way films are made these days like how Spielberg complains about not being able to find financing to make his films. Anyway, I'm rambling...

Chichi ariki, Nagaya shinshiroku, Ohayo, and Banshun
 

dcassell

Banned
First time seeing them? I envy you. Rewatched them recently thinking I'll find them worse than I remember them being, ended up cementing themselves as my favorite movie trilogy. Phenomenal movies.

I have seen none of the "Before" movies. I like Ethan Hawke. What do you like about them? I have never seen anything from these films, and am debating on laying down the money for that bluray collection.

I watched Moana. It was exactly what I expected, but still made me feel warm and fuzzy. Sadly my least favorite Disney score of the recent movies, though I wanted to love it.

I also saw The Edge of Seventeen, which I had never heard of before whatsoever. Saw a 95% Tomatometer and my father in law loves Woody Harrelson, so we checked it out with my in laws. They all loved it, and I thought it was a really solid coming of age movie. I have a soft spot for teenage dramas, but this was an excellent one.
 

WolfeTone

Member
I have seen none of the "Before" movies. I like Ethan Hawke. What do you like about them? I have never seen anything from these films, and am debating on laying down the money for that bluray collection.

I'm not the person you quoted, but I'ma big fan of the Before movies and Linklater movies in general. The Before movies have very little plot, each movie is essentially a conversation between two people. The dialogue is extremely well-written and the performances of the leads are outstanding.

It's hard to list movies which are similar to these, but if you liked any of Linklater's other work, they're worth a shot.
 

JTripper

Member
Raw: This is the best coming-of-age movie of 2017 so far. Fun for the whole fam!

That was fucking disgusting.

I thought it was great.
 
Watched After Hours for a third time last night. Wow, still love it. Rosanna Arquette was so hot in this. I found it even funnier than previous viewings. This is a masterwork, brehs.
 

dcassell

Banned
I'm not the person you quoted, but I'ma big fan of the Before movies and Linklater movies in general. The Before movies have very little plot, each movie is essentially a conversation between two people. The dialogue is extremely well-written and the performances of the leads are outstanding.

It's hard to list movies which are similar to these, but if you liked any of Linklater's other work, they're worth a shot.

Dazed and Confused in a top 10 movie for me, and I did like Boyhood quite a bit. I'll have to check these out eventually, but the $68 price tag on the collection is killer.
 

WolfeTone

Member
Dazed and Confused in a top 10 movie for me, and I did like Boyhood quite a bit. I'll have to check these out eventually, but the $68 price tag on the collection is killer.

You can rent the first movie in the trilogy from Amazon for $4.

I've not watched the Criterion versions but I'm not sure that these are the type of movies that would benefit much from a high quality Blu Ray transfer, but maybe that's just me. I'm sure the extras are worth it.
 

dcassell

Banned
You can rent the first movie in the trilogy from Amazon for $4.

I've not watched the Criterion versions but I'm not sure that these are the type of movies that would benefit much from a high quality Blu Ray transfer, but maybe that's just me. I'm sure the extras are worth it.

Oh shoot, the first two are on Amazon Prime for free. Might watch that tonight then!
 
20 million miles to earth (1957) - first, you get an Sicilian fisherman doing the most Italian thing possible: heroically charging into Dutch angle to saves people from a sinking US space missile. Then, as they have brought two survivors to the coast, a kid does the second most Italian thing with a tube that washed up on the shore: steal the shit out of it and sell it to a local zoologist. And later, when the tube turns out to be important, that little shit turns out to be a greedy little shit too. Thanks to that little shit, a confused stop-motion creature from Venus is basically just hunted until the humans kill it. Yeah, that's the whole thing. Also, you get to see those depressing shit-prisons people used to call 'a zoo' where a (REAL) elephant is herded with a pitchfork, and then turns into stop-motion to fight the creature for some reason. But really, I fucking hate zoos. And I hate this movie. I fucking hate it. I suppose the stop-motion is nice, considering its maker went to make Jason and the Argonaughts, but this 'story' (oh yeah, there was also a disease on the ship that didn't matter) can go straight to hell. Nothing clever about it, except for the line that explains why bullets wouldn't kill it: no heart and lungs. Joan Taylor had great screen presence though.
But other that that I got nothing but hate.

X-Com: the movie
wait, no, that's wrong.... (I suspect it's totally an inspiration for X-Com though, with satellites being shot down and all... seriously, whoever is playing in this movie, their satellite game sucks ass. This is how the aliens won, man! )
Earth vs The Flying Saucers (1956) - this will be the end of my '50s run for a while (Hitchcock and Klaatu can wait), but at least it's got something going good going for it: presumably inspiring both X-Com and Mars Attacks (it has the same saucers as the latter). And twenty minutes in or humans just attacked a landing without provocation. Wow. This is going to a loooong remaining hour isn't it.
edit: oh thank god, there is something of a reason for it.
edit2: hahaha, it went full on Mars Attacks. I recognize so many shots. OH! And there goes the obelisk, yeeeeaaaah. Turnaround, baby. ACK! ACK ACK! and then the aliens get drunk and keep crashing, x-com force claims responsibility. And the Capitol building, yeeeeaaaah!
aawww, and then it's just over. Schucks, I was hoping for some Indian Love Call to finish it off.
Oh no, now I have to pretend to complain about Tim Burton completely ripping off this movie for parody purposes. hahaha, fuck no.

I am glad I somehow managed to save the best for last though. Man, the 50s sure were hit or miss.
 

crustikid

Member
I'm a huge fan. Personally I hold Ozu as one of the top 3 in film of all time.

Banshun (1949 )is amazing, one of his best so maybe start with that?

Have you seen Sanma no aji? Probably my favorite ozu.

Yes, I checked out An Autumn Afternoon. Really dug the viagra pills and generally innocent Japanese old men trolling each other. His use of ellipses was quite interesting.

Ozu feels like the antithesis to everything I'm seeing as of late, I love it.

Chichi ariki, Nagaya shinshiroku, Ohayo, and Banshun

Should I do Late Spring before Tokyo Story? I was considering waiting for Tokyo Story to play in 35mm near me, but that might be too long of a wait. I think I'll save Ohayo for the Criterion restoration coming in May.
 
Oh shoot, the first two are on Amazon Prime for free. Might watch that tonight then!
The other poster already answered your question, but yeah, see it. It's basically what I call a "walkie-talkie" kinda movie. It's only about two characters getting to know each other in the span of a single night. Watch the first one and skip the other's if you don't like it. They're mostly the same, the "plot" structure doesn't change, only the tone but that's because the characters get older. Highly recommend them though.
 
trainspotting-600x269.jpg


Sorry for the double post but I just came out of a screening of T2: Trainspotting and I'm surprised by how much I enjoyed it. It's a pretty strong follow-up to the original, but quite a bit more depressing than it. If T1 is the memory of you doing stupid shit as a kid, T2 is the realization afterwards, that maybe what you did was wrong and repeating the same mistakes over and over will get you nowhere. A standout once again was Spud's character arc (maybe even more so than in the original) and Frank's usual bullshit. IMO two things are what brings the movie down a little bit in the end. First is that it's a bit too reliant on moments from first movie, instead of standing on its own with wholly original material. The other thing is that some of the stuff that happens in the third act make sense considering the characters but might not be what I was looking for, in terms of a conclusion. Also I couldn't help myself but giggle every time there was a small reference to my country by Sickboy's girlfriend.

Overall, definitely recommended. Very far from the generation defining masterpiece that is T1, but still quality enough to make a worthy follow-up.

... also why the hell did it take 2 months for it to come out in the US ffs?
 
I don't know if this Life movie is gonna be any good, but god bless Ryan Reynolds and Jake Gyllenhaal for hijacking every interview I've seen from their press run and wasting everyone's time.
 
I don't know if this Life movie is gonna be any good, but god bless Ryan Reynolds and Jake Gyllenhaal for hijacking every interview I've seen from their press run and wasting everyone's time.
The best thing about mediocre to bad movies are the interviews cause that's where they seem to be having a lot of fun. Ryan Reynolds is hilarious in that Wired interview, he must have done improv.

https://youtu.be/z4Ezruu1oeQ
 
It's so strange when you see bits of yourself in a character. Not in the sense of say, identifying with a character like a superhero or an action hero, I mean when you see yourself in a character. It's weird, but cool, specially if its done right.

Like the character Jane in this film, I have Aspergers Syndrome, something you don't see in films often, and specially don't see done well often. So before anything else about Jane Wants a Boyfriend is said, the performance of Louisa Krause as Jane is really excellent. Mainly cos like I said, I see a lot of myself in her performance. Good performance, to the extent it made me uncomfortable.

Apart from that? Jane wants a boyfriend is a pretty decent film. Didn't blow my mind or anything, although watching someone with this condition also struggle with almost any form of social interaction very like myself hit me right in the feels. It feels like an honest film, despite the cookie cutter plot, decent to good performances from the rest of the cast, specially Eliza Dushku.

It's a difficult film for me to judge objectively, I almost think. Given how it connects to me on the personal level. But I don't think that makes my feelings invalid? It's a good film, and I highly reccomend it.
 

UrbanRats

Member
Paterson (Jim Jarmusch, 2016) - Adorable, comfy movie.
I'm starting to really like Adam Driver, a lot.
Kind of weird, but i think this is only my second or third Jarmusch movie (other one i remember watching is Broken Flowers, which wasn't all that, maybe Down By Law, but i barely remember anything about it).
Very beautiful little movie about finding poetry in the mundane.
His girlfriend was cute af, too.
The dog was also great.
 

thenexus6

Member
The Hidden Fortress

Man, why do I put off watching films sometimes? I've owned this for like seven years and only just watched it. I watched it in three parts because I was so tired everynight which isn't the best way to experience a film but whatever.

I thought it was great. Fantastic action, comedy, neat story / the tricks the characters pull off. Can see alot of the Star Wars influence too.

Want to try and watch Stray Dog later but not sure.. as its Kurosawa's birthday today!
 

lordxar

Member
The Hidden Fortress

Man, why do I put off watching films sometimes? I've owned this for like seven years and only just watched it. I watched it in three parts because I was so tired everynight which isn't the best way to experience a film but whatever.

I thought it was great. Fantastic action, comedy, neat story / the tricks the characters pull off. Can see alot of the Star Wars influence too.

Want to try and watch Stray Dog later but not sure.. as its Kurosawa's birthday today!

I should resume my Kurosawa marathon this weekend. Hidden Fortress is the very next film on my list...
 

Sean C

Member
Design for Living (1933): I rewatched this in the Criterion edition I bought a while ago (I own all the extant Lubitsch Blu-rays, to encourage the production of more of them). This viewing more or less reinforced my initial view of it, namely, that it's a very amiable comedy with a last act that never quite seems founded on what came before. But it's really remarkable in terms of the degree of sexual agency the female lead has. Also, Gary Cooper is a boring actor, but this is about as lively as I've ever seen him onscreen.
 
Elle
Movie made me feel very uncomfortable. Huppert is great as the main character in it but there wasn't a whole lot else that I really enjoyed. It seems as though there is going to be a mystery, but that kind of fizzles out
and honestly its disappointingly obvious who the culprit is
, and the movie is much less of a 'noir thriller' than it has been advertised as, which can be blamed on the marketing folks and not the movie at all. At points it can be cringe inducing in a funny sort of way, but the dark nature of the subject matter and the kind of strange way in which Huppert's character handles it had me squirming throughout. If that was Paul Verheoven's intention - which I'm 100 per cent sure it was - then well done to him, but its not something I would recommend to anyone else.

Was funny to see the game Styx throughout the movie.

Make a shlocky action movie again Paul!
 

faridmon

Member
I
I also saw The Edge of Seventeen, which I had never heard of before whatsoever. Saw a 95% Tomatometer and my father in law loves Woody Harrelson, so we checked it out with my in laws. They all loved it, and I thought it was a really solid coming of age movie. I have a soft spot for teenage dramas, but this was an excellent one.

Woody Harrelson was freaking amazing. Anytime he was on screen, I dying of laughter.

Great movie, dare II say one of the best coming of age movies. The characters all felt very believable and the drama was fairly grounded with great character progression.
 
You're referring to this thing, right?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z2VZ_OGz0RU

"NO EYES!"

Awesome.

I'm referring to all of it. Watch any interview from thier junket that day and see how they tank 4 of the 5/6 minutes allotted to every single interview. You can even make a timeline because they start calling back to jokes from different interviews and the Wired Autocomplete thing. Like De Niro levels of "do not care about these fluff interviews" filtered through a stoner comedy
 

Pachimari

Member
Mighty Morphin Power Rangers (1995) - ★★★☆☆
Recently I decided to rewatch the very first movie based on the Power Rangers franchise, as the days have been led up to the new one premiering today. The team has the lovely Tommy, Kimberly and Billy who is joined by the new rangers in Aisha, Adam and Rocky. Back then, I could never get around why these new ones had replaced Jason, Zack and Trini who I loved from the tv show. Anyway, I came to love the whole team, as they were searching for a foreign power to save our dear Zordon, who have been attacked by none other than Ivan Ooze.

I think this film has one of the best villains in the franchise's history, and I love how his strength is shown by imprisoning Rita and Lord Zedd. Ivan is here and he means business, as he compels all of Angel Grove's parents to do his jobbing. The movie might be simple, but I still find it to be a nice thing, that it keeps both the main plot and sub-plot rather simple. It respects the viewer's time and gets down to martial arts fighting. The choreography is way better than I could have wished for, with some sick ninja moves by Tommy, and accompanying suits, that will bring them through the harsh conditions that is ancient guards and ugly birds.

Aisha and Adam doesn't do much unfortunately, but I found it cool how they suit up in the updated suits based on the classics, and how they use new equipment in the parking lot, like flashlights in the ears of the Yellow Ranger's helmet. Even Rocky has gotten an upgrade and can now scan the dark environments for enemies with a special visor. I even forgot about their weapons, and how Saber can shoot laser out of its eyes. The first and second acts are great, with Bulk and Skull acting as comedy pieces, and the kid making us want the best for the families of Angel Grove.

Unfortunately, the third act lets me down with its poor CG and boring Zord fight against huge ants. It looks really bad, and the payoff was very poor. Still, Mighty Morphin Power Rangers was better than I remembered, and to this day, I'm still thankful this movie got made.

Turbo: A Power Rangers Movie (1997) - ★★☆☆☆
With just one day till the new Power Rangers movie, yesterday I decided to start up the sequel in Turbo: A Power Rangers Movie, which I had never seen before. I didn't know we got one more movie as a kid, and only now got to see what it's all about.

Unfortunately everything about this movie is worse than in the original, but that doesn't mean it wasn't entertaining to watch. I was first and foremost surprised to see Tommy, Adam and Rocky again, and I got me some shocks throughout. Rocky got a back injury and didn't feature much, but what I didn't expect was for the rangers I know and love to be new colors. Tommy being the Red Ranger, Adam switching over to Green, and Rocky being the Blue Ranger. To be honest, I did see these new Power Rangers as action figures when I travelled to Germany as a kid and thought they were cool but never realized they came out of a tv show or movie.

The new additions in Katherine and Tanya are very poor inclusions. I don't like the acting of Kat, and Tanya gets almost nothing to do, other than being the black woman of the bunch. It's a sad affair. And then Zordon decides to give another person the mantle of the Blue Ranger, which was interesting, but I was left with my jaw at the floor when it turns out to be a kid named Justin. Wow, did I not see that one coming. At the end I really wish they had made the kid from the first movie the new Blue Ranger as he had wanted and deserved it. I was actually pretty fine with a kid being on the team, but it was still a bit uncomfortable seeing him grow into this grown man body and still acting like the kid he is. Another surprise was the sub-plot that includes Kimberly and Jason; Jason being my favorite ranger. I always wondered why he weren't there in the first film, so it was very nice seeing him return, although not as a ranger. I liked where it all went, where in the third act Kimby and Jason fights the Power Rangers.

But as I said, everything in Turbo is worse than the first one. The fights aren't as cool, the villain Divatox is shit, Legirot was a special sight but ultimately a poor link, and the theme song ”Turbo Power Rangers, Go!" was cringy. The new Zordons was just regular cars suited up to also be robots. This movie went so many unexpected places, first to a new planet, then to a pirate ship, and then to an abandoned island. It was very special, and although it wasn't bad, it wasn't even average. Still an entertaining flick, especially for fans alike, but it was nothing more than nice fan service.

Saban's Power Rangers (2017) - ★★★★☆
I grew up with the Mighty Morphin Power Rangers on television and VHS cassette, and even watched the Christmas special every Holiday. It was a dear thing to me. In elementary school, me and the whole class of kids would go outside and roleplay as if we were the Power Rangers, and at Halloween I would dress up as the Red Ranger while everyone else were the White one. I also wanted to be the White Tiger but the costume was sold out everywhere. I'm glad I ended up as the Red Ranger after all as Jason was my clear favorite. I watched the first movie in the cinema when I was a kid and loved it. Two days ago I gave it a rewatch for the first time since I was a kid, and found it to better than what my memory tells me. Yesterday, I watched the Turbo: Power Rangers film for the first time ever, and although it was worse in every way compared to Mighty Morphin, it was still enjoyable to watch.

Today, a new generation of high schoolers enters the picture, and introduces new kids and old fans alike to Saban's Power Rangers that takes a few liberties but mostly sticks to the source material. This is Power Rangers as we love them, with a dark edge and immense acting. Dark edge you wonder, but please, keep reading.

The movie starts out with a very dark and edgy scene but one that is important to the history of the Power Rangers and the set up of this film. You will be surprised at who features in this intro scene and what happens, but not to give anything away, this one scene is the only one that directly mimics the fan film from a few years ago. It's the perfect start for those of us who wanted some edge and a darker tone, this however, is weighted up against some great acting, humor, fun and jokes among the teenagers.

All five of them have distinct personalities, which comes forward in a sweet and honest scene around the bonfire. In order to summon the armor and prove they are the right ones chosen, they need to sit down, and get to know each other, to care about each other. Here we learn Billy has a disorder and mostly don't understand humor and sarcasm, funnily enough he's the funniest of the bunch. His arc gets him through stuff you wouldn't see coming, although this part was the weakest of the entire plot. Zack is the wildcat who has heavy baggage with him, Trini is the outcast who rather be alone, Jason has leadership skills from American football and Kimberly has this one dark secret she needs to come forward with, but for another time.

There are various interesting subplots, like Zordon's background and why he is so interested in this Power Rangers force. Rita, her background, and her way back, and her ultimate goal. Angel Grove is a character in itself and is pretty well represented with some scenes around the high school, and you get to see some of the other students.

The movie is self-aware and knows when it jokes around, even with some serious plot details. So though it can have some dark scene here and there, it brings in the humor to balance it all out. The fighting against the puddies are some of the best fights in Power Rangers ever, unfortunately we don't get more than around three scenes of this wonder. In fact, we get more scenes with the Zords and the Megazord and it's no problem they remove their visors from their helmets while communicating. This whole end fight is so captivating, one for bringing you into it with the classic Power Rangers theme, and another because the CG has actually ended up looking great and this is not just a huge robot. It is different command centers and each Ranger have to communicate in order for the Megazord to makej the right moves, and I tell you, you will see them fail.

We get fantastic performances from everyone in the cast, everthing from Rita Repulsa to the teenagers and Zordon. The weakest link is Becky G as the Yellow Ranger as I am not convinced about her range. Alpha-5 also has a voice that doesn't fit him.

As a Power Rangers fan, having just left the theatre, I am greatful toward Lionsgate and the crew for realizing this movie, and I am happy and ecstatic because this turned out so well. This is the Power Rangers I wanted and I love them. And if the someewhat disappointing mid-credits scene is anything to go by, we might see a sequel (if it does well on the BO as well). The two cameos the film features is a sweet thing but very small part that you can miss if you're blinking.

I got to give credit to the cinematographer and the editing team, because this movie is not just littered with beautiful scenery and shots, but it's also very well edited with scenes flowing together nicely and the pacing is balanced well. The only time the pacing drops is somewhere in the second act where the teenagers finds Zordon's command center.

Wow at that fighting. Wow at those megazords. And although simple, wow at the background and setup for this movie.
 
A New Leaf (1971)
Surprisingly great! Reminiscent of Preston Sturges, my all-time favorite comedy director, this film draws humor from the darkness of man/woman relationships, and it doesn't hold back. But it has a unique perspective, which I think is enabled by the director Elaine May playing the female lead. I'll be seeking out more from her.
4/5

My Cousin Rachel (1952)
Strong performances make this worth watching.
3/5

Captain Fantastic (2016)
I was loving this for a good portion of it. It's kind of crazy how parents are able to raise their children in bizarre ways if they want. Being trained for "missions", having no clue how to interact with other people, the tension between love and resentment. I was into it. Hated the last 20 minutes though, and it retroactively made the earlier parts worse. It turned into exactly the bland, lackadaisical "quirky movie" I was afraid it was going to be. Could have been great if it had a final act.
3.5/5
 
The Usual Suspects: I've known about the twist for a long time now, and I do think it's hampered my view of this movie that would otherwise have been better. However, I think it's decent. Kevin Spacey and Chazz Palminteri play well off each other. The story is ultimately a good one. If you don't know about the ending, go see it. If you do know it, I can't really recommend it.
 

Sean C

Member
The Killers (1964): This remake of the 1946 film of the same name is included in the Criterion Blu-ray of the earlier film, which I saw for the first time a few months ago and was dazzled by. The remake, directed by Don Siegel, was apparently originally meant to be a TV movie, which is hard to believe given the quality of the photography (it ultimately went to theatres instead because it was too violent). The result is a solid movie, though it doesn't measure up to the 1946 film at all in terms of weight or style; it has a pretty good final scene, though. The original also had Burt Lancaster and Ava Gardner, and the people playing their roles here don't have remotely the same amount of screen magnetism. Also, Ronald Reagan, in his last screen role, plays one of the villains; he would henceforth take his villainy offscreen.

The Criterion disk also includes a Stacy Keach audio recording of the Hemingway short story on which the films are based, an Andrei Tarkovsky's student short film adaptation of that story.
 

kevin1025

Banned
Irrational Man

This feels like lesser Woody Allen, but I still ended up liking it a little. It started off pretty weak apart from Joaquin Phoenix being great as always, and Emma Stone being Emma Stone. But then the movie took a turn I did not expect in the slightest and became fairly entertaining and interesting. Still nowhere near Allen's best work, though.
 
Straw Dogs (1971) (Sam Peckinpah): Decided to rewatch this since Criterion announced the blu-ray remaster. Every month when they announce their new drops I like to go back through what I already own to see whether I actually want to upgrade, and oh yeah, this is one of those times where I definitely will. I still think the first half is a little slow, and yeah the central event is still executed in a.... rather questionable way to say the least, but my god the last act of Straw Dogs is still as thrilling as it's always been. The movie suddenly bursts forward through Peckinpah's trademark rapid fire editing and becomes this muscular, rolling boil display of scum, even in 2017. Hoffman's just fantastic here, particularly in the back half of his arc.

After that I thought it was finally time to take care of-

Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia (1974) (Sam Peckinpah): For what has to be over a decade now I've been catching small bits and pieces of Bring Me The Head of Alfredo Garcia, unable to watch the film in full for one reason or another. Last time I saw a piece of it was, I think, on IFC or TCM, before I owned a DVR, and I swore to myself I wouldn't watch another frame of the movie until I could sit down and watch it properly. What better time to do this than right after Straw Dogs, for a nice double dose of provocative 70s grit. This movie is amazing. From minute one, you're dropped into a rotting, sweaty, dusty vision of Mexico dressed up as The Neo Western, walking around as a reanimated corpse well past its prime, with absolutely 0 morals left. It's here we track Bennie, trying desperately to escape this moody, nihilistic hellhole by, well, doing what the title says. This movie's so bleak. Like, I had a general idea of what I was in for, but I didn't think it would be just oozing with such a palpable, mean hopelessness. I love it. The pacing, the characters, the dialogue, the locations, the action, the ENDING omg. It's ugly, but with just the right amount of visual poetry to make it work. Warren Oates on screen is a microcosm of this movie's worldview, in his big sunglasses and disheveled suit, pistol tucked. Hiding behind that facade of "the cool guy" is a weary soul that keeps getting dirt dumped on him. How do you escape if you have to embrace that dirt? Well, "Nobody loses all the time."
 
I haven't watched anything all week. Got lost in Amnesia: The Dark Descent. Gonna be a good weekend tho with Personal Shopper and After the Storm playing here.

Is 'The Red Turtle' worth seeing in theaters? Its actually opening this weekend close to me

Yes. It's a lovely film.

The Usual Suspects: I've known about the twist for a long time now, and I do think it's hampered my view of this movie that would otherwise have been better. However, I think it's decent. Kevin Spacey and Chazz Palminteri play well off each other. The story is ultimately a good one. If you don't know about the ending, go see it. If you do know it, I can't really recommend it.

I watched this for the first time maybe... two years ago? Not that long ago. I managed to NOT know the twist this whole time.

...still thought it was kinda bullshit. But also a good bit of fun while it lasts. I wouldn't really recommend it but it's a neat curio from the 90's.
 

JTripper

Member
Everybody Wants Some!! is still peak Linklater on second viewing. It's just as good as Dazed and I hope one day it'll be viewed as such (although I think it's pretty much celebrated by the majority of those who've seen it).

Besides School of Rock, it's also the funniest Linklater I've seen.
 
Everybody Wants Some!! is still peak Linklater on second viewing. It's just as good as Dazed and I hope one day it'll be viewed as such (although I think it's pretty much celebrated by the majority of those who've seen it).

Besides School of Rock, it's also the funniest Linklater I've seen.

One of my favorite movies last year. Also probably the one out of all of them I can see myself rewatching a lot in the future like Dazed and Confused
 

Icolin

Banned
10 Cloverfield Lane

Fantastic suspense, a chilling performance from John Goodman (Mary Elizabeth Winstead is great too), and an overall claustrophobia that hasn't been matched by many films. The pacing and how the revelations were handled was great, and the movie was constantly building up in its intensity, and raising questions. Loved it.

And then the last 10-15 minutes happened.

★ ★ ★ ★ / 5
 
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