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Last film you watched

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Heywood Jablome Offline
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Post: #6611
RE: Last film you watched
(24-05-2020 18:13 )*Kal-El* Wrote:  Firefox

One of my fav Clint Eastwood movies.

Loved this as a kid, snuck into my local flicks to see it (was a AA certificate of I recall back in 82) and I was defo not AA age!!
24-05-2020 20:40
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Dan Volatile Offline
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Post: #6612
RE: Last film you watched
Playtime
Jacques Tati - 1967

[Image: image-64E5_5ECE9DCC.jpg]

"Jacques Tati’s gloriously choreographed, nearly wordless comedies about confusion in the age of technology reached their creative apex with Playtime. For this monumental achievement, a nearly three-year-long, bank-breaking production, Tati again thrust the endearingly clumsy, resolutely old-fashioned Monsieur Hulot, along with a host of other lost souls, into a bafflingly modernist Paris. With every inch of its superwide frame crammed with hilarity and inventiveness, Playtime is a lasting testament to a modern age tiptoeing on the edge of oblivion." (from Criterion Collection)

Tati is one of those filmmakers loved by the black polo neck brigade and Rowan Atkinson has said that Hulot was one of the inspirations for Mr Bean. That set off a few warning bells but I was still looking forward to my first Tati film "crammed with hilarity". What I actually got was two hours of the least funny "comedy" film I have ever seen. One bit of slapstick three quarters in made me chuckle and that was it. We need to crowdfund a release of Danny Dyer's "Run for your Wife" in France to show them how it ought to be done.

Ranked 47 in the TSPDT list of the 1,000 greatest films.

27-05-2020 18:33
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*Kal-El* Away
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Post: #6613
RE: Last film you watched
The Rookie

Another great Clint Eastwood movie with a young Charlie Sheen and main villain Raul Julia. One of my fav lines for in the movie:

Henchmen “I saw you die”

Clint Eastwood “Welcome To Hell, asshole”


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"No Clark I know Everything About You, I Didn’t Just Borrow Your DNA, I Have All Your Memories All Your Thoughts......Every Last Twisted One of Them”.
28-05-2020 07:23
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The Goatman Offline
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Post: #6614
RE: Last film you watched
Batman (1989)

Still my 2nd favourite batman film with my favourite Joker Jack Nicholson

Really enjoyable and it still holds up being 31 years old.... Tim Burton was really the right director to bring gotham alive, his style suits the batman universe so well, I still have hope for a batman beyond movie with burton and keaton returning i think that would be amazing

8.5/10

I miss Amber Coen
29-05-2020 10:23
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Tractor boy Offline
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Post: #6615
RE: Last film you watched
The vanishing (1988)

The superior Dutch version without the Hollywood ending of the Kiefer Sutherland film.

9/10
31-05-2020 00:58
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Dan Volatile Offline
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Post: #6616
RE: Last film you watched
Citizen Kane
Orson Welles - 1941

[Image: image-280A_5ED3EA71.jpg]

"When a reporter is assigned to decipher newspaper magnate Charles Foster Kane's (Orson Welles) dying words, his investigation gradually reveals the fascinating portrait of a complex man who rose from obscurity to staggering heights. Though Kane's friend and colleague Jedediah Leland (Joseph Cotten), and his mistress, Susan Alexander (Dorothy Comingore), shed fragments of light on Kane's life, the reporter fears he may never penetrate the mystery of the elusive man's final word, "Rosebud"." (from Fandango)

Polls of film critics often have this as the greatest film ever made. You have to forget about that and just enjoy it for what it is: a very good film. It's skilfully made and Unlike a lot of films loved by the cognoscenti it's easy to watch. The scene at the end where we discover the identity of Rosebud is stunning and poignant.

31-05-2020 18:48
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*Kal-El* Away
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Post: #6617
RE: Last film you watched
Olympus Has Fallen.

"No Clark I know Everything About You, I Didn’t Just Borrow Your DNA, I Have All Your Memories All Your Thoughts......Every Last Twisted One of Them”.
31-05-2020 19:35
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The Goatman Offline
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Post: #6618
RE: Last film you watched
Justice League Dark: Apokolips War.

If only dc could pull this sort of film off in live action it would be incredible.

Ending the dc animated movie universe which started with flashpoint paradox back in 2013, This is a fantastic movie that i can not recommend enough, Go watch it.

10/10

I miss Amber Coen
02-06-2020 22:49
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Dan Volatile Offline
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Post: #6619
RE: Last film you watched
Meet Me in St. Louis
Vincente Minnelli - 1944

[Image: image-36DB_5ED80E39.jpg]

"Meet Me in St. Louis" is a classic MGM romantic musical comedy that focuses on four sisters (one of whom is the nonpareil Judy Garland) on the cusp of the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair. The film spotlights the sisters' education in the ways of the world, which includes, but isn't limited to, learning about life and love, courtesy of the prototypical boy next door. In the end, love -- accompanied by song, dance and period costumes, all in glorious Technicolor -- conquers all." (from Google)

Light frothy family entertainment (apart from the Halloween sequence where the kiddies turn into fire raising psychos). Nice to look at and it's not a chore to have to listen to Judy Garland singing "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" but slightly puzzling as to why so many serious critics have it as one of their favourite films. Then again they probably can't understand why I rate "Sex Lives of the Potato Men" so highly.
The late Labour Government Minister and expenses cheat Gerald Kaufman wrote an entire book about this film. I bet it looked good on that eight grand telly bought by the taxpayer.

Nominated for four Oscars and ranked 242 in TSPDT's 1.000 greatest film list.

(This post was last modified: 03-06-2020 22:30 by Dan Volatile.)
03-06-2020 22:15
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Dan Volatile Offline
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Post: #6620
RE: Last film you watched
Riot in Cell Block 11
Don Siegel - 1954

[Image: image-C9C2_5EDBC202.jpg]

"As prison riots sweep across America, Cell Block 11 is where the hard-core felons are kept in isolation and treated like animals. When the inevitable violence breaks out, it's led by the psychopathic Dunn and the equally unhinged Carnie. Holding guards hostage, including the brutal Snader, they demand decent living conditions, better food, less brutal guards and educational opportunities." (from Google)

I don't know if it's down to the Hayes Code but the problem with this film is that we don't really see the reasons for the riot. Brutalisation and sadistic guards are not apparent and the only real violence is from the inmates. The Warden is portrayed as hard-nosed but humane and the conditions no worse than the Prestatyn Pontins although without the annual snooker tournament. Having said that it's a better than average B-movie, quite gritty and with an agreeably low key ending.

This was an early film of Don Siegel who is most famous for "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" and "Dirty Harry" but the driving force behind it was the producer, the improbably named Walter Wanger who had served time for shooting his wife's fancy man and wanted to draw the world's attention to the state of the nation's prisons.

Quentin Tarantino thinks that this is the greatest prison film ever made.

06-06-2020 17:41
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