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Topic: Movies We've Seen Recently  (Read 258031 times)

chai tea latte

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Movies We've Seen Recently #765
Oppenheimer 2023 4.5/5
Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning: Part One 4/5

Gonna see Barbie at home with my mom so I didn't "barbenheimer" but there was no way I was gonna miss these two in the theatre. before Dead Reckoning there's a ten second thing with Tom Cruise and the director where they say, hey, we make these movies for you to enjoy on the big screen, thanks for coming out today. And it's true, y'know, that's true about blockbusters and the big screen. And it's true that the summer blockbuster is back!!! COVID-19 did not kill it forever! Streaming at home hasn't killed it yet! Go get some AC and hit your vape pen outside the multiplex because baby it is a summer for blockbusters and for each of us who loves da friggin moveys.

the modern M:I movies only get better and better and this one was awesome. We open with a car chase that feels refreshingly new and fun, we have a great train scene that calls back to the first movie, and the stakes for Ethan "I refuse to sacrifice the people I love for the country I am honour-bound to protect" Hunt have never been higher or more perfectly calibrated to the world we live in. This is the last big action franchise with real stunts and the stunts are real as fuck and really fucking good. Meanwhile, Oppenheimer was a brilliant delight. Anyone who thought it was subtle or confusing fails my "understanding the visual language of cinema" class. the movie is many things but it isn't subtle! the thread of 'we theorize the existence of black holes / the sun as nuclear fusion bomb / the sun collapses into a gravitational singularity at the heart of a black hole' was extremely unsubtle but nobody talked about it last week when they were all gesturing at what the movie means or ignores or justifies. There's so much to take away from this and it is a genuine draw to actually go see a movie at the friggin theatre. See it in IMAX if you still can.

After Blue (Paradis Sale) (2021) 3/5
there are a lot of French movies where it's pretty, but nothing happens - cinéma du look - and this is one of them. it's very pretty though. the French are some of the only people still making movies where naked women alternately kiss and shoot each other while covered in glitter. the director has some stupid Manifesto About Film that involves shooting on expired film without a script. the expired film looks nice, and the lack of a script is a real shame given how nice everyone and everything looks. god it's boring though. if that sounds interesting to you, well, it's on Shudder.

the Exorcism of Emily Rose (2005) 2/5
An underwhelming legal drama / horror movie (mostly a bad legal drama?) about a catholic priest killing a young woman except maybe what if it was demon possession and the catholic priest were a super good guy who never wanted to harm children and who shouldn't go to jail? Shoreh Agdashloo from The Expanse has a small role as a witness for the defense near the end of the movie and she's awesome. For all that it's "based on a true story" and even though the movie is extremely clear about the facts of the legal case, we are asked by the filmmakers (and, in a disquieting post-credits card, the family of Emily Rose) to "explore the possibility" that the priest's misdiagnosis of Emily Rose's "epileptic psychopathy" was some sort of Godly trick to publicize just how real Satanic possession is and how real God is. Any credit the movie might buy by reminding you of the Exorcist (and it tries a lot) is lost for me here. And you're supposed to root for the Catholic priest! In the horror movie!
« Last Edit: August 03, 2023, 12:11:56 am by chai tea latte »

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Movies We've Seen Recently #766
$4 movie tickets nationwide on Sunday

Im.trying to choose between blue beetle, tmnt and talk to me

FinchChunk

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Movies We've Seen Recently #767
Talk to Me was one of the most gripping horror films I've seen. For comparison of tension level, though not content, it built a lot like Hereditary but I think had a tenser final act. I am probably a bit biased since it's nice to see aussie films doing well.

chai tea latte

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Movies We've Seen Recently #768
Killers of the Flower Moon was a masterpiece. Big ups to Marty on this one. It's crazy to have a movie to star Robert DeNiro, Leo DiCaprio, and a woman whose prior claim to fame was a series of film school youtube videos (and Certain Women, Buster's Mal Heart), where the woman in question acts the pants off of deniro and dicaprio. If you were to somehow, accidentally, only see the scenes of this movie where the camera is set at a closeup of Lily Gladstone's face it would still be the best movie you'd seen in 2023. Five stars. COVID-19 delays in filming and editing led Scorsese to "drastically re-evaluate" the viewpoint from which he tells the film; the book (also very good!) chooses as its main character Tom White, the 'ndn' agent of the newly-formed FBI. Scorsese instead chooses Lily Gladstone's Mollie Burkhart, a woman who spends three hours of the 3.5 hour movie aware that her husband murdered her entire family for money. The effect, to me, was that the movie is more humiliating, more humbling, sadder, more tragic, than the book because of this lens. Great stuff.

Say Yes (2018) - one of the strangest romantic plots in history. This movie is unlike anything else ever made by a human being with a human brain and person emotions. A woman, dying of a sudden and aggressive cancer, insists that she can only be happy in death if her fraternal-twin-brother and her husband fuck. And they do. Weird stuff. two stars

Ogroff the Mad Mutilator - maybe one of the coolest things i have ever seen that was filmed on Super 8 film but i'm not actually convinced that this was a movie. Some weird french guy tries to remake Texas Chainsaw Massacre in the idyllic wooded French countryside. THE MAD WOODSMAN is CONVINCED THE WAR NEVER ENDED and if you stray into his woods HE KILLS YOU. there is almost no dialogue at all in the entire film. at one point Ogroff the Mad Mutilator drives a motorcycle down the highway and throws axes at women. when he returns home to his weird farmer shack he jacks off an axe while staring at a wall calendar pinup. Weird as fuck. Startling. Unaware of any rules or conventions established by any previous movie, horror or not. 3.5 stars.

Chompy & The Girls - awesome!!!!! total pulp. Absolutely loved this. A woman wants to kill herself but instead she reconnects with her biological father, and when they're hanging out in the park, they see a space alien swallow a little girl whole and eat her. the space alien then proceeds to It Follows them around their anonymous city. Made for a TINY budget and with an AUDACIOUS goal, Chompy & The Girls succeeds, imo, on all levels other than 'well-integrated CGI'. 3.5 stars.

Asteroid City - Wasn't sure about this one! But you see Scarlett Johansson naked in the mirror for a like ten second shot. As far as Wes Anderson movies go if you like that stuff you'll like this one; he's back on his bullshit. Personally I was so annoyed we didn't get to actually see video of the new mexico desert; fuck off with your soundstages, asshole. I like the desert and I think the stars are awesome there. I'm a so-so Anderson fan and I think this was most of the stuff he does that I don't like rather than the stuff he does that I do like. Maybe I don't like Wes Anderson at all. IDK. Blah blah blah blah blah blah blah wes anderson dialogue. And what I'm trying to say is that I haven't been the same , emotionally, kids, since your mother died. Two stars.

Cypher (2002) - I really liked this! Lucy Liu smoulders, the main guy grows on you, I liked him a lot by the end of the movie too. It's a neo-noir about corporate espionage, and the trick of a spy, especially a corporate spy, is "dissimulation", pretending-to-be-that-which-one-is-not. This movie dissimulates itself really well IMO. When telling a story that spirals out from its centre like this, we as the audience have to be so interested in the first cover story being told, in its characters (and I was!), that we're surprised when the william gibson PKD of it all really comes to the fore. Awesome stuff. Great script from Brian King. Can't wait to show this to people. 4 stars.

moooo566 (taylor's version)

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Movies We've Seen Recently #769
Yesterday was the 20th anniversary of the release of Return Of The King, so I did the sensible thing and spent 11 hours in the cinema watching them in IMAX.

They're always been impressive films, but there's so much I've never noticed, having only seen them in home versions, on small displays with crappy speakers in a building full of other stuff. The practical effects are incredible, and even the CGI holds up relatively well considering how old it is. The casting and acting is so on point, every little thing is sold so well, both verbally and in body language, in the centre of the shot and in the background, whether it's a major character or just Old Man #14. The music is beautiful and striking and timed and delivered with absolute perfection.

It's clear just how much love and care and effort was put into those films, in a way that almost never shows, especially in fantasy.
Salubrious Rex vaMpiresoftWare chai tea latte

moooo566 (taylor's version)

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Movies We've Seen Recently #770
DUNC part two is great, but obviously ends on a cliffhanger, so I guess they'll just need to keep going through the completely insane shit, both because I earnestly want to see that turned into something good and because I desperately need to see how people who haven't been exposed to the source material take it.

corporate daiquiri

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Movies We've Seen Recently #771
I saw Maxxxine today and I'm wondering what anybody else thought of it. I enjoyed myself, but thought it was less gleeful about the violence than the previous movies (X and Pearl) despite every opportunity to do so. I don't want to spoil anything, but the genre of it all just felt flat.

PaulLovesToLaugh

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Movies We've Seen Recently #772
I caught Bad Boys 4 and Despicable Me 4 and the best parts of both trips was after the movies ended. Specifically, getting the popcorn and soda refills.

Dr. Buttplug

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Movies We've Seen Recently #773
Watched "Rope" by Alfred Hitchcock. I would recommend watching Rope without ads by all means. It is structured to give the illusion that the entire film is one continuous shot. So breaking it up would be bad.
The film has much the same effect on me as Uncut Gems did, near panic attack levels of anxiety by the end. Not nearly as intense, but incredible considering this is little more than a recorded stage play with a few camera tricks to sustain the illusion.
The actors are corny as shit (with the exception of Jimmy Stewart of course) and that may bother you at first but having unbroken views of them for so long you just accept them as real.
A well observed aspect of motion picture media, the world in the box feels realer than those next to you, but heightened so by the technique.

vaMpiresoftWare

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It’s not that recent but I periodically remember that I watched To The Bone and that it should not exist.

Turtle

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World Trade Center (2006)
Directed: Oliver Stone
Starring: Nicolas Cage, Michael Peña, Maria Bello, Maggie Gyllenhaal
Based on a true 9/11 story. A fair initial expectation of this movie would be that it's going to be bad. You probably expect a lot of Patriotism, a lot of fluffing up New York Cops. It is, instead, shockingly restrained. A handful of Port Authority cops respond to the initial hit and set out for rescue operations. This is over minutes later when the tower collapses in on them, kills 2 or 3 of them, and leaves the remaining (Cage, Peña) in the rubble. This situation is not resolved until near the very end of the movie, so two of our primary characters are trapped under rocks in darkness and dust for 90% of the feature. The majority of the movie, then, follows their wives (Bello, Gyllenhaal) as they panic over not knowing the status of their respective husbands. These aspects of the movie aren't *bad*, exactly - they're predictable. What really pulls this whole thing together is the C-plot. A retired marine (Michael Shannon) decides he has a god-given duty to help with the rescue mission. He leaves work, travels multiple states, puts on his old fatigues, and walks into the Ground Zero rescue operations under false pretenses. He continues at night, after the official operations have been suspended for safety concerns. There are no negative consequences to this, of course, everything works out fine, and our protagonists are rescued. I said at the top that this movie was shockingly restrained - there are a few exceptions to this. This character is most of them. One of his initial lines, "It's like God made a curtain with the smoke, shielding us from what we're not yet ready to see", is a groaner, but it has nothing on his last line. Nearly two hours into this movie, after the rescue is done, when the movie is in the full swell of catharsis, we are treated to, as he walks through rubble: "They're going to need some good men out there to avenge this". Atrocious. Cage's performance here is workmanlike - the first few minutes show a terse, unpersonable sergeant, and then he's under a rock and off screen for all but a few minutes. Skip this one.

Gone in 60 Seconds (2000)
Directed: Dominic Sena
Starring: Nicolas Cage, Angelina Jolie, Giovanni Ribisi
I'm something of an expert on movies about cars that move quickly and angrily, so this was an exciting pull. Legendary former car thief Memphis Raines (Cage) is forced back into the criminal life to save his kid brother Kip (Ribisi) after a job goes bad. They have to steal a list of 50 specific cars and deliver them within 4 days. We assemble a crew, a mix of old blood from Memphis' former crew and new from Kip's. Hounding him all the while is Detective Castlebeck (Delroy Lindo), unconvinced that Raines has turned over the new leaf he claims to have. When it comes to the action, its pretty good. But when this movie wants to be funny, it is *awful*, ranging from juvenile poop jokes (brief appearance here of last week's star Michael Peña) to wild racism. These scenes feel so out of place and break the pace of the movie. At 2 hours, it doesn't need the filler. It would be much stronger without them. The core flaw though is in the characters. This is a strong stance but I think if you're going to have a crew-based movie, its pretty important that the crew be likeable. They're nearly all just awful, the two exceptions being Otto (Robert Duvall), who is a pretty rote Old Man Mechanic, and Sphinx (Vinnie Jones), the silent muscle. The former is a free space and the latter is, well its Vinnie Jones, that's also a free space. The romance subplot with Sway (Jolie) is superfluous but inoffensive. What *is* offensive are her blonde white girl dreads. It's a terrible look. To the extent that this is a good movie, it's on the backs of Cage and Lindo who both give great performances. Oh and Christopher Eccleston is here. Give this one a watch, just maybe think about something else when Mirror Man is on screen.

Ghost Rider (2007)
Directed: Mark Steven Johnson
Starring: Nicolas Cage, Eva Mendes, Sam Elliott
When I started writing these down I hadn't fully processed that I would need to find words to say about Ghost Rider. It's, fucking, it's Ghost Rider. Ok, shit. The music choices in this movie are funny every single time. There are two halves to this movie, the half with Nicolas Cage and the half with CGI Flaming Skeleton, and luckily it costs money to put the skull man on screen so we get to spend a lot time with Cage wearing fun Evel Knievel outfits and sunglasses and enjoying monkey movies, its a good time. Skullman time can be goofy fun but there's also a lot that feels like worse Blade. It even has Donal Logue! The villain especially would love to be Deacon Frost. They're at least right to do it, Blade kicks ass. Oh David S. Goyer was executive producer. Yup that checks out. Sam Elliott's here, he delivers exactly what you're looking for from him. Oh right, the first like 20 minutes is backstory. Mostly skippable, 2007 comic book movie that thinks it needs to tell you why there's a flaming skeleton biker. We don't need to know why there's a flaming skeleton biker, just show us the skullman.

Left Behind (2014)
Directed: Vic Armstrong
Starring: Nicolas Cage, Cassi Thomson, Chad Michael Murray
The wheel has decided that I watch this movie and I am *struggling* to speak about it. Fuuuuck this movie sucks. Let's try: Kid Dorkus gets raptured and you're glad to see him go, what a dweeb. The beginning of the movie when its showing all kinds of vehicles going unpiloted is the funniest shit in the world. A Cessna falls into onto main character, just diving into a parking lot as if its targetting her. A bus somehow drives off a bridge. Just cars going everywhere. It's so good, these brief moments.  There's a bit with an elderly couple that could have been in Airplane, it's actually just good vaudeville. I think that's it, I think I've exhausted the good parts. Oh right, uh Melvin Weir is here and he's just kind of fun in every scene, just really kills his part. The bad parts have such a range. There are the small things, the implications of the world view with slut shaming, anti-atheism, expected what have you, but then it'll just throw a heavy ass punch on muslim terrorism implications, a fucking *wild* moment at the end of the movie where a little person supporting character (Melvin Weir) is kicked over in a way that might be the most hateful thing in the entire movie? It's like 2 seconds and it's fucked that it exists. I guess something notable about this movie is how poorly it portrays true believers. They all get raptured, for sure, but before that moment every single one of them is portrayed as absolutely insufferable. And that's not just me bringing the opinion in, the movie thinks these opinions are abrasive, it just then later gets to decide that they were right. It does have the classic religious film thing of the atheist who has to confront a newfound faith but it's remarkably bad at even that. Hot take I think this movie might have been written poorly.
chai tea latte Secret Gaygent 69 Achilles' Heelies dijon du jour

dijon du jour

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Movies We've Seen Recently #776
Gone in 60 Seconds (2000)
Turtle, October 03, 2024, 01:06:15 am

Mrs. Jolie's white girl dreads are so bad they legitimately had me watching the last five minutes of this movie and thinking "Wow they're really waiting a long time to introduce Angelina Jolie's character. Why wasn't she given the female lead role instead of this random grimy lady."

Which is such a shocking misuse of a 2000's Angelina Jolie. If you're putting her in your movie at that time it's because Angelina Jolie looks like Angelina Jolie and this movie might as well have had her in a werewolf costume.
chai tea latte Turtle

chai tea latte

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Movies We've Seen Recently #777
Megalopolis
i've seen other Francis Ford Coppola (Godfather, Godfather II, Apocalypse Now, Bram Stoker's Dracula, the final entry in the Godfather trilogy) and I felt some threads of continuity there but this new thing was much less straightforward than those other ones while also being much less fun or good. However, if you're ever going to see it at any point in your life, you might as well go see it in the theatre on the big screen. there are probably hundreds if not thousands of scenes which are either quotes or deliberate misquotes of scenes from other movies and it's fun to try to catch as many as you can. My opinion about the fact that all the women characters die is that I didn't enjoy it. two stars.

Iron Angels 3 (1989)
The Iron Angels franchise - a girls with guns brand built around the always-incredible star power of Moon Lee - is kind of disjointed. But there's a lot to love here, not least the American sidekick, a policeman named Computer (because he knows how to use a computer). Unfortunately, Moon Lee is missing from most of Iron Angels 3's runtime (but when she's on screen, it's awesome). There's an incredible climax where. well. I won't spoil it; the plot is a pretty standard drugs-and-crime story about Vietnamese gangsters. But we're talkin' sword fights, machine guns, hundreds of extras, and the only way to stop cynthia rothrock with 200 goons and a shotgun being a pair of good guys with jetpacks. 3.5 stars.
Achilles' Heelies

Turtle

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Movies We've Seen Recently #778
Pay the Ghost (2015)
Directed: Uli Edel
Starring: Nicolas Cage, Sarah Wayne Callies, Veronica Ferres
Pagan mom stake-burned by mob, revenge kidnaps children on Halloween. There's like one scene in this entire movie where Cage gets to do something above replacement and it's reading a book. This is not a bad movie, it is, by most merits, fine. Its crime is having Nicolas Cage in a leading role and doing absolutely nothing with him. Cage has an incredible range and movies like this, movies like last month's Left Behind and World Trade Center, they take his potential range and plot him on x0,y0. It's a crevice of unambitious film.

Mandy (2018)
Directed: Panos Cosmatos
Starring: Nicolas Cage, Andrea Riseborough, Linus Roache
I was so fucking ready to watch Mandy again. A tribute to the aesthetics of 80s heavy metal, fantasy novels, and classic horror films, Mandy uses the entire canvas. Its use of color, darkness, music, is distorted, haunting, and melodic. It's a world that blends the natural with the supernatural and demonic both literally and metaphorically. It demands your attention and earns it. I adore this movie

Color Out of Space (2019)
Directed: Richard Stanley
Starring: Nicolas Cage, Joely Richardson, Madeleine Arthur
I haven't fully processed my feelings on this movie yet. An adaptation of the Lovecraft story, a meteor lands in the yard of a well-to-do family who has recently moved out to the father's (Cage) arboreal family farm. Slowly it begins to corrupt everything around it - the flora, the fauna, the family - distorting them in dangerous and terrifying ways. The back half of this movie is fantastic as the beautiful horrors set in and the characters, after an hour of being frayed at the edges, are fully unraveled. A slow build, its the front half of the movie I'm conflicted on. It's quite good at building tension, at feeling uncomfortable, only slightly unnatural, but it's often not doing so in ways that I would describe as Above Replacement. Perhaps I've just seen it too much before. My gut feeling coming out of it, and somewhat during, is that it felt like it was making minor missteps, small choices that felt out of place. Some of it was just a feeling I couldn't place, some were what I would call clumsy script choices. I'm curious how I'll feel about this given time. The performances are great. The daughter (Madelein Arthur) pulls a lot of weight in a crucial role of someone who notices the changes going on but who is nonetheless affected by and powerless to stop them. We get so many kinds of Nicolas Cage here - a goofy, dorky father at first, he begins to vacillate between abusive and vacant, at times channeling the pretentious condescension of his previous character Peter Loew (Vampire's Kiss). Tommy Chong, in a small role, is used very well - he's so often a shallow elder stoner, here they really made him work. Overall, I highly recommend this movie, I'm just left feeling that it's a 9 that stumbled short of the 10 it earned.
 
Con Air (1997)
Director: Simon West
Starring: Nicolas Cage, John Cusack, John Malkovich
Shortly after returning from duty, US Army Ranger Cameron Poe (Cage) is assaulted by some local good ol boys. Things turn ugly and he's sentenced to 8 years for involuntary manslaughter. Skip forward, he's now on his way home again, traveling by air bus alongside various other prison transfers including a handful of transfers to a newly opened Supermax. These highly dangerous convicts (John Malkovich, Ving Rhames, Danny Trejo, etc) have a plan - they take control of the transport and they're on their way out of the country. It's up to Poe, who everyone assumes is himself a hardened criminal, to prevent this escape and save the life of his diabetic cell-mate and friend Baby-O (Mykelti Williamson). Cusack plays the role of The Only Smart Federal Agent, working to foil the escape, playing straight man against Colm Meaney's incredible performance as the most piece of shit DEA agent to ever live. Dave Chapelle is here and he is awful in all the ways you kind of expect from this era of his career, but is somehow only the second most hateful character on the screen behind the extremely problematic 'Sally-Can't Dance' who exists solely as transphobic comic relief. Steve Buscemi is here and its kind of unclear why. This movie is full of characters and his doesn't really interact with anyone or contribute to anything.

In the modern era, we have a Cage triumvirate of Mandy, Color Out of Space, and Pig. Twenty years ago, we had The Rock, Face/Off, and Con Air. I think this framing, today, ten years ago, and even twenty years ago, is unkind to Con Air. Does Simon West deserve to draw comparison to John Woo? To Michael Bay, even? No, Con Air should be evaluated not as member of this action blockbuster trinity, but on its own terms. And on its own terms - it may actually be kinder to sneak it through with the others. Malkovich and Meaney are great (plus I'm just glad to see him) and Cage is doing an absolutely insane southern accent. Short of that? It's a good flick, not a great one.
chai tea latte
« Last Edit: November 09, 2024, 10:55:07 am by Turtle »

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Movies We've Seen Recently #779
Watched Wicked Part 1 in theaters last weekend. Enjoyed it so much that I ordered the book!