Seen any good movies lately? - Films you MUST see

hank solo

Just practicin' steps and keepin' outta the fights
Moderator
Founding member
They Live, John Carpenter, 1988 How Rowdy Roddy didn't get a nomination for this I cannot fathom. Awesome film.

This is one of my all time favorites!
P.S. David Icke, 'famed' conspiracy theorist acctually says one should see this film as resarch into the ways of the real Reptilian Race!:eek: He also strongly suggests the mini-series, V.

My ex-wife's favorite film.

/end rant.

I thought there was a thread about this, but I can't spot it right now:

Spiral Descent, a Charles Bukowski Story with Roddy Piper
 

hank solo

Just practicin' steps and keepin' outta the fights
Moderator
Founding member
I just saw "The Wrestler", and I found it great. A perfect role for an aging Rourke.
I can only think of good things to say about the movie.
I was thinking that he was the perfect Buk ,and still is.

Yeah it's a fine performance by Rourke, and a much better turn by Marisa Tomei this time - I thought she was off in Factotum. Shame there was no cameo for Roddy Piper though huh? :)
 
Doubt was amazing....ly short. Nonetheless, Philip Seymour Hoffman and Meryl Streep were brilliant. Excellent film.

MILK was great. I'm just not gagga over Gus Van Sant anymore. He's a bit of hit or miss with me. And with this one, he did neither. The actors pulled their weight, all on their own without the help of anyone. Sean Penn deserves the Oscar, but I've heard Mickey does too.
I have yet to see the Wrestler, so I'll hold off on that assumption.
 

Gerard K H Love

Appreciate your friends
Just saw Doubt. It was worth the $22.50. Yes I brought my own beverage.
It was long enough. Amy Adams was so good I didn't know she was this:

enchantedprem5.jpg


and this,

doubt_still.jpg


playing a nun
 

mjp

Founding member
That would be a shame. Who would they give the award to, the computer programmers?
 
The curious case of Benjamin Button.
Liked it... quite a bit.


i found it dull, boring, and pointless and i didn't care at all for the characters. of course, most people disagree, but i almost walked out after two hours knowing i had another 30 minutes to watch...
 

hoochmonkey9

Art should be its own hammer.
Moderator
Founding member
there's a great little documentary streaming at pitchfork called Tokion Soundclass.

here's the description from the website:

This short documentary from director Adam Glickman, seen here in an early rough cut, explores the history of Jamaican sound system and dub culture. The film uses interviews with Paul Simonon, DJ Kool Herc, Grandmaster Flash, and more to explore the roots of this music and the influence it had around the world.

link

it's only up for a little bit, so if interested in such things...
 

mjp

Founding member
Computer animation is not my thing, I won't voluntarily watch it. So, no, I wouldn't go see something like that. I was basing the comment on what I read about the movie being primarily CGI work, pasting computer generated faces onto the different actors who are supposed to represent the different periods of the main character's life.
 

ROC

It is what it is
There will come a time (and this movie shows that we are probably there) when you wont know you are watching CGI.
For me, the CGI in this movie in no way detracted from the story telling element.

And James, you are right about the movie being pointless. It has no point to make, no lesson to draw or great moral to impart. But neither do most short stories (this one is loosely based on F. Scott Fitzgeralds).
It's just a weird story about a man who grows young and how that effects the way he lives his life.
My favourite movies are mostly pointless... snippets from a life or group of lives. The closer a movie comes to literature the better off it is as far as I'm concerned.
It's the loose strings, undotted i's and uncrossed t's that I like.... like Babel, No Country for Old Men, Osama etc.
 
exactly.
There was no 'wonder of life' Spielberg music, and the CGI was incredibly indecipherable, so much so, that it made me feel like I was watching a film straight out from the 70s.

However, I didn't find it THAT pointless, as some of you may have found it, upon watching it.
It's, nonetheless, a great film.
 
Everyone should see slumdog millionaire. It is entertaining and tells a very good story. Also, the older brother character is amazing and complex. The movie reminds me of City of God but for me that is a good thing.
 

Gerard K H Love

Appreciate your friends
Hey ttthomas welcome to the forum. I like your recomendation but please, go to the New Blood section, start a thread and introduce yourself. I mean for all I know you might be my nephew.

I want to see that movie .
 

chronic

old and in the way
Someone mentioned Little Dieter Needs to Fly awhile back. Just watched it. Wow... great film!

Every few years I seem to go through a Herzog rediscovery phase. I'm in one now and this is one that I had never seen before. Whoever it was that recommended it, thanks.
 
that was me...yea, that doc made me think of my life differently.
you're welcome chronic! glad you enjoyed...
 
Just watched Notorious; Hitchcock 1946, staring Ingrid Bergman and Carey Grant. Excellent, as Hitchcock tends to be. I'd not seen this one before, it's quite nice when a 63 year old film keeps you in awe on so many levels.CRB:)
 
Just watched, "The Golden Compass" with my daughter, on HBO. Has anyone seen it? Thought it was an interesting concept; demons, dust, truth, kids, etc. Some good actors, decent acting. The bears kinda reminded me of the old Coca Cola commercials (Always - I think was the campaign), but they were fun, and well animated.

Pax,

homeless mind
 

ROC

It is what it is
A Scanner Darkly and The Road to Guantanamo.

Interesting and disturbing for different reasons.

I wonder how many North Americans could sit through the Guantanamo movie without thinking their government and culture condoned and actively pursued the torture of innocent people for the sake of revenge and racism.

I know the shame for the Howard years is large and growing here in Australia (but I guess it depends on who you talk to).

Anywho... both good movies.
 
O Brother, Where Art Thou? was on regular TV today (remember free movies on TV?). Very good stuff.

Homer's Odyssey as presented in depression-era Mississippi through the experiences of three escaped convicts. Highly recommended.
 
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