anyway leave me alone you nerds. my favorite part of triple frontier was when they were like "ben affleck killed 36 people in 9 different countries and he cant even send his daughter to college! what the hell!". they said some variation of that line like 4 times
Night and Day (2008) - Another brilliant portrait of male self-delusion and sexual politics by Hong Sang-soo. A married Korean man facing a marijuana arrest decides to bail the country and ends up Paris. His existence in Paris is rather ho-hum until he gets acquainted with a couple expat Korean women. The streets of Paris lended themselves well to Hong's low-key style, the aimless walking reminded me of when I got lost walking a couple of times whilst visiting RIP.
Night and Day (2008) - Another brilliant portrait of male self-delusion and sexual politics by Hong Sang-soo. A married Korean man facing a marijuana arrest decides to bail the country and ends up Paris. His existence in Paris is rather ho-hum until he gets acquainted with a couple expat Korean women. The streets of Paris lended themselves well to Hong's low-key style, the aimless walking reminded me of when I got lost walking a couple of times whilst visiting RIP.
Noroi: The Curse
A man documents a string of supernatural cases, which are seemingly linked to an old curse. Pretty good movie. Tense, interesting narrative and some great scenes, especially the final scene, which really sticks with you. A bit long and some scenes were either irrelevant or got lost in translation. Would recommend 7/10
It: Chapter Two
Great casting, well performed, nice cinematography. On a technical level it was great. But as a movie? A colossal waste of 3 fecking hours. The narrative structure is all over the place, not scary at all, too much CGI, so many plot holes, constant exposition dumps. Just awful. But the comedy segments worked for the most part. Bill Hadar is brilliant 4/10
It’s not my favourite genre of film and I nearly jumped out of my seat at times but that’s par for the course with a film about alligators invading a house.
The effects are impressive and Kaya does well in the lead role.
Has a bit of a ‘wait, that’s it?’ type ending with the helicopter which performs far too easily for my liking in a massive hurricane
Overall far from a waste of money but doesn’t make my top 10 of 2019.
I rewatched American Gangster last night, hadn't seen it since it was released all those years ago. I'd forgotten how good the overall cast is, and it's very efficient for what it is. I've never been a massive Denzel fan so I suppose it works better for those who are, but still it's very good. And good score too.
It’s not my favourite genre of film and I nearly jumped out of my seat at times but that’s par for the course with a film about alligators invading a house.
The effects are impressive and Kaya does well in the lead role.
Has a bit of a ‘wait, that’s it?’ type ending with the helicopter which performs far too easily for my liking in a massive hurricane
Overall far from a waste of money but doesn’t make my top 10 of 2019.
Saw this last week myself. Fairly enjoyable for what it is. I'm a fan of Barry Pepper and hadn't seen anything with him since True Grit so that was good.
Picnic at Hanging Rock - was always on when I was a chidler but haven’t seen it in years. Still creepy, colonial Australia lends itself to horror and its offshoots well. Would be a good double feature with Stalker. Young Jackie Weaver, young John Jarrett. Good stuff.
Picnic at Hanging Rock - was always on when I was a chidler but haven’t seen it in years. Still creepy, colonial Australia lends itself to horror and its offshoots well. Would be a good double feature with Stalker. Young Jackie Weaver, young John Jarrett. Good stuff.
I rewatched American Gangster last night, hadn't seen it since it was released all those years ago. I'd forgotten how good the overall cast is, and it's very efficient for what it is. I've never been a massive Denzel fan so I suppose it works better for those who are, but still it's very good. And good score too.
I've been warming up to westerns lately after having seen OUATITW and The Good, The Bad and the Ugly. There's something charming about them. I like the desert landscapes, the simple towns, and the late 1800s period of time.
I've been warming up to westerns lately after having seen OUATITW and The Good, The Bad and the Ugly. There's something charming about them. I like the desert landscapes, the simple towns, and the late 1800s period of time.
Spaghetti Westerns are like normal Westerns on steroids, every trope is exaggerated, dumbed down with forced machismo. I can def see the appeal though seeing as I once did enjoy them.
Just watching this on TV. Haven't seen it in years and forgot just how freaking great this movie is. Paul Hogan is just hilarious without even trying and Linda Kozlowski is just fecking hot. Full of classic scenes and one-liners. One of the great movies of the 80s. Absolutely love it.
Wind River is a 2017 neo-Western murder mystery film starring Jeremy Renner and Elizabeth Olsen as a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service tracker and an FBI agent, respectively, who try to solve a murder on the Wind River Indian Reservation in Wyoming.
The Interview is a 1998 Australian thriller film from writer-director Craig Monahan. Almost the entire film takes place in a police interrogation room, with some short flashback sequences, and the cast consists primarily of three key actors - Hugo Weaving, Tony Martin, and Aaron Jeffery.
I remember trying to watch this and it bored me to death. Maybe I wasn't in the right mindset. Might give it another go.
Okja
A young girl risks everything to prevent a powerful, multinational company from kidnapping her best friend - a fascinating beast named Okja. A bit heavy handed with the messaging but overall a great adventure movie that's equally exciting and touching. The characters were quite complex and it looked superb 8/10
Under The Shadow
As a mother and daughter struggle to cope with the terrors of the post-revolution, war-torn Tehran of the 1980s, a mysterious evil begins to haunt their home. I kind of enjoyed it the first time but after reading the critical acclaim of this movie, I thought I must have missed a lot of the symbolism or something. Watched again and my opinion hasn't changed. It's a decent horror-drama that got overhyped because it isn't mainstream like Annabelle or The Conjuring and it has a feminist angle 6/10