Good films I watched this weekend

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Langweilig

4,324 posts

211 months

Friday 2nd November 2012
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Red Tails. Not a bad film but I wish George Lucas could understand this :-

Infinite ammunition On/Off.

The Tuskegee airmen seem to just relentlessly blast away at anything that moves. There's only so much in an ammo box.

Watch the head on dogfight with a Messerschmitt 262. The quad 30mm cannons are made to look like peashooters.


Legacywr

12,084 posts

188 months

Saturday 3rd November 2012
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I originally saw Public Enimies at the pictures and thought is was very dull and empty, so I thought I would give it another go last night on the TV,…and I still feel the same!

Halb

53,012 posts

183 months

Saturday 3rd November 2012
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Where do they teach you to talk like this? In some Panama City "Sailor wanna hump-hump" bar, or is it getaway day and your last shot at his whisky? Sell crazy someplace else, we're all stocked up here.


Negative Creep said:
There is of course the twist which every horror movie must include by law, which I did see coming. Does anyone these days ever believe the scene right near the end where everything seems to have been resolved and they'll live happily ever after? Wouldn't it be a great twist to have no twist at all?
I think all Horrors need the traditional twist. But It does need to be unpredictable.

Legacywr said:
I originally saw Public Enimies at the pictures and thought is was very dull and empty, so I thought I would give it another go last night on the TV,…and I still feel the same!
Got thus plussed, wanted a Bale/Depp film for years.

y2blade

56,091 posts

215 months

Saturday 3rd November 2012
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The Skeleton Key.
Had not seen it before.

Great film

SeanyD

3,374 posts

200 months

Saturday 3rd November 2012
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Just finished the 2003 remake of The Shining. 10/10 utterly brilliant. Starts a little slow but once it got going fabulous. Slightly different from the original Jack Nicholson classic, but just as good if not better, 4:30 long though. Bought for a few quid in an HMV bargain bin, worth 10 times that.

Negative Creep

24,964 posts

227 months

Saturday 3rd November 2012
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Halb said:
Negative Creep said:
There is of course the twist which every horror movie must include by law, which I did see coming. Does anyone these days ever believe the scene right near the end where everything seems to have been resolved and they'll live happily ever after? Wouldn't it be a great twist to have no twist at all?
I think all Horrors need the traditional twist. But It does need to be unpredictable.
Problem is the unpredictability becomes predictable, so I find myself sitting there thinking "I bet it turns out X was the killer" or "i reckon the ghost will appear again in the mirror" etc. There have been some great horror twists - Shutter, Don't Look Now, The Sixth Sense, The Others - it shouldn't be mandatory. The likes of An American Werewolf in London or the Shining do a good job in themselves of wrapping the story up. Or you could just leave it open such as Halloween or Dawn of the Dead.

porridge

1,109 posts

144 months

Sunday 4th November 2012
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Salmon fishing in the Yemen. sleepsleepsleep

blippo1984

358 posts

146 months

Sunday 4th November 2012
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Goldfinger.

My first time ever (I'm 28). My first Sean Connery Bond ever.

Brilliant.
Standard reset for Bond films

Adam B

27,213 posts

254 months

Sunday 4th November 2012
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Crazy stupid love - that rare thing, a romcom that is smart and funny, saw it at the cinema and it stood up to sky second viewing, still had a good chuckle 8/10

Haywire - another one I had seen before, a standard agent/assassin character betrayed plot but with a very different feel courtesy of director Steven Soderbergh, imagine a female Bourne with a lower budget and some sex, lies and videotape quirkiness. Refreshing 8/10

Resistance - d-day has failed and ze Germans have invaded, character study of a welsh farming village where all the men have left to join the resistance and some Germans move in on a secret mission, there is zero action (ok someone shoots a horse), minimal dialogue or plot, lots of granite-faced stoicness, and zero enjoyment 1/10. Wales looks pretty hence the 1

DuncanM

6,169 posts

279 months

Sunday 4th November 2012
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Adam B said:
Haywire - another one I had seen before, a standard agent/assassin character betrayed plot but with a very different feel courtesy of director Steven Soderbergh, imagine a female Bourne with a lower budget and some sex, lies and videotape quirkiness. Refreshing 8/10
Really?

Comically bad, the worst acting I have seen for many a year in my opinion.

2/10 from me frown


chris watton

22,477 posts

260 months

Sunday 4th November 2012
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DuncanM said:
Adam B said:
Haywire - another one I had seen before, a standard agent/assassin character betrayed plot but with a very different feel courtesy of director Steven Soderbergh, imagine a female Bourne with a lower budget and some sex, lies and videotape quirkiness. Refreshing 8/10
Really?

Comically bad, the worst acting I have seen for many a year in my opinion.

2/10 from me frown
I tried very hard to watch Haywire the other night, but I had to turn it over - a real mess of a film, I thought.

anonymous-user

54 months

Sunday 4th November 2012
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Killer Joe

That is one fked up film! Good acting though 6.5/10

Gretchen

19,028 posts

216 months

Sunday 4th November 2012
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chris watton said:
DuncanM said:
Adam B said:
Haywire - another one I had seen before, a standard agent/assassin character betrayed plot but with a very different feel courtesy of director Steven Soderbergh, imagine a female Bourne with a lower budget and some sex, lies and videotape quirkiness. Refreshing 8/10
Really?

Comically bad, the worst acting I have seen for many a year in my opinion.

2/10 from me frown
I tried very hard to watch Haywire the other night, but I had to turn it over - a real mess of a film, I thought.
We watched this last night. It's ok as an Arthouse film. Gina Carano isn't an actress, so as Johnny put it 'the film showcases her skills as a mixed martial artist'. I enjoyed it for what it as such.






Daz68

3,364 posts

210 months

Sunday 4th November 2012
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porridge said:
Salmon fishing in the Yemen. sleepsleepsleep
Really enjoyed it? Predictable I agree but still very good.

Halb

53,012 posts

183 months

Sunday 4th November 2012
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Legacywr said:
I originally saw Public Enimies at the pictures and thought is was very dull and empty, so I thought I would give it another go last night on the TV,…and I still feel the same!
It was certainly rich and luscious looking. But there was something missing. Still good performances from the two leads.

Negative Creep said:
Problem is the unpredictability becomes predictable, so I find myself sitting there thinking "I bet it turns out X was the killer" or "i reckon the ghost will appear again in the mirror" etc. There have been some great horror twists - Shutter, Don't Look Now, The Sixth Sense, The Others - it shouldn't be mandatory. The likes of An American Werewolf in London or the Shining do a good job in themselves of wrapping the story up. Or you could just leave it open such as Halloween or Dawn of the Dead.
I think when it's done well it isn't. Like in the Others, the story was so good for me that the twist came as a pleasant surprise. When the twist is invisible, it can still retain a surprising quality.
I had to refresh my memory of the original DotD (new one does have the twist and doesn't suffer for it imo, but it is frustrating). Werewolf finishes off the story with a conclusive end, which was nice.

y2blade

56,091 posts

215 months

Sunday 4th November 2012
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Oh yes The Dambusters is just starting on itv4.

hapless

3,558 posts

217 months

Monday 5th November 2012
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Halb said:
DotD (new one does have the twist and doesn't suffer for it imo, but it is frustrating)
I suspect a lot of impatient viewers won't even know about the DotD twist, because of how it's revealed. FWIW I like that twist a lot, because it fits way better with the tone of the balance of the film than the untwisted finale does.

torqueofthedevil

2,074 posts

177 months

Monday 5th November 2012
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Unthinkable with Samuel L Jackson - ste

anonymous-user

54 months

Monday 5th November 2012
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Pirates! Band of Misfits

Aardman animation, utterly brilliant, possibly the funniest thing i've seen this year!

9/10

nonuts

15,855 posts

229 months

Monday 5th November 2012
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After seeing a recommendation on here I bought Drive ages ago, had no expectations or idea of plot but was very impressed. Excellent acting and sense of tension throughout the film.

torqueofthedevil said:
Unthinkable with Samuel L Jackson - ste
I didn't actually think that was too bad, I liked the concept and thought it had some brilliant scenes.

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