Last Movie Watched

Yep. Capt Phillips was great, illustrating the vast contrast between the American captain and the Somali pirates. Tom Hanks is so versatile, it seems he can pull anything off. I read he will be playing a "warts and all" drinking and smoking Walt Disney in an upcoming film about the making of the 1964 classic Disney film "Mary Poppins" called "Saving Mr. Banks".

PH6n8VGz3MW59d_1_m.jpg
 
Last edited by a moderator:
51%2B8bERHc1L._SY300_.jpg


Solid film about a retired thief losing his memory, his failing relationships with his grown children, and the robot that helps him cope with his problems with the world.


51tIg1jhn4L._SY300_.jpg


A great, low budget horror movie, that while I felt it had been done before, it was so well shot and acted that it is highly recommended. It was not as scary as I had hoped though.


711G33EH8AL._SY300_.gif


Meh, don't really see the appeal of this 1990 remake. The over-acting just kills these movies for me.


51LHL9k2W4L._SY300_.jpg


Wow, loved the fair and reasonable portrayal of the issues and day to day struggles many teens go through. Must see movie.


51kGLW25GOL._SY300_.jpg


Pass, all the tense moments and unknown terror of the first movie replaced by a stock zombie-like horror movie.


51qxc0NIrsL._SY300_.jpg


Decent throwback to the 80's Hughes teen movie with quite a few funny moments


51T0g2vBogL._SY300_.jpg


Oh man, what a terrible movie. Interesting premise of a night of lawlessness executed in such a lazy manner, I had so many problems with the stupidity in this movie. That's besides the hideously bad acting.


51zO7-zSxpL._SY300_.jpg


Great coming of age movie about a kid trying to get comfortable with who he is while dealing with his doormat mom's demeaning boyfriend on a summer vacation. This comes from his interaction with a girl he meets on the trip and a job he takes at a water park. Fairly simple plot, but the supporting characters including Sam Rockwell make this movie very enjoyable.


51QKuIcbSFL._SY300_.jpg


Not a huge Bond fan in recent years but this was an outstanding installment. Awesome villain, great story


51iVrlJl3tL._SY300_.jpg


Brutal, intense horror about a seemingly normal teenage girl, her screwed up father, and the terror they impose on a boy who rejected her prom invitation. Recommended


515%2Bpw7cXDL._SY300_.jpg


More of the same in this series, a number of amazing(and unbelievable) action sequences sandwiched around some sort of plot that doesn't matter
 
C'mon...the Purge wasn't THAT bad. And the Loved Ones???? SOOOOOOO overrated. OOOooOoooOOOoh crazy Prom Night with requisite daddy leftover from TCM family. Diehard loved this one too. Meh, It was average at best. That Shaun White wasn't a bad actor for a snowboarder...
 
C'mon...the Purge wasn't THAT bad. And the Loved Ones???? SOOOOOOO overrated. OOOooOoooOOOoh crazy Prom Night with requisite daddy leftover from TCM family. Diehard loved this one too. Meh, It was average at best. That Shaun White wasn't a bad actor for a snowboarder...

I don't want to give it away but the twist in Purge is so pathetically lazy and irrational to me that it overshadows any positives there might have been in the movie. As for Loved Ones, it may have been an ode to number of other well known horror movies but I thought it was effective and really enjoyed both of the 2 evil characters.
 
Last week caught The Strange Colour of Your Body's Tears. I was really looking forward to this, because the duo who created it are the same pair who made Amer and the "O" segment of The ABCs of Death. I found this review quote by Sight and Sound's Anton Bitel on RottenTomatoes.com, and I think it's a pretty good one:

Formally experimental, headily disorienting and an aesthete's wet dream, The Strange Colour of Your Body's Tears is a schizophrenic blend of arthouse and charnelhouse.

Experimental might be an understatement. This movie makes following the storyline of Amer like reading a Dick and Jane book. IOW, I was lost most of the time. However, the visual style, especially the color palette, is amazing, purposefully evocative of the filmmakers' giallo influences; and the soundtrack is my favorite of the year. Obviously not a movie everyone will enjoy. About 5 people walked out, the dude next to me fell asleep, but I was entranced and looking forward to the chance for another viewing.

The next day, I got to see The Court Jester on the big screen. This is one of my all-time favorite films. The only bummer is it seemed like they had to screen it from a DVD, but, as the story kicked in that hardly mattered, and it was great to see a comedy masterpiece along with a large audience.
 
51nOsI2jdnL._.jpg

Black Lizard (Kurotokage) - So there's infamous master female cat burglar and a famous master detective chasing after her, based on a story by famous master author Edogawa Rampo. And they might have a thing for each other. It's a story you've sort of seen before (although usually between two dudes with unspoken ****-eroticism), but I bet you've never seen it done like this. Musical numbers and a lot of off-the-wall lighting and camera work. It was pretty entertaining and apparently not available on english subtitled DVD anywhere, so I was pretty pleased that Turner Classics decided to show it.


51GFFB6HYHL.jpg

The Creeping Flesh - Alright, so here's a confession: Up until watching this, I had seen pretty much nothing Peter Cushing had done other than Star Wars, and I don't think I'd seen many Christopher Lee films, either. I don't think I'd ever seen a single Hammer film. It's something I've been slightly embarrassed about ever since I really got into movies and I'd always planned to get into the Hammer catalogue someday, but I just never did. And then I found this on one of the HD movie channels. And now I'm hooked.
Really enjoyed it. It's kind of B-movie-ish, but it's not really overly cheesy. I actually thought the climax was really well done and effectively creepy, especially considering the implausibility of what was happening. A lot of it was Lee and Cushing being so good that they made everything work, and a lot of it was just good directing. Of all the Cushing/Lee movies I've seen since this, which I'll mention here, this is still my favorite.


51S0avPLuJL._.jpg

Female Convict Scorpion - A Hong Kong remake of one of my favorite movies of all time, starring Miki Mizuno, who was awesome in the Hard Revenge Milly movies. I went in not expecting much, maybe some decent fight scenes, but I didn't even get that. This movie suuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuucked. Just all around bad. Badly edited, shot and directed. The fight scenes were ridiculous. Nope. Avoid.


51gEPkvLh%2BL._.jpg

Life Of Pi - Very pretty and worth watching. Wouldn't say I loved it, but I enjoyed it.


51YgOngPa5L._.jpg

Hidden In The Woods - Bleh. A lot of the reviews for this talk about it being a great, disturbing horror flick, but I thought this movie blew chunks. Extreme gore alone does not make for a great, disturbing horror flick. I was constantly wondering why the characters would do what they were doing. Eventually, it got to be too much for me and I just fast forwarded to the gorey stuff. Some of that was decent, at least, but story-wise this felt very amateur hour. Maybe the reviewers who liked it haven't seen Martyrs.


51BQfhhmdLL._.jpg

Horror Of Dracula - So, like, two days after I watched The Creeping Flesh, this was on Turner Classics. Sweeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeet. I liked this movie well enough, but, to be completely honest I was disappointed that there wasn't more of Christopher Lee/Dracula. I do enjoy watching Peter Cushing and I did still enjoy the movie, but, dammit, I need more Dracula and less Van Helsing talking to people about Dracula. I guess Lee has made around 10 Dracula films, though, so I assume I'll get my chance. Also, I completely had no idea that that was Michael Gough playing Arthur until I saw the IMDB listing. I think this was my first time seeing him in a film outside of the original Batman flicks, too.


51lXvO0sUiL._.jpg

The Romantic Englishwoman - It's rare that my mancrush on Michael Caine is not enough to sustain my attention for a movie, but this one pushed the limits. So ****ing boring. Caine was great, and got to step away from the type of role he usually plays by just being a tremendous dickhead, but the rest of the movie was slow and not terribly interesting. Don't be fooled by the racy cover, there ain't much too look at here.


51fpiRdoYGL._.jpg

The Brave One - Someone remind me why I watched this again. I guess because I wanted to see what it looks like when Jodie Foster goes Punisher. And I like Terrence Howard. It was ok. Just kind of there. Not bad, not great.


51P2RVVCH9L._.jpg

Jarhead - Hadn't seen this since it was in the theater. I like it. Sam Mendes, man. Jamie Foxx is pretty great.


510HPEK3NAL._.jpg

The Curse Of Frankenstein - For the first half of Halloween day, TCM showed nothing but Cushing/Lee movies and I recorded them all. The second half of the day was all Vincent Price movies and I only recorded one because my DVR is not infinite and they'll show most of them again next year, but he's next on my list. Anyway, remember how I said I was disappointed with Horror Of Dracula because there wasn't enough Christopher Lee? Yeah, there was even less of him in this. But, I enjoyed the non-Lee stuff a little more, so I think it just about balanced out. Good stuff.


61sBxoGNwnL._.jpg

The Mummy - By now, I knew what to expect. This one was pretty similar to the Frankenstein and Dracula flicks as far as tone and style, and I had pretty much the same feelings about it. I enjoyed it, not enough Christopher Lee. I wish we could get a Blu-ray box of these flicks. Goddamn.


51uquEZveOL._.jpg

Dracula: Prince Of Darkness - Ok, seriously. Are any of these movies going to have Dracula as more than a supporting character? Again, I enjoyed this movie plenty, but I'm much more interested in what Dracula is doing at any given moment than what four random strangers who happen upon his castle are. Extra points on this for the resurrection scene, which was pretty fantastic, and because this is actually available on Blu-ray. Probably pick it up at some point.


51Yw0w7UkdL._.jpg

Wandering Ginza Butterfly - Hadn't seen this Meiko Kaji flick in a while and decided it was a good time to watch it again. The overall story is sort of rote and ho-hum, but it's elevated by the performances, especially hers, and the pool hall stuff, which I thought was really interesting. Apparently, shortly before agreeing to this role, Meiko had seen The Hustler with Paul Newman in it and talked the director into making one of the showdowns be a game of billiards. It's pretty cool. The final battle isn't exactly Lady Snowblood level, but it's entertaining.


51a3VM8z7mL._.jpg

Horror Express - Theeeeeeeeeeere we go. Lots of Christopher Lee. I really liked this one, especially the creature effects.


41PFjkih6AL._.jpg

Purple Noon - An adaptation of The Talented Mr. Ripley made in France in 1960. Pretty solid and entertaining, mostly thanks to Alain Delon who's got to be be one of the most attractive men who ever walked the planet and is a damn good actor. I wouldn't buy it, but I liked it.
 
images


I know I'm seriously late to this party, but I thoroughly enjoyed this flick despite not being a horror fan. Available on Netflix. If you haven't, check it out. Good stuff.

Did I mention I'm not a horror fan? If you are a horror fan, I'd say this is an absolute must.
 
resolution-2012-poster.jpg


Netflix recommended this *because you watched [enter random drug-related titles]. Looking like a super low-budg student film, I thought it was just the story of a guy who drives up to a remote mountain cabin to try and drag his very unwilling crack-addicted buddy to rehab, but it slowly turned into a sleeper horror flick. I gotta admit, while it was fairly low key and slow-moving there were a few ominous moments and a fair amount tension building up at the end, all the while keeping a pretty realistic (profanity-heavy) dialogue and subtly humorous give-and-take between the two friends. It won't blow you out of your seat with chills or effects, but it was unique and interesting enough to sit through easily to the end.
 
Last edited:
Resolution_1.jpg


Netflix recommended this *because you watched [enter random drug-related titles]. Looking like a super low-budg student film, I thought it was just the story of a guy who drives up to a remote mountain cabin to try and drag his very unwilling crack-addicted buddy to rehab, but it slowly turned into a sleeper horror flick. I gotta admit, while it was fairly low key and slow-moving there were a few ominous moments and a fair amount tension building up at the end, all the while keeping a pretty realistic (profanity-heavy) dialogue and subtly humorous give-and-take between the two friends. It won't blow you out of your seat with chills or effects, but it was unique and interesting enough to sit through easily to the end.

Image link doesn't work for me, so I don't know what this is.
 


Hurm. Not bad. Kinda reminded me of Kill The Irishman. Not an outright hero-ization of a horrible man(based on a true story), but it definitely cleaned up some DARK edges. Nice try at showing how Shannon's character kept his darkness in check by killing...but Shannon never really convinced in the 'family man' role. Nice work by Ray Liotta and Chris Evans(completely wasted in the end) but simply a decent flick that got away from the director as it rolled downhill. Coulda been special.



Another heartbreaker. Heard it was a Drunken Irish Tremors...they lied. Not horrible, but about as lightweight as it gets.

Both on Netflix streaming
 
I personally really liked The Iceman. It's not perfect but it's better than most movies new I've watched in the past 6 months. I honestly can't name a single one off the top of my head now that I'm thinking about it. I guess I haven't seen very many great movies this year.
 
Sorry dudes. Tried again. And JD nailed it.

I watched Resolution a while back, totally agree with you. Nice little horror flick.

jmf6KKE.jpg


I watched Henry a while back, I was only half paying attention so I decided to give it another watch because I didn't remember it being particularly disturbing. Now I see where the film's reputation comes from. Pretty ****ing morbid. Probably won't watch again anytime soon.

ufP0RC4.jpg


12 Years a Slave is an amazing film. Great performances all around. Michael Fassbender is brilliant as a ruthless, heartless plantation owner, possibly the best performance of his career. But the one that really stands out is Lupita Nyong'o who plays Patsey, a slave who is regularly abused, beaten, and raped. She's a parallel to the main character, except while Northrup embodies hope and determination Patsey embodies a slave that has long given up hope. Her performance is absolutely heart-wrenching. Can't wait to see it again.
 
51x8pPW-IcL._.jpg

World War Z - Not bad, not great. With all the troubles they had and the re-shoots they had to do, I'm actually a little impressed that the film managed to be as good as it was.


51rveIQwi3L._.jpg

The Devil Rides Out - Disappointing. The first half of this movie was pretty ****ing awesome, culminating in an appearance of Satan that I thought was one of my favorite moments I'd seen thus far in a Hammer film. The second half, though, is pretty ridiculous, and I don't just mean the bad special effects. The rules that everyone is playing by seem to get made up on the spot and it just goes overboard with the hokey stuff. Still an enjoyable film overall, and, ****, I am practically mesmerized by Christopher Lee anymore, but you could do much better.


51b-EwsQJCL._.jpg

Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol - Hadn't seen this in a while. I think it deserves to be mentioned amongst the best action movies ever made.


51MCm6-Bf2L._.jpg

Identity Thief - This got such bad reviews that I went in with really low expectations and ended up enjoying it more than I thought I would. It's still not great, maybe not even good, but it's got enough laughs to keep you watching. I've wasted 90 minutes in worse ways.


5121o2%2BdAqL._.jpg

Dark Shadows - Another one I went into with low expectations, but this one I went out of feeling like I got what I expected. I wanted to watch this because we saw Danny Elfman do some of the music live, and I will still watch anything Johnny Depp does, but that's just about all this had to offer. It wasn't even bad, it was just... there.


51uyxjSPwSL._.jpg

The Taking Of Pelham One Two Three - I had only seen the remake of this before, and I was really surprised at how funny it was. I really enjoyed all the New Yorkers swearing at each other all the time. Beyond that, it was a pretty good thriller and an interesting flick. I liked it quite a bit.


51965J0SQFL._.jpg

Scanners - Just... yes. **** yes. I ****ing love Michael Ironside. Hurry up and Blu this already, please.


517PaxzvrzL._.jpg

The Ward - As bad as I'd heard, but I still had to see for myself. There were some small flashes of that Carpenter talent, but this flick was otherwise as generic as can be. Nice eye candy in the form of Amber Heard, but that's really about it.


61MvXh%2B7GCL._.jpg

John Dies At The End - Pretty entertaining, but I get the feeling that the book is a million times better. Like the Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy movie. There's only so much you can fit into an adaptation. I know the book is pretty big, and it's now on my want list.


51WE1E94KKL._.jpg

The Amityville Horror - Parts of this were pretty cool, but for the most part I thought it was fairly underwhelming. I think the formula for this has been repeated a number of times since this came out and that may have ruined it for me some. Or maybe the later films were just better. I'm not sure. It had it's moments, though.


51NSpW1n6CL._.jpg

Evil Dead - The only redeeming thing about this remake was the gore in the last 30 minutes or so. I was so close to just shutting this off and forgetting about it, but as things escalated in the end, some of the maiming and killing was pretty cool. It's not a good movie at all, though, and I wouldn't recommend it. Go watch High Tension or something if you want to see awesome gore. Ignore this.


51DJRUMTUYL._.jpg

Frankenweenie - Cute, and it had some decent laughs, but I didn't enjoy it as much as I was hoping I would.


51gwhKEBuuL._.jpg

Haze - Holy ****, I've been wanting to see this Shinya Tsukamoto short film for 8 ****ing years and I finally found out that it was available on Amazon Prime. It's never been released out here and Tsukamoto is one of my favorite directors of all time and it's been EATING AT ME THAT I COULDN'T WATCH IT. But now I've seen it. Based on an Edogawa Rampo story about a man who wakes up in a very small space and keeps finding himself in more and more uncomfortable/painful situations. I liked it a lot, though there isn't a whole lot to it. One of the situations was really tough to watch. I wish he would make movies more often.
 
Taking Of...may be one of my all time faves. All the players are terrific including the gone-too-soon Robert Shaw. The almost lazy 'ah hAH!' at the end was just the capper on a great movie. Matthau, for me, was never better than when he was a schlubby shoe faced reluctant action hero. I will not even acknowledge the remake. And Coscarelli actually ran out of money making JDatE. The book is swell Adgy, but the movie does fine by it. But by all means, you SHOULD read it. Amityville, I saw that in a theater when it originally came out. And yes, it was VERY effective back then...but time has not been kind. Maybe I had my Carpenter glasses on, but I didn't think the Ward was terrible, and I am glad you agree with me on Evil Dead. The only part of that turd that I enjoyed was the Ash cameo that payed out at the end. That short film sounds like something worth checking out...time to fire up the Amazon Prime.
 
Taking Of...may be one of my all time faves. All the players are terrific including the gone-too-soon Robert Shaw. The almost lazy 'ah hAH!' at the end was just the capper on a great movie. Matthau, for me, was never better than when he was a schlubby shoe faced reluctant action hero. I will not even acknowledge the remake.

All things considered, the remake wasn't that bad. Maybe that's because I saw it first, but I liked it better than I was expecting to. I rarely ever enjoy John Travolta, but he seemed like he was having such a good time being the villain. And, you know, Denzel is Denzel. Not trying to talk you into watching it, it wasn't anything special, but it certainly didn't have the charm or humor that the original did.

And Coscarelli actually ran out of money making JDatE. The book is swell Adgy, but the movie does fine by it. But by all means, you SHOULD read it.

I plan to. I actually saw a girl reading it at the airport the other day and it's size is what really cemented my "the book must be so much better" feeling. It was pretty damn huge! One thing that I thought was sorely lacking from the movie: Clancy Brown. I was hoping for more of him. I would watch a movie about him as that character.

I am glad you agree with me on Evil Dead. The only part of that turd that I enjoyed was the Ash cameo that payed out at the end.

I was actually kind of pissed off/disappointed with that. After it happened, it was "THAT'S IT?!?!!" for me. Why even bother at that point? I mean, I'm never not happy to see The Chin, but I was expecting them to actually work him in or give him something to do. **** that movie and it's blood rain.
 
Well I think the 'team-up' was what they were trying to establish. Not sure what the status is now because conflicting reports have Fede Alvarez moving off the sequel and the elephant in the room is the potential Army of Darkness sequel. Raimi got the franchise active again and I guess the rest is up to him.

And yeah...I might watch 2hrs of Clancy Brown doing laundry.
 
Back
Top