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2020-06-29, 04:37 PM (ISO 8601)
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What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
Just curious on what movies people like and they want to watch. Yes, this is a very subtle way of asking for recommendations.
For the record, I do feel like most of my favorite films feel somewhat off from my current demographic, but from where I lived as a kid I didn't really get the chance to experience movies. So I guess I'm playing catch-up.
My list:
The Matrix
V for Vendetta
The Silence of the Lambs
The Shawshank Redemption
District 9
Zodiac
Wall-E
fricking IP Man, goddamn
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
Scott Pilgrim vs the World
And to-watch:
Parasite
Spirited Away
Knives Out
Spoiler: Knives Out
Wow, nicely done. I knew Rian Johnson was holding back.
Pan's Labyrinth
any of Fincher's Films
Donnie Darko
(I'll probably edit this later).
What are your lists?Last edited by understatement; 2020-06-29 at 07:45 PM.
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2020-06-29, 05:24 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Sep 2006
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- England
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Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
Favourites : (though ask me this again tomorrow and I guarantee at least a few will be different)
Monty Python and the Holy Grail
Usual Suspects
Zulu
Princess Bride
Mr Vampire
Terminator
Yojimbo
Untouchables
The Raid
Dredd
Zu Warriors
To See:
Uncut Gems
Midsommar
A Field In England
Animal Kingdom
A Bittersweet Life
The Lighthouse
SPL
The Hidden FortressLast edited by comicshorse; 2020-06-29 at 05:32 PM.
All Comicshorse's posts come with the advisor : This is just my opinion any difficulties arising from implementing my ideas are your own problem
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2020-06-29, 11:08 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Dec 2015
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- San Francisco Bay area
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Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
Here's some films that I liked, and the years they were first screened (with a random few highlighted with links about them):
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari - 1920
The Thief of Bagdad - 1924
Footlight Parade 1933
Gold Diggers of 1933 (just take a guess why don't you?)
Things to Come - 1936
The Prisoner of Zenda - 1937
Alexander Nevsky - 1938
The Adventures of Robin Hood - 1938
His Girl Friday - 1940
The Grapes of Wrath - 1940
The Great Dictator - 1940
The Sea Hawk - 1940
The Thief of Bagdad - 1940
Waterloo Bridge - 1940
The Maltese Falcon - 1941
Casablanca - 1942
Double Indemnity - 1944
La Belle et la Bête (Beauty and the Beast) - 1946
It's a Wonderful Life - 1946
The Third Man - 1949
Orphée (Orpheus) - 1950
On the Waterfront - 1954
The Seven Samurai - 1954
Cyclists Special - 1955
Paths of Glory - 1957
The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad - 1958
Vertigo - 1958
Journey to the Center of the Earth - 1959
On the Beach - 1959
The Time Machine - 1960
Yojimbo - 1961
Billy Budd - 1962
First Men in the Moon - 1964
Lord Jim - 1965
Le Roi de cœur (King of Hearts) -1966
De Duva (The Dove) - 1968
Johnny Got His Gun - 1971
The Conquest of the Planet of the Apes - 1972
Dark Star - 1974
The Island at the Top of the World - 1974
The Land That Time Forgot - 1974
Monty Python and the Holy Grail - 1975
The Rocky Horror Picture Show - 1975
At The Earth's Core - 1976
Logan's Run - 1976
Jabberwocky - 1977
Star Wars - 1977
Wizards - 1977
Hardware Wars - 1978
Alien - 1979
Monty Python's Life of Brian - 1979
Dragonslayer - 1981
Escape from New York -1981
Excalibur - 1981
Raiders of the Lost Ark - 1981
The Road Warrior - 1981
Time Bandits -1981
Blade Runner - 1982
The Wrath of Khan - 1982
Something Wicked This Way Comes - 1983
Conan the Destroyer - 1984
Repo Man - 1984
1984 - 1984
The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension - 1984
This is Spinal Tap - 1984
Brazil - 1985
Young Sherlock Holmes - 1985
Aliens - 1986
Raising Arizona - 1987
The Adventures of Baron Munchausen - 1988
The Princess Bride - 1988
Gattaca
Galaxy Quest - 1999
A Knight's Tale - 2001
49 Up - 2005
Hott Fuzz - 2007
Atonement - 2007
Moonrise Kingdom - 2012
Locke - 2013
The Grand Budapest Hotel - 2014
'71 - 2014
J. R. R. Tolkien vs George R. R. Martin. Epic Rap Battles of History - 2015
Twentieth Century Women - 2016
Topping my "to see" list right now are:
Waterloo Bridge - 1931
Make Way For Tomorrow - 1937
Tokyo Story - 1953
Gaby - 1956
L'eclisse (The Eclipse) - 1962
Chimes at Midnight - 1965
Girl on a Motorcycle - 1968
The Brothers Grimm - 2005
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2020-06-29, 11:13 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Dec 2009
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- Birmingham, AL
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Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
Cuthalion's art is the prettiest art of all the art. Like my avatar.
Number of times Roland St. Jude has sworn revenge upon me: 1
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2020-06-29, 11:34 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Dec 2015
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- San Francisco Bay area
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Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
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2020-06-30, 05:14 AM (ISO 8601)
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- Mar 2020
Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
While I can watch almost anything because of my chronic lack of taste, here's some of the films that stuck with me after the fact;
8 Women, a French murder-mystery-musical, quite possibly one of the funnest genre mishmashes. Weird and dark and sad andSpoilersurprisingly gay, though most of it didn't age well.
Ocean's 11. A slick heist movie that knows its limitations and what it wants to do and does it well. In terms of sequels; skip 12, maybe watch 13, and go into 8 with an open mind.
Song of the Sea, an Irish (available in English) 2D animated film that takes inspiration from celtic mythology. Cartoon Saloon, the studio that made it, comes in swinging with visuals that can only be described as lush. Just a beautifully scored, beautifully animated film. I used to walk past their studios a lot in the past, and they're still going strong.
Spiderman: Into the Spiderverse. If you have ever considered yourself interested in the animated medium, are sick of the focus on photo realism in non-live action films, or just like having fun, and you haven't watched this, you are missing out. Genuinely one of the most innovative, artistically masterful pieces I've seen in a while.
Pride, a story that depicts the real-life struggles of LGSM, an alliance between the miners and the gay community during the 80s. Fun, sad, genuinely well-written dialogue and characters, and a kickin' soundtrack. What more could you want?
It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, not because it's good or not, but because I watched all three and a half hours of it straight through when I was 8 and I think everyone should experience the out-of-body experience I had after the fact.
The Cornetto Trilogy, specifically The World's End. Anything Edgar Wright touches is solid gold, but these films . . . They're just that good, okay?I draw, and I write sometimes! Drow paladin avatar by me. They/Them
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2020-06-30, 07:03 AM (ISO 8601)
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Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
Some of my favorites:
The Beast (1988)
Cube
Pan's Labyrinth
Banlieue 13 (2004, French)
The Transporter
Fanfare (1958, Dutch)
Starship Troopers
How To Train Your Dragon
The Land Before Time
The Thing (1982)
And purely for the soundtrack Best of the Best (1989) and Prince of Egypt.The Hindsight Awards, results: See the best movies of 1999!
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2020-06-30, 09:39 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Mar 2008
Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
Those 2, along with your earlier list, make a great group of recommendations, though there are a couple I don't particularly like and a few I haven't seen.
I'll add my usual plug for the 20's silent version of Ben-Hur, plus a few more, focusing on movies I think are kind of unfairly over-looked:
Winchester '73 (one of the best Westerns, and one of Jimmy Stewart's best films)
A Shot in the Dark (first sequel to The Pink Panther, and much more typical of the series than the first pic; probably over-looked because it's the only one in the series not to have the franchise name somewhere in the title)
The Black Hole (not exactly a favorite, but a very interesting yet flawed movie--exactly the kind of movie that needs to be re-made IMO)
Con Air (a guilty pleasure; stupid but fun)
Saving Grace (under-rated British comedy)
The Green Mile (I'll see your Stephen King-based prison film, and raise you 1)
Spy Kids (yeah, ok, it's a kids' movie, but it's Robert Rodriguez's take on a kids' movie)
The Whole Nine Yards (one of my favorite comedies)
The Whole Nine Yards (one of my favorite comedies)
To See List (very abridged version)
Punch Drunk Love
The Manchurian Candidate (definitely not the remake--I actually started watching the original a while back but got interrupted)
Bubba-Ho-Tep
Children of Men
Tucker & Dale Vs. Evil
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2020-06-30, 09:57 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Dec 2009
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- Birmingham, AL
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Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
Cuthalion's art is the prettiest art of all the art. Like my avatar.
Number of times Roland St. Jude has sworn revenge upon me: 1
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2020-06-30, 10:52 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Feb 2011
Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
Originally Posted by deltamire
Song of the Sea, an Irish (available in English) 2D animated film that takes inspiration from celtic mythology. Cartoon Saloon, the studio that made it, comes in swinging with visuals that can only be described as lush. Just a beautifully scored, beautifully animated film.
Originally Posted by deltamire
Spiderman: Into the Spiderverse.…. Genuinely one of the most innovative, artistically masterful pieces I've seen in a while.
Originally Posted by deltamire
Ocean's 11. A slick heist movie that knows its limitations and what it wants to do and does it well. In terms of sequels; skip 12, maybe watch 13, and go into 8 with an open mind.
As for 8, it was a ton of fun, and once again Cate Blanchett proves she can play anything flawlessly. But I had one marked gripe with this one:
SpoilerEverything goes off without a hitch.
Every single aspect of the heist goes perfectly, right to the plan, and that just made it all too pat for me. Half the enjoyment of a heist movie is that moment when things go to pieces, and they have to toss the plan and improvise.
Ocean’s 8 ignored that completely, and it felt unsatisfying as a result.
Originally Posted by dps
The Black Hole (not exactly a favorite, but a very interesting yet flawed movie--exactly the kind of movie that needs to be re-made IMO)
The novelization was by Alan Dean Foster, who somehow managed to do novelizations for just about everything (Aliens, Star Trek, Star Wars, etc.) and as usual he improved on the source material. I usually don’t like remakes, but I have to agree a remake in this case could be interesting.
One of my favorites which hasn’t been mentioned is The Road to El Dorado, which was one of the first movies released by Dreamworks, although it was overshadowed by Prince of Egypt.
The Road to El Dorado does exactly what it sets out to do, and it does it superbly: a silly and hilarious buddy movie, with some surprisingly authentic touches mixed in with all the goofiness. Also a soundtrack with some excellent songs.
As for movies I plan to watch, I've been meaning to take a look at Woman Walks Ahead, which from the preview seems to be a thoughtful take on a period in American history which is typically given a rather violent and superficial treatment.
.Last edited by Palanan; 2020-06-30 at 10:54 PM.
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2020-07-01, 10:54 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Jun 2004
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- Everywhere you want to be
Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
I don't have a particular list - I've never been that into cinema as a subject for obsession, so my experience is relatively limited. I would probably include:
The Fly (1986) - Cronenberg is a genius, one of the best and most disturbing depictions of terminal illness ever created, both Geena Davis and Jeff Goldblum are great.
The works of John Carpenter, especially including:
Starman (1984) - it's kind of a love story involving Space Jesus, but... I rather like this one anyway.
The Thing (1982) - actually requires some thinking to fully understand, high tension, remarkable special effects for the time that are still effective.
Others:
The Devil's Candy (2015) - I hate grossout and slasher movies. This movie shows nothing, and is all the more effective for what it leaves out. Memorable and disturbing without ever being explicit, demonstrates a mastery of true horror.
The Descent (2005) - excellent psychological tension - if possible, watch the one with the UK ending, not the US one, which is stupid and offensive. Extraordinary film otherwise that reminds me of the best parts of the Alien series - where you realize you've been seeing the images without recognizing them.
Spider-man: Into the Spider-verse (2018) - Well-told story, interesting characters, feels like a comic book come to life in all the best possible ways. Extraordinary art. Highly recommended.
The Avengers (2012) - best superhero movie of all time IMO. I expected little of it, saw it after a friend was enthusiastic, was completely blown away. Joss Whedon deserves more respect.
The Shawshank Redemption (1994) - Stephen King writes fantastically when restricted in length, and this is a great adaptation of a great novella. Emotionally powerful, inspirational without being glurgy or saccharine.
Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982) - best appreciated by fans of Star Trek, I know it's a bit over the top at points, and sometimes the lack of budget shows, but it's entertaining, riveting, has an exceptional and memorable performance by Ricardo Monteban, and the ending is a cultural touchstone, arguably must be seen to understand modern pop culture.
The Dark Knight (2008) - I found myself looking away from the screen because I couldn't take the tension any more. Keith Ledger was wonderful, and horrible. And of course any film with Michael Caine is good, even if it's only the Michael Caine bits (in this movie it's all good).
The Muppet Christmas Carol (1992): Michael Caine, the Muppets, and a solid version of an old classic. Also Gonzo and Rizzo the Rat! See this even though it's Disney.
Babe (1995) - 'heartwarming' annoys me, but this movie is so relentlessly good I can't hate it even if I try.
(edit to add)
Clue (1985) - zany, ridiculous humor in a send-up of murder mysteries. If it has both Tim Curry and Madeline Kahn, you know it's good.
Ladyhawke (1985) - has one of the worst beginnings ever, with one of the best mid-to-ends. Uneven but unforgettable.
Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure (1989) - one of the few movies that gets time travel right. Whoa.Last edited by Caledonian; 2020-07-03 at 04:07 PM.
Alignments are objective. Right and wrong are not.
Good: Will act to prevent harm to others even at personal cost.
Evil: Will seek personal benefit even if it causes harm to others.
Law: General, universal, and consistent trump specific, local, and inconsistent.
Chaos: Specific, local, and inconsistent trump general, universal, and consistent.
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2020-07-06, 08:30 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Feb 2011
Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
Originally Posted by Palanan
As for movies I plan to watch, I've been meaning to take a look at Woman Walks Ahead, which from the preview seems to be a thoughtful take on a period in American history which is typically given a rather violent and superficial treatment.
SpoilerThat said, for a movie that wants to celebrate a lesser-known figure, it ends up stripping out much of her life and simplifying her character to the point of Generic Eastern Society Woman. Given how carefully they addressed some of the finer points from history, they didn't do Catherine Weldon the credit of acknowledging how complex her life had really been.
Still worth watching, but also worth keeping in mind that the main character's real life story was much different than what the script presents.
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2020-07-06, 08:48 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Oct 2006
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- Toronto, Canada
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Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
Surprised nobody mentioned this one:
Dirty Rotten Scoundrels
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0095031/?ref_=fn_al_tt_2
Love that movie, hilarious characters .. casting ... :)
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2020-07-07, 01:49 AM (ISO 8601)
- Join Date
- Dec 2013
Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
Favorites as of right now? Just a few I can think of at the moment.
Arrival
Annihilation
Up
Wall-E
Pontypool
Sorry To Bother You
The Last Days
Her
Good Time
Falling Down
(And then of course there's several shows that have longer arcs like a movie for an entire production run, but are also formatted into smaller mini-arcs like episodic TV shows. But I'll play along and pretend those don't exist. In my mind, though, I think of those things as if they were movies.)
I like a lot of movies, so favorites might be overstating the ones on this list. I don't generally think of movies in terms of favorites as much as I tend to categorize them as, "would recommend to general audience", "would recommend to specific audience" and "would not recommend". It's rare I use it, but I also have an "recommended to avoid" category that truly excessively awful things go into. But most of the movies I just mentioned are ones I've seen multiple times or have elements in them I consider interesting enough to discuss with people or think about on my own.
Sometimes I watch a movie and I don't really know what I think about it yet. Aniara is one such movie.
I think most movies have little of interest to really talk about. There are movies I have seen which I thought were garbage, but because it was garbage for an interesting reason, I can find them somewhat interesting to talk or think about. Especially when I think of the movie in terms of trying to figure out what the writers/producers/director were trying to accomplish. So in some sense, I have seen terrible movies before that have given me more to say than genuinely good movies. An enjoyable movie I don't have much to think about cannot be a favorite movie of mine.
Some movies I plan to watch include:
Under The Skin
Prospect
Paddleton
I don't have much I plan to watch in general because I tend to watch things on a whim rather than because of critical reception or general hype. Do I feel like giving "stated specific premise" a shot right now? If yes, I'll generally give anything a shot. Even sometimes Asylum or Adam Sandler/Will Ferrell movies. Though Asylum movies are usually accidental viewings, like I assume most of their audience is.I write a horror blog in my spare time.
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2020-07-07, 08:43 AM (ISO 8601)
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- Feb 2011
Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
Originally Posted by BeerMug Paladin
Arrival
Originally Posted by BeerMug Paladin
Prospect
SpoilerThere are a few places where the very low budget is obvious to the point of distracting, but for the most part it’s an example of how really good low-budget SF is possible and worth doing. Very much recommended.
Originally Posted by BeerMug Paladin
Sometimes I watch a movie and I don't really know what I think about it yet. Aniara is one such movie.
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2020-07-07, 09:17 AM (ISO 8601)
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- Apr 2009
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- Germany
Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
The Empire Strikes Back
Blade Runner
Ghost in the Shell
In that order.
Also high in my collection:
Alien
The Thing
Raiders of the Lost Ark
Fury Road
Inception
Princess MononokeWe are not standing on the shoulders of giants, but on very tall tower of other dwarves.
Spriggan's Den Heroic Fantasy Roleplaying
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2020-07-07, 09:18 AM (ISO 8601)
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- Feb 2005
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Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
A lot of people have mentioned some of my favorites, but two that haven't gotten attention yet.
My Cousin Vinny (1992) - both a wonderful comedy and a far more accurate portrayal of the trial system than any police procedural, to the point where it's (supposedly) shown in law school to students.
The Hunt For Red October (1990) - Sean Connery as a Russian submarine captain who gives 0.3 Honey Badgers about his accent, a young Alec Baldwin, and James Earl Jones make for the best film adaptation of any Tom Clancy novel.NOW COMPLETE: Let's Play Starcraft II Trilogy:
Hell, It's About Time: Wings of Liberty
Does This Mutation Make Me Look Fat: Heart of the Swarm
My Life For Aiur? I Barely Know 'Er: Legacy of the Void
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2020-07-07, 02:03 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Mar 2008
Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
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2020-07-07, 04:43 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Dec 2009
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- Birmingham, AL
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Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
A good deal of law schools do actually show it (or parts of it) as examples of how to do a textbook X, mostly as a way to unwind for a small bit in between all the soul crushing that goes on. According to some lawyer friends, at least. I knew that well before the Legal Eagle episode, but it was still a fun ride.
Cuthalion's art is the prettiest art of all the art. Like my avatar.
Number of times Roland St. Jude has sworn revenge upon me: 1
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2020-07-07, 05:58 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Feb 2005
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- Santa Barbara, CA
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Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
So lets take my lead....
Brazil....the international ending only/directors cuts. This may be my favorite movie period
Dr Strangelove
Rush (the F1 movie....probably gets my "most underrated" award a character study marketed as a sports flick)
Silver Linings Playbook (hey someone used every damn trope of the RomCom and made it work...kudos)
Dredd 3D (good grief this was pretty and not even that stupid)
Cave of Forgotten Dreams (if you can find a 3D showing of this...do. It is what sold me on the use of 3D as artistic choice)
Monty Python (Life of Brian, Meaning of Life, and Search for the Holy Grail-just I'm a fan)
A Fish Called Wanda
Edge of Tomorrow
Love Actually (total schmaltz but I watch it every Xmas and love it every time)
Collateral
Girl With a Pearl Earring
Silence of the Lambs
Alien and Aliens (two genres both great fun)
Moon
The Wicker Man (73...No Mr Cage)
Four Rooms
Reservoir Dogs
Syriana
Witness
Indiana Jones & last Crusade
Neon Daemon (amazing as modern fairy tale)
Locke
Shame
Se7en
Tomas Crown Affair (I like the Pierce Brosnan one more for the return scene but damn the Chess scene with McQueen is good)
Cube
Shawshank Redemption
Clue
Apollo 13
Bridge of Spies
The Bucket List
Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels
Inception
The Italian Job (1969)
Event Horizon
When Harry met Sally
Harry Brown
A Single Man
Memento
In Bruges
Seven Psychopaths
The Deerhunter
Kingsman: The Secret Service
Stranger than Fiction
Pulp Fiction
Blade Runner
Her (with Mr Phoenix)
Jurassic Park (original only thankyouverymuch)
Frost/Nixon
Robot & Frank
Pacific Rim
Star Wars (Ep IV)
Twelve Angry Men
Up in the Air
Pan's Labyrinth
Edit:
Deadpool (that movie did its job very well)
Paranormal Activity (first one only)
The Usual Suspects
one Hour Photo
Good Will HuntingLast edited by sktarq; 2020-07-07 at 06:09 PM.
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2020-07-08, 03:41 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Jun 2004
- Location
- Everywhere you want to be
Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (1988) - Terry Gilliam is a genius, and this movie is an excellent demonstration of why. I love all his films, but this one has a special place in my heart.
Alignments are objective. Right and wrong are not.
Good: Will act to prevent harm to others even at personal cost.
Evil: Will seek personal benefit even if it causes harm to others.
Law: General, universal, and consistent trump specific, local, and inconsistent.
Chaos: Specific, local, and inconsistent trump general, universal, and consistent.
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2020-07-10, 09:47 PM (ISO 8601)
- Join Date
- Jul 2009
Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
My favorites are
1. Jack Reacher
2. Oceans 11
3. Scott Pilgrim
4. Princess Mononoke
I've basically given up on movies though. None that I'm looking forward to.
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2020-08-06, 12:40 AM (ISO 8601)
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- Dec 2009
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- Birmingham, AL
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Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
So, seeing as you're using it for recommendations, I'm going to toss out some reasonings in here. Three movies you almost certainly have seen before, but just in case you haven't.
Rocky.I don't dislike the rest of the Rocky movies, they're fun watches, but they completely take away from the entire point of the first one. The Rocky sequels are movies. But Rocky is art.Spoiler: SpoilersRocky doesn't want to fight Creed; he fights in clubs for peanuts, Apollo is a world-class fighter. Rocky knows he can't win, he knows it wouldn't be much of a fight, so he doesn't want to do it at first. The promoter, Mr. Jergens, convinces him. Rocky starts to train in earnest, gets Mickey behind him, gets the city of Philadelphia behind him, he believes he has the wind at his back. And then, far and away the best scene in the movie, Rocky goes to the ring the night before. It's intimidating - a massive arena, empty except for himself and Jergens who also happens to be there. The calm before the storm. The banner of him, larger than life, has the colors wrong on his shorts. "It doesn't really matter, does it?" Jergens says. And then it really hits home, what he knew when he first turned down the fight. It's not real, it's not for him, it's a show. A spectacle. And he knows that he can't win, but he decides that all his training, all his hopes he's had the previous months, they're going to mean something. He sets a goal, he decides to go the distance, no matter what. All 15 rounds with Creed, a feat that has never been done before. He doesn't want to win, he doesn't want the belt, he doesn't want the media circus. He wants to go the distance.
And there is what sets Rocky apart. He loses. And he doesn't just lose, they don't even make a big deal about him losing. It's practically relegated to the background, with triumphant music playing over the announcement and Rocky calling for Adrian, swatting away reporters wanting to talk to him, and when Creed says there won't be a rematch, simply replies, "don't want one." Because when he went to the fight, he went in with his eyes truly open and saw the spectacle. He saw the show. Apollo coming in, fireworks blazing, dancing on his float. And Rocky rejected it, he did what he came to do, he went the distance. Everything else be damned.
If that's not a damned good resolution I don't know what is.
First Blood. The unspoilered bit I said about Rocky can all be said verbatim about First Blood. There are Rambo movies, and there is First Blood. The only flaw in that movie is they didn't stick with the original ending due to test audiences, who were objectively wrong. It could have been a perfect movie. As is, it is a near-perfect movie. Stallone captured lightning in a bottle twice with those two.
Jaws. Putting aside everything great about the rest of the movie, the Indianapolis speech alone makes this one a must-watch. That has to be the best monologue in all of cinema, hands down. The shark didn't cause a national fear of the water. Robert Shaw talking for four minutes caused a national fear of the water. And the cinematography on Body is so elegantly simple - the almost painfully slow move back out of the light, the darkness of the background slowly but surely enveloping him and the audience with him, a claustrophobic feeling as the memory unfolds, until you're there in the water with Quint, feeling the fear he and the others felt as they waited without expectation of rescue, just waiting their turn. No effects, no CGI, just a subtle backing music and an acting powerhouse. Anyway, they delivered the bomb.
And gonna toss in a newer one that you probably haven't seen and absolutely should because it's fantastic:
In Bruges. Anything I can say about it could be better said by a review on YouTube titled "The Absurd Worth of Redemption." Fair warning, it spoils just about every major plot point, so absolutely do not check it out until after. But I wholly recommend checking out that review, because it was able to make me realize things that I couldn't quite put my finger on but seem so obvious after they're explained, and really brings to the forefront the beauty of the movie.Last edited by Peelee; 2020-08-06 at 12:41 AM.
Cuthalion's art is the prettiest art of all the art. Like my avatar.
Number of times Roland St. Jude has sworn revenge upon me: 1
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2020-08-06, 04:10 AM (ISO 8601)
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- Aug 2020
Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
Interstellar
Vita è bella
La meglio gioventùLast edited by SallyOsaku; 2020-08-06 at 04:11 AM.
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Re: What movies are your favorites, and what do you plan to watch?
Other people have already mentioned most of my favorites: Princess Mononoke, Interstellar, Hot Fuzz, Princess Bride, Tucker & Dale vs. Evil, Wall-E, Terminator 2: Judgment Day, Spider-Man: Into the Spiderverse, Scott Pilgrim vs. The World, etc..
Two that I haven't seen mentioned yet that are nonetheless fantastic are Secondhand Lions and Stardust.Last edited by PoeticallyPsyco; 2020-08-07 at 12:51 PM.
Originally Posted by Darths & DroidsOptimization Trophies
Looking for a finished webcomic to read, or want to recommend one to others? Check out my Completed Webcomics You'd Recommend II thread!
Or perhaps you want something Halloweeny for the season? Halloween Webcomics II
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