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  1. In Memory of LAJ_FETT: Please share your remembrances and condolences HERE

Amph What was the last movie you saw? (Ver. 2)

Discussion in 'Community' started by Violent Violet Menace, Nov 17, 2017.

  1. Jedi_Sith_Smuggler_Droid

    Jedi_Sith_Smuggler_Droid Force Ghost star 6

    Registered:
    Mar 13, 2014
    My take away watching that was.

    1) It would have been a hugely successful TV series.

    2) Zack Snyder was doing his own thing with the established characters. Maybe he should have gone all the way and made these all original characters.
    Was he just giving off the right vibe as an actor for the time period? And then that type of character went out of fashion?

    His career as a leading man does not survive the 80s. His last big movie is 1990.
     
  2. CT-867-5309

    CT-867-5309 Chosen One star 7

    Registered:
    Jan 5, 2011
    He took a five year break from acting, and by the time he came back, I do think the business had passed him by. It doesn't help that he didn't seem to be a great actor. If you go back and watch his prime movies, he had a ton of charisma, but not much else. People certainly got tired of the the Mahoney role; he did four Police Academy movies, and they did seven overall.

    Comedy does indeed often age badly. Jokes and styles of comedy become less funny if you use them too many times, and it seems big comedy hits spawn a lot of copies. So the joke just gets beaten to death.

    People don't, but I do. There is a continuity to comedy. You can trace it. I think it's important to recognize the impact and the influence some of these comedies have had. They end up influencing a lot of what's funny later on.
     
  3. darkspine10

    darkspine10 Chosen One star 8

    Registered:
    Dec 7, 2014
    Matilda (2022), a very fun adaptation of the stage musical (I’ve not seen it myself but knew a few of the songs and read the book). The heightened fantasy moments were charming, and the child actors were all very solid in t for roles. Among the adult cast, Emma Thompson seems born to play Miss Trunchbull, the cruel headmistress villain, perfectly capturing her over the top brand of bullying. A very effective movie overall.
     
  4. Todd the Jedi

    Todd the Jedi Mod and Loving Tyrant of SWTV, Lit, & Collecting star 6 Staff Member Manager

    Registered:
    Oct 16, 2008
    Strange World (2022)

    Adventure! Excitement! Farming?
    This is a little mishmash of pulp serials with some good ole family drama, intergenerational at that. It starts out in a steampunk-ish world and moves to an underground world full of the most nonsensical creatures imaginable, and these wildly imaginative settings provide the backdrop for the story about a man at odds with his adventurer dad; they have wildly different approaches to navigating these worlds which puts them frequently at odds, but they both understand what needs to be done to complete their mission in the strange world. Fortunately things are better between the man and his own son, and though they have some tense moments on their journey their relationship is a lot healthier. So even though things wrap up about as much as you'd expect with this family, it provides for a nice story alongside a fantastic voyage to save the surface world.

    I appreciated that they fully embraced the silly nature of pulp fiction, with character names like Jaeger and Meridian, and creature designs where each one makes you go wtf. There's a great intro evocative of radio serials with Alan Tudyk as an old-timey narrator setting the stage for the character dynamics, and it's rendered in a great bit with stylized 2D animation, which is another nice touch making this film feel like a throwback to older media. Once the action kicks in they let most of the characters go all out, which gives it a bit of a swashbuckling feel as well. That said it does a great job fleshing the whole cast out, from this family of farmers/adventurers to their companions, including the bold and brash president of their land. Searcher Clade is a representation of that ever ongoing struggle for parents everywhere to be better than their own parents, and while things seem well between him and his son Ethan, the journey lays bare the cracks in their relationship; throw in the wild card of Grandpa Jaeger and their relationship is truly put to the test. But this is a Disney movie and it is a tribute to pulpy stories, so there's also a cute creature sidekick that joins the Clades on their journey, who can only be described as a belligerent bipedal amoeba. Like most Disney films there's a decent balance of drama and more fun action, so by the end you can easily root for these people as they save their world.
     
  5. AndyLGR

    AndyLGR Jedi Grand Master star 4

    Registered:
    May 1, 2014
    Quite surprising really because, whilst not the best actor he was a good looking guy with some charm. When you look at it he was in some popular movies as well as Police Academy……Short Circuit, Cocoon and 3 men and a Baby were all big hits and had sequels too.
     
  6. Chancellor_Ewok

    Chancellor_Ewok Chosen One star 7

    Registered:
    Nov 8, 2004
    As an idea, The Da Vinci Code was great. Dropping a character into a random city and saying solve this five hundred year old art puzzle was brilliant, however, Dan Brown did not really have the creative chops to properly pull it off.
     
  7. JEDI-SOLO

    JEDI-SOLO Force Ghost star 6

    Registered:
    Feb 12, 2002
    3 Men and A Baby

    The only thing I really remember about that movie was the “ghost” in the curtains rumors/craze. Lol

    Please tell me others remember that who grew up in the 80’s.
     
    Last edited: Nov 29, 2022
  8. CT-867-5309

    CT-867-5309 Chosen One star 7

    Registered:
    Jan 5, 2011
    Yes, I remember my siblings trying to pause it at the right spot. The only other thing I remember is Guttenberg being an artist and doing murals on the walls of their apartment.
     
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  9. christophero30

    christophero30 Chosen One star 10

    Registered:
    May 18, 2017
    I remember both Steve Guttenberg and the Police Academy movies, but neither very fondly.
     
  10. CT-867-5309

    CT-867-5309 Chosen One star 7

    Registered:
    Jan 5, 2011
    I liked them when I was a small child, I liked the quirky characters, I even had quite a few toys, but even the first one didn't hold up well when I rewatched it some time in the last ten years.

    I remember Sergeant Callahan very fondly, along with the El Bimbo song from the Blue Oyster Bar. Mahoney's One In The Oven belly shirt and jean cut offs was an iconic look.
     
    Last edited: Nov 29, 2022
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  11. Sarge

    Sarge Chosen One star 10

    Registered:
    Oct 4, 1998
    Devotion (2022)
    I thought this movie would be easier to watch the second time, but no, it tore me up again. The acting really hit me hard, especially Jesse and Daisy. I don't know how well the story plays out to 'normal' people, but as someone who has lost friends in airplanes, this one really gets to me.
     
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  12. christophero30

    christophero30 Chosen One star 10

    Registered:
    May 18, 2017
    Warrior
    Fantastic mixed martial arts movie with Tom Hardy and Joel Edgerton as 2 estranged brothers who end up fighting each other. Nick Nolte plays the father whom neither son seems to like. Hardy is the fighter with the brawn with a troubled past, Edgerton is the fighter with the brains who is fighting for money for his wife and daughter.
     
    Last edited: Nov 29, 2022
  13. Drac39

    Drac39 Force Ghost star 6

    Registered:
    Jul 9, 2002
    'Glass Onion'

    'Glass Onion' does what a good sequel should. It takes what we liked about the first film and uses the resources a sequel provides to expand upon it. Rian Johnson has created a franchise that I think has the power to stay fresh and reinvent itself. ‘Glass Onion’ does not repeat motifs or narrative threads from the original film, which is very welcome. For the most part, it is a fresh experience but the problems I had with ‘Knives Out’, I have here and in all honesty, they stand out even more in this picture. Johnson’s script is again masterfully written and is a subversive deconstruction of the Agatha Christie breed of mystery.



    Upon reflection, I think the biggest strength of ‘Knives Out’ and ‘Glass Onion’ is the casting. Every role is expertly filled. Leslie Odom Jr, Dave Bautista, and Katherine Hahn are underappreciated character actors that really get to shine here. Kate Hudson gives a performance that is hilarious and bravely self-deprecating and one I think is worthy of Best Supporting Actress consideration. Make no mistake, ‘Glass Onion’ does go bigger and while ‘Knives Out’ ensemble was stronger I think ‘Glass Onion’ may be a funnier film. It is a real shame that the theatrical window was so limited because this picture has moments that scream for an audience.



    ‘Knives Out’ and ‘Glass Onion’ are fun mysteries but beneath the surface, they are really clever indictments of excess and privilege. I mean once we see the mystery play out in our first viewing, the staying power these films have is their commentary. Benoit Blanc becomes secondary as the film goes on and I think that is very clever and by design. In both films we have a cast of unremarkable people who despite all their supposed convictions are entirely willing to stab people in the back for money and clout… and ‘Knives Out’ does this story better. The Thromby family was far more sinister and two-faced than this group of ‘Disruptors’ who are played for more camp value. ‘Knives Out’ had more peril and menace. And it is of no fault to Janelle Monae but Ana de Armas’ Marta was a stronger character. There is a surprise with Andi that Monae plays beautifully but that takes too much time to reveal and hurts the pacing of the picture and a time when it was picking up steam.



    The problem I guess is the conclusion. ‘Glass Onion’ does what ‘Knives Out’ does, the entire film is an exercise in turning the mystery formula on its head so many times that the red herring ends up being our “killer”. Like Chris Evans in ‘Knives Out’, our “killer” is loud. It is a highly entertaining performance and satisfying to see this character get their comeuppance but it’s also kind of dare I say it predictable...



    If you liked ‘Knives Out’, ‘Glass Onion’ makes a great bottom part of a double bill. A ‘Godfather Part II’ it isn’t but I’ll welcome Benoit Blanc back anytime…
     
  14. JEDI-SOLO

    JEDI-SOLO Force Ghost star 6

    Registered:
    Feb 12, 2002
    Lassard’s podium scene. Probably the greatest bit of that movie for me.
     
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  15. Leoluca Randisi

    Leoluca Randisi Jedi Grand Master star 6

    Registered:
    Jun 24, 2014
    Is it available on Netflix yet?
     
  16. Leoluca Randisi

    Leoluca Randisi Jedi Grand Master star 6

    Registered:
    Jun 24, 2014
    I liked it a lot! A lot of nods and homages and was done in the spirit of the original! It helped all the kids from the original were in it all grown up! Bigbys corner window was great as was the Bigbys Department store and Santa all from the original! And all the sets and locations looked like from the original! I cried at the end as he was reading the paper/Opening Jean Shepherd lines from the original and end with the Real Jean Shepherd narrating! I would love to watch the original and new one back to back before Christmas is over this year! I don't know if you saw it but Hallmark made a sequel that stunk. This was light-years better!

    The Red Neck Kids across the Street weren't Scud Farkus's kids they were the Bumpases kids with the Bloodhounds! Scud just mentioned he had trouble always trying to apprehend those kids.

    On another topic I loved the Da Vinci Code books and movie 1 and 3 the best the movies had a modern day Indiana Jones feel to them!
     
    Last edited: Nov 29, 2022
  17. Havac

    Havac Former Moderator star 7 VIP - Former Mod/RSA

    Registered:
    Sep 29, 2005
    The Letter. Bette Davis plays the wife of a plantation owner in Malaya who shoots another man she claims tried to rape her. She’s a bit too cool a customer, but it would be an open-and-shut case until her lawyer is approached with an offer to sell an incriminating letter showing that the man was her lover and she summoned him to her house last night. She prevails on him to compromise his morals and secure the letter.

    It’s a drama without a whole lot of drama. There’s little ambiguity to whether Davis is guilty: she plays a rather transparent narcissistic manipulator, and the only thing interesting is how easily this bad liar is able to get away with it by playing the weak-woman-in-distress card among the polite colonial society who instinctively back her. I think there’s supposed to be some ambiguity in there somewhere, but the film bungles it; there’s never any reason for the audience to doubt that the shoe will drop. The one guy who sees through her is the lawyer as soon as the letter comes up, but as he immediately folds on the letter, there’s not a lot for his story to pivot on, either. As his contempt for Davis and remorse for his moral compromise grows, there’s a bit of suspense over whether he’ll crack, but William Wyler doesn’t really make you buy it. The story just kind of plays out. There’s enough there to dig into, but it’s never framed in a way to really make it compelling. Had this come out a few years later, the noir potential of the setup probably would have been wrung out of it, but in 1940, it’s a hair too early. It still plays out like a staid thirties drama, without any flair, where “watch this wicked woman” is considered a sufficiently dramatic hook that nothing else need be done with it.
     
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  18. CT-867-5309

    CT-867-5309 Chosen One star 7

    Registered:
    Jan 5, 2011
    Somewhere in Time

    Since Hav seemed so taken with the concept, I thought I'd give it a try. I was well aware of it, and soon realized I had seen it as a child with my brother. I remember balking at the time travel and walking away. Lame! Try a flux capacitor next time.

    I mostly agree with Hav's comments. There are one or two truly magical moments, but they are so short lived, the romance is just too thin. They don't spend nearly enough time on it. I paused it just to see how long it took to get Reeve and Seymour to meet, I think it was over 50 minutes in, and as Hav said, Seymour's manager gets in the way. I suppose it doesn't matter, the romance defies time. The whole point is they only have a few moments together, but those moments span 70 years.

    I don't really agree on the quality of the leads, though I agree it is sweet and earnest. Neither can really act, though, and it's a problem here. Reeve is Superman, but I've never been impressed with him as anyone else. Seymour is so beautiful, she still is today (Insert her over the older actress! Make it more realistic!), but she might as well have been played by her photograph. They're both really stiff here, and I think Reeve is really the one who drops the ball on the passion. Seymour goes for Reeve simply because she's been imagining him and waiting for him so long, you know, somewhere in time.

    I agree with Rogue on the score. I'll be dancing to it in my dreams tonight.

    I did really enjoy it, though, I can't lie. It was sentimental and just what I needed tonight.


    Okay, I have to take you guys through this experience of mine. I thought Reeve falling in love with an old picture of a beautiful actress was kinda ridiculous. I didn't buy it at all. I mean, get a life, loser. I know, just go with it, their love reaches across time. But you know what? The most stunning lesson was played on me almost immediately. Reeve goes to see a woman who wrote Seymour's biography. Imagine my surprise when the woman turned out to be the lovely Teresa Wright, who was just mentioned in this thread. And I remembered that she was just mentioned in this thread. Coincidence? More like fate. This was made in 1980, I think the latest movie of hers that I had seen was 1952's The Steel Trap. So it was like I hadn't seen her in 28 years. I recognized her face and her voice instantly, and at 62 years old I could still see the glow of beauty in her. It was so surreal. I was so engrossed with Wright I temporarily lost interest in what Reeve was there for. It was like I was Reeve, seeing this older woman, and then seeing her in my mind in her beautiful youth during the Golden Age of Hollywood. It was like I lived Reeve's fascination with a memory for just a few seconds. I wonder if that was intentional. In my face, anyway. Total facial.

    Personal trivia: I've been to the Grand Hotel in the movie many times. No, really. It's on Mackinac Island in Michigan. My mom and my gran loved going there for some reason. I thought it was horribly boring as a kid, but it was like a tradition, so I returned several times as an adult, and even took a woman there once. We had lunch in the hotel. The hotel, the last time I went, was still basically just like it is in the movie. They were also very snooty about being THE Grand Hotel from the greatest romance movie of all time, Somewhere in Time. You've never seen it? You must have lived under a rock your whole life. I was very put off and haven't gone back since. Mind you, I don't think I had actually seen the whole movie, or had no memory of it, until watching it tonight. I was aware that it was the hotel from the movie, because they make sure you know, but it had no significance to me. Now I wish I had seen the movie long ago. Maybe I should go back some time, though it's like a five hour drive.
     
  19. AndyLGR

    AndyLGR Jedi Grand Master star 4

    Registered:
    May 1, 2014
    The Client Never seen this til this week but I had a load of misconceptions going into it, I assumed that it starred Brigitte Fonda, that it was mainly a courtroom drama and that its about a kid witnessing a murder. All pretty much wrong. A boy and his brother witness a mob attorney kill himself, but not before he tells one of the kids some important information about a dead body of a senator that the FBI are searching for. The local DA (Tommy Lee Jones) wants to use the kid to bring down a mob family, the mob family want to frighten the kid in to not testifying and local attorney Susan Sarandon wants to defend the kid. It all ends up with the kid being forced to testify and the mob having to try and kill the kid to stop him revealing the secret of the dead body. Surprisingly it wasn't as tense as I thought it would be, the threat didn't seem as perilous as I expected and it kind of falls between being part court room drama, part mystery and part runaway kid story. Its got some big names in the cast, but none really get to flex their true acting muscles resulting in something good but not great.

    I think he pulled it off pretty well. I really enjoyed the book. Some of the ones since have been awful though.
     
    Last edited: Nov 30, 2022
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  20. bstnsx704

    bstnsx704 Force Ghost star 5

    Registered:
    Mar 11, 2013
    May or may not get a chance to watch another movie tonight after work, but if not, here's everything I've watched in November 2022 (* denotes theatrical viewing):

    The Mysterians (1957, Ishirō Honda)
    Tár (2022, Todd Field)*
    The Creature Walks Among Us (1956, John Sherwood)
    The Stuff (1985, Larry Cohen)
    Italianamerican (1974, Martin Scorsese)
    I am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang (1932, Mervyn LeRoy)
    Call Northside 777 (1948, Henry Hathaway)
    Out of the Fog (1941, Anatole Litvak)
    The Banshees of Inisherin (2022, Martin McDonagh)*
    Nope (2022, Jordan Peele)
    Double Indemnity (1944, Billy Wilder)
    Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (2022, Ryan Coogler)*
    The Wolf of Wall Street (2013, Martin Scorsese)
    Tension (1949, John Berry)
    Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio (2022, Guillermo del Toro and Mark Gustafson)*
    Godzilla Against Mechagodzilla (2002, Masaaki Tezuka)
    Godzilla: Tokyo S.O.S. (2003, Masaaki Tezuka)
    The Menu (2022, Mark Mylod)*
    Knives Out (2019, Rian Johnson)
    In the Mood for Love (2000, Wong Kar-wai)
    Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery (2022, Rian Johnson)*
    Dogora (1964, Ishirō Honda)
    The Lady Eve (1941, Preston Sturges)
    The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special (2022, James Gunn)
    Paper Moon (1973, Peter Bogdanovich)
    The Last of Sheila (1973, Herbert Ross)
    The Fabelmans (2022, Steven Spielberg)*
    American Graffiti (1972, George Lucas)
    Bones and All (2022, Luca Guadagnino)*
     
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  21. Dagobahsystem

    Dagobahsystem Chosen One star 10

    Registered:
    Sep 25, 2015
    Somewhere In Time seems like a film I've seen before, but after rewatching the trailer and 5 scenes I've not seen it before, but I will. It looks really good. And the Grand Hotel looks amazing.

    Seems like the director is using a lot of slow tracking shots and zoom ins and zoom outs while the camera is trained on a characters face or them walking. Reminded me a bit of Kubrick's style with the long slow intense takes with no or little dialogue. Great music in Somewhere In Time too.

    I need to finally watch it.

    Just realized The Shining is another fantastic hotel based movie from 1980.
     
    Last edited: Nov 30, 2022
  22. DarkGingerJedi

    DarkGingerJedi Chosen One star 6

    Registered:
    Nov 21, 2012
  23. soitscometothis

    soitscometothis Chosen One star 6

    Registered:
    Jul 11, 2003
    Top Gun: Maverick (2022)
    Cheesy, clichéd, and predictable, but so well put together it still works.
     
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  24. Havac

    Havac Former Moderator star 7 VIP - Former Mod/RSA

    Registered:
    Sep 29, 2005
    I agree that Reeve’s acting doesn’t help sell the passionate love, but I think he is good at the earnestness and he could probabky be better with better material, and his inherent likability is doing a lot to get the audience rooting for him and make up for the fact that the script isn’t doing anything. Without Reeve, I don’t
    think the movie works even in the halfway manner it does. I put a lot more of the blame on the script.


    Also, it’s hilarious that I am inspiring a mini-boom in Somewhere in Time viewership with a negative review.
     
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  25. soitscometothis

    soitscometothis Chosen One star 6

    Registered:
    Jul 11, 2003
    I remember really enjoying it back when I first saw it in the eighties. I don't think I've seen it in decades.