Recent movies reviews/recommendations/warnings
#601
Posted 2018-January-16, 02:22
George Carlin
#603
Posted 2018-February-03, 19:25
#604
Posted 2018-February-04, 09:43
Chas_P, on 2018-January-07, 19:07, said:
We saw it last night. That was quite a performance by Gary Oldman and yes a stirring speech. It was also a reminder that way too many people in positions of leadership are living in the past, have no clue and even worse judgment. Gary Oldman brought Churchill to life for a couple of hours. It's going to take more than that to prevent the next Dunkirk.
#605
Posted 2018-May-19, 02:43
A truly beautiful film. Got bad reviews presumably because of lack of sex and violence
#606
Posted 2018-May-19, 07:03
gwnn, on 2018-January-09, 14:06, said:
I just saw this and I thought it was terrific. A little quirky and sad like What's Eating Gilbert Grape?
#607
Posted 2018-August-14, 18:59
A literature-professor-turned-author receives the Nobel Prize in literature. We follow his, his wife's and his son's stay in Stockholm for the award ceremony.
Sounded like a boring theme so the only reason we went to the cinema was that we didn't have team mates and it was a teams' event yesterday night at the local club.
But the film didn't disappoint. The plot is brilliant (I won't disclose any details here).
Since most of the actors were American I thought it was an American film, but the lack of violence plus the frequent use of words like fvck and sh!t revealed that it is in fact a Swedish film.
#608
Posted 2018-August-15, 07:59
helene_t, on 2018-August-14, 18:59, said:
A literature-professor-turned-author receives the Nobel Prize in literature. We follow his, his wife's and his son's stay in Stockholm for the award ceremony.
Sounded like a boring theme so the only reason we went to the cinema was that we didn't have team mates and it was a teams' event yesterday night at the local club.
But the film didn't disappoint. The plot is brilliant (I won't disclose any details here).
Since most of the actors were American I thought it was an American film, but the lack of violence plus the frequent use of words like fvck and sh!t revealed that it is in fact a Swedish film.
So I assume there also aren't any stupid chase scenes. No doubt it wil be a box office flop here.
#609
Posted 2018-August-15, 08:52
helene_t, on 2018-May-19, 02:43, said:
A truly beautiful film. Got bad reviews presumably because of lack of sex and violence
My wife read the book so when it came on Netflix the reviews and ratings are trumped by that. I'm glad they were as I enjoyed it.
What is baby oil made of?
#610
Posted 2018-August-15, 16:04
kenberg, on 2018-August-15, 07:59, said:
Indeed. There were a couple of scenes that appeared to be shot at the back seat of a taxi but there were no pictures of cars from the outside I think.
#611
Posted 2018-October-10, 17:47
helene_t, on 2018-May-19, 02:43, said:
A truly beautiful film. Got bad reviews presumably because of lack of sex and violence
Constance and I enjoyed the film also -- and what a great title!
In a more contemporary vein, tonight we watched the excellent July 22, set in one of our favorite places in the world. It's sobering to look at the events of seven years ago in the light of the alt-right rhetoric in the US today.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#612
Posted 2018-October-11, 09:33
1) Leave no Trace
- This was really a moving film. It's about a father and daughter, who are living in the woods in the beginning of the movie. We get to know them throughout the movie, and really feel for them through their challenges. This is not a "feel good movie", I should warn people. It's also about PTSD and how it affects both the person and their relatives. Definitely worth seeing, in my opinion.
2) Puzzle
- This one I wish that I had missed. I was expecting a quirky, entertaining movie (that's what the descriptions I read implied, I felt), but really, the main problems presented to the characters in this movie could have been solved if they just TALKED to each other. I understand that movies have to have problems to have a plot, but it really annoys me when the problems could be discussed with proper communication, and people don't seem interested in talking to each other.
3) Tel Aviv on Fire
- This was the quite entertaining movie I was hoping for. It's about a guy who works on a serial TV show in Ramallah, and has to cross the border daily to get to work, and his relationship to the main guard, who wants the serial to go a specific direction. I quite enjoyed the movie, though I would have liked one character to receive more pushback about one of his actions (I don't want to spoil the movie by being more specific).
In the end, I recommend either Leave no Trace or Tel Aviv on Fire, depending on what you're in the mood for.
#613
Posted 2018-October-16, 09:38
#614
Posted 2018-October-17, 20:49
#615
Posted 2019-January-01, 20:11
Quote
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#616
Posted 2019-January-02, 10:27
It brought back memories of the original, of course. I was only 3 when it came out, so I'm not sure if I ever actually saw it in theatres (I kind of remember seeing it, maybe it was the kid feature at the drive-in). But we had the cast album at home that I listened to a lot, and didn't understand many of the lyrics -- what does a 5-year-old know about the women's suffrage movement? I could figure out that tuppence was money, but was "tuppence a bag" a lot or a little?
#617
Posted 2019-January-02, 15:03
barmar, on 2019-January-02, 10:27, said:
It brought back memories of the original, of course. I was only 3 when it came out, so I'm not sure if I ever actually saw it in theatres (I kind of remember seeing it, maybe it was the kid feature at the drive-in). But we had the cast album at home that I listened to a lot, and didn't understand many of the lyrics -- what does a 5-year-old know about the women's suffrage movement? I could figure out that tuppence was money, but was "tuppence a bag" a lot or a little?
Your being 3 when Mary Poppins first cane out (1964) makes you the same age as my older daughter. I'll have to ask her if she remembers it. I cannot honestly say I remember taking her to it but probably I did. She has a good memory for such things, for example she was recently telling me how much she enjoyed The Three Billy Goats Gruff as a child. "Who's that stomping over my bridge?" I remember it well. http://www.sterlingt...goats_gruff.htm
As to remembering the details of just how you saw the 1964 MP: I was 3 when Bambi came out, I am sure I saw it in a theater. I am sure I was with my father. But I am less positive that this was when it first came out in 1942 I was very young, but maybe not 3. It did keep coming back. "Your mother can't be with you anymore". It makes an impression. So did the fire.
We have been thinking of A Star is Born. I believe I saw the 1937 version, as a re-run of course, before I saw the 1954 version. I'm up for the new one, we just haven't done it yet. Any thoughts from anyone on how it is?
#618
Posted 2019-January-03, 10:11
The first R movie I remember my parents taking me to was "The Exorcist", I was 12 when it came out.
#619
Posted 2019-March-23, 23:09
#620
Posted 2019-June-01, 21:22
Mark Singer's May 20th story in the New Yorker about Milch and their discussion of Milch's battle with Alzheimer's is poignant and fascinating.
Quote
“There’s an acute sense of time’s passage,” he said. “Things are important. You don’t want to be inconsequential in your perspective on things. I feel that with an increasing acuteness—that everything counts.”
“Do you wake up to that feeling every day?”
“Yeah, I do.”
Singer: What do you want to be the focus of our conversations?
Milch: To the extent that this sort of thing is appropriate, a focus on the illness. . . . While writing the screenplay for “Deadwood: The Movie,” I was in the last part of the privacy of my faculties, and that’s gone now. I was able to believe that— You know, we all make deals, I suppose, in terms of how we think about the process of our aging. It’s a series of givings away, a making peace with givings away. I had thought, as many or most people do, that I was in an earlier stage of givings away than it turns out I am. It’s kind of a relentless series of adjustments to what you can do, in particular the way you can’t think any longer. Your inability to sustain a continuity of focus. And those are accumulated deletions of ability. And you adjust—you’d better adjust, or you adjust whether you want to or not.