Movies You've Seen Recently |OT| JULY 2014

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I've been watching Harry Potter movies after I've completed reading the books (for the first time).

The Sorcerer's Stone
I hated everything about the first 1/3 of the movie. As soon as they get to Hogwart's, it picks up a bit, however the color grading and camera work is pretty dreadful. Sir Richard Harris is a great actor but I don't feel like he ever "got" the character and felt pretty mis-cast. The rest of the casting is great, they just don't have much to work with. 2/5

Chamber of Secrets
I think that I enjoyed this better than the first movie despite it being an inferior novel. The ending felt odd to me, I never knew that the
serpent was that large
, it ruined the believability. 2.5/5

Prisoner of Azkaban
The best of the bunch so far, like the others, there is a lot removed from the story however the pacing and cinematography is top notch. This is the closest to a proper film I'd imagine them completing. Oldman steals the show on-screen. 4/5

Goblet of Fire
They completely subverted the sense of mystery and surprise that the book had. I know that book readers generally complain about everything but some of their decisions were remarkably poor. Everything feels rushed and you have an inconsistent tone as a result. Great performances by Gleeson and Fiennes though. 3/5

General comments on the movies thus far:
For the love of god what happened to establishing shots and at least attempting some basic characterization? If you hadn't read the books, you'd be lost.

Rowling is no Tolkien, there's no need to stick so tightly to here inane dialog. It's far too reverent. I feel like these films could be something special on-par with LOTR if only they'd put the effort in.

I'd love to see a competent writer/director team reboot these movies in a decade or two and make Harry a teenager from year one. Go high school to college. You can subvert some of the dumb drama and help get some better performances.
 
I did a Harry Potter marathon a year ago and you are reminding me of the great time I had with it. I had only watched the first two movies when they first came out and I'm not really a big fan of those fantasy sagas, but I find the whole Harry Potter universe so engaging and amazing that I'm almost doing it again now. I don't get my critic side going when I watch it, but the only thing that really puts me off is the acting that it isn't very good mostly on the first two movies. Radcliffe never improves much though.
 
I maintain to this day The Prestige is Nolan's best movie. It is a masterpiece that i can re-watch constantly. My face must have made such contortions in the theater worthy of photograph the first time i saw it, it was so good.
 
I still prefer memento but I'm pretty sure interstellar will be my favorite of his by far if he doesn't fuck it up

The trailers speak to me bruh
 
I still prefer memento but I'm pretty sure interstellar will be my favorite of his by far if he doesn't fuck it up

The trailers speak to me bruh

Im pretty sure everyone on planet earth of course hopes Interstellar is their new favorite Nolan movie. I mean i have enjoyed every one of his movies. But Prestige was so good.
 
Watched Project X again today. Now my Warner bros where is the sequel huh?

Also watched Grand Budapest Hotel. Oh my god my new favorite Wes Craven movie.
 
Rise of the Dawn of the New Era of Monkeys:


Pretty dope. A little hard to take it seriously at times, even though the film itself was taking everything very seriously. But apes on horses with guns is something I have a hard time taking as serious drama.
 
Rise of the Dawn of the New Era of Monkeys:


Pretty dope. A little hard to take it seriously at times, even though the film itself was taking everything very seriously. But apes on horses with guns is something I have a hard time taking as serious drama.

But apes on horses with guns is awesome, you have to admit
 
I maintain to this day The Prestige is Nolan's best movie. It is a masterpiece that i can re-watch constantly. My face must have made such contortions in the theater worthy of photograph the first time i saw it, it was so good.


I agree with this. It's one of the few Nolan movies that don't get worse upon repeated viewings. The only one, perhaps



just seen Departures
Departures(film_sfondi_wallpaper_foto_immagini_poster)(140210214039)departures_1.jpg


it's been the third time actually, but boy what a great movie. Such a fascinating view on one of Japan's most ancient and, in today's world, prejudiced traditions: being an encoffineer. The main theme is treated with such levity, such dignity and grace it's absolutely fascinating and not at all bleak or depressing. Of course, Japan's beautiful landscapes and rural villages also have a great effect on the viewer, and the story is never boring, with quite a few funny moments as well, that well balance the heartbreaking scenes with the family of the deceased . A great movie
 
I don't get my critic side going when I watch it, but the only thing that really puts me off is the acting that it isn't very good mostly on the first two movies. .
I could see that for the later movies but the color grading really kills it for me in #1. Looks like they didn't white balance.
 
I've been watching Harry Potter movies after I've completed reading the books (for the first time).

The Sorcerer's Stone
I hated everything about the first 1/3 of the movie. As soon as they get to Hogwart's, it picks up a bit, however the color grading and camera work is pretty dreadful. Sir Richard Harris is a great actor but I don't feel like he ever "got" the character and felt pretty mis-cast. The rest of the casting is great, they just don't have much to work with. 2/5

Chamber of Secrets
I think that I enjoyed this better than the first movie despite it being an inferior novel. The ending felt odd to me, I never knew that the
serpent was that large
, it ruined the believability. 2.5/5

Prisoner of Azkaban
The best of the bunch so far, like the others, there is a lot removed from the story however the pacing and cinematography is top notch. This is the closest to a proper film I'd imagine them completing. Oldman steals the show on-screen. 4/5

Goblet of Fire
They completely subverted the sense of mystery and surprise that the book had. I know that book readers generally complain about everything but some of their decisions were remarkably poor. Everything feels rushed and you have an inconsistent tone as a result. Great performances by Gleeson and Fiennes though. 3/5

General comments on the movies thus far:
For the love of god what happened to establishing shots and at least attempting some basic characterization? If you hadn't read the books, you'd be lost.

Rowling is no Tolkien, there's no need to stick so tightly to here inane dialog. It's far too reverent. I feel like these films could be something special on-par with LOTR if only they'd put the effort in.

I'd love to see a competent writer/director team reboot these movies in a decade or two and make Harry a teenager from year one. Go high school to college. You can subvert some of the dumb drama and help get some better performances.

I find Chamber of Secrets to be the weakest of the films, and it's probably the only one that you could completely skip and not miss much of the overall story. My only dilemma is that on my DVR all the films are from Disney channel, I'll have to buy a bluray set on sale.

I maintain to this day The Prestige is Nolan's best movie. It is a masterpiece that i can re-watch constantly. My face must have made such contortions in the theater worthy of photograph the first time i saw it, it was so good.

Agreed. Caught it on TV the other day and was sucked in immediately.
 
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Snowpiercer
This movie is so stupid yet so fun to watch. You have to disconnect your brain to enjoy it and just accept the reality they show. If you plan to watch it I don't recommend watching the trailer. It's a fun sci-fi film.
 
Don't skip Days of Heaven, the cinematography alone is some of the best ever put on film (even by the standards of Malick).

Badlands is probably my lowest ranked Malick, not saying it's a bad movie, it's great, but I prefer what his style evolved into after the 20 year gap.

Yes follow it up with Days of Heaven and continue to go in order. The best is yet to come IMO with The Thin Red Line and The New World, but go in order.
Will go to Days of Heaven next in that case. I loved Tree of Life, so I bet I can take any of what he throws at me, just in terms of scope/imagery/pacing.
I still prefer memento but I'm pretty sure interstellar will be my favorite of his by far if he doesn't fuck it up

The trailers speak to me bruh
Yeah, same exact thing here pretty much.
 
Thor 2: The Dark World.

Watched not expecting much because Thor was bland, but damn, that was actually a lot of fun. Portal-esque ending sequence was amazing. Not exceptional, just a good fun comic book action blockbuster that knows what it wants to be and does it.
 
Speaking of The Raid 2. I just came across this gif on reddit:

v604GpS.gif


I like how one of three cameramen is disguised as a carseat and how they also have 3 camera's set up to film the 3 cameramen filming the scene.


If anyone thinks knowing there is a
car chase
scene is a spoiler I'll remove the gif.
 
The Raid 2 isn't really the kind of movie you can spoil with plot details, so I guess action set pieces would be more like spoilers.
 
Saw Snowpiercer.

I thought it was good, but not sure about 94% RT good. Also it feels like the kind of movie that I'll like way more on a rewatch, because at that point I'll know what this movie is exactly and won't be confused when
a bunch of thugs stop mid-combat to welcome the new year or when the unkillable terminator shows up.
 
The Raid 2 isn't really the kind of movie you can spoil with plot details, so I guess action set pieces would be more like spoilers.

Maybe if you detail them or give away a particularly original moment, but "there is a car chase" is as much of a spoiler as "there's an upward shot of trees", in a Malick movie.
 
Speaking of The Raid 2. I just came across this gif on reddit:

v604GpS.gif


I like how one of three cameramen is disguised as a carseat and how they also have 3 camera's set up to film the 3 cameramen filming the scene.


If anyone thinks knowing there is a
car chase
scene is a spoiler I'll remove the gif.

Yeah I remember wondering how they made that shot while watching the movie. The transition between one car to another was so smooth.
 
My Malick fanboy friend didn't really like To the Wonder, but he was ok with that. The way he saw it, he already did his 2001/masterpiece with Tree of Life that his career was building to, and now that he has no more worlds to conquer, its time for experimental shit
 
My Malick fanboy friend didn't really like To the Wonder, but he was ok with that. The way he saw it, he already did his 2001/masterpiece with Tree of Life that his career was building to, and now that he has no more worlds to conquer, its time for experimental shit

Voyage of Time!
 
My Malick fanboy friend didn't really like To the Wonder, but he was ok with that. The way he saw it, he already did his 2001/masterpiece with Tree of Life that his career was building to, and now that he has no more worlds to conquer, its time for experimental shit

I had forgotten that movie existed, to be honest.
Not a shit movie, but i didn't like it.
 
To the Wonder is definitely one of Malick's lesser focused efforts, but I still very much got swept away by it and it was one of the best films of the year for me personally regardless.

Requesting a ViewtifulJC coli face Malick tier rating so settle this
 
To the Wonder is definitely one of Malick's lesser focused efforts, but I still very much got swept away by it and it was one of the best films of the year for me personally regardless.

Requesting a ViewtifulJC coli face Malick tier rating so settle this

At points it felt like a Malick parody to me.
 
watched Terry Gilliam's "The Zero Theorem" starring Christoph Waltz... and holy crap was Christoph amazing. The visuals remind me a lot of the futuristic timeline of "Mr. Nobody" with eye candy at every turn. The last 10 minutes were kind of disappointing, but for a philosophical movie about "the meaning of life" (pretty cliche for art films now adays) it was pretty powerful.

I'd probably say it's my favorite of this year (so far) followed by Dance of Reality and then The Grand Budapest Hotel.
 
Saw Merantau, the movie Gareth Evans made before The Raid.

I had the impression that The Raid was something that came out of nowhere and Merantau was some clunky mess nobody liked, so this was way better than I expected it to be. The action isn't as quick and brutal and doesn't have the huge variety and inventiveness of The Raid 2, but it gets way closer than I expected. A few scenes felt a bit like dance-fighting, which I don't get from the Raid movies, but overall I was impressed.

That plot though? What a
bummer. Yuda meets a girl with problems and gets her into way bigger shit. She ends up raped and he ends up dead. The end.
 
Dawn of Monkeyworld

Apes on horseback hunting deer and fighting bears, awesome. Handful of Humans in San Francisco need an entire hydro plant to power a portable ham radio and a broken ipad; fucking idiotic. It's San Francisco, I refuse to believe they couldn't find enough solar panels to light that whole building up.

Three out of five bananas
 
I feel like asking this just out of curiosity...

At what time do you guys prefer to watch a movie and do you actually think the mood and the time you choose to watch it influence - how so - the attention and investment you give to it?
 
I feel like asking this just out of curiosity...

At what time do you guys prefer to watch a movie and do you actually think the mood and the time you choose to watch it influence - how so - the attention and investment you give to it?

No special science for it. If I'm in the mood to watch a film, I'm watching a film.
 
I feel like asking this just out of curiosity...

At what time do you guys prefer to watch a movie and do you actually think the mood and the time you choose to watch it influence - how so - the attention and investment you give to it?

Work + small daughter = I have no choice in the matter. I like evening movies the most though so it's all good. And sunday afternoon ones although it's now a rare occurence.

When I was completely free I could watch almost anything at anytime save maybe from horror or difficult/boring movies before noon.
 
Just saw the new Transformers.

Every. fucking. time.

Michael Bay has to be respected. His movies elicit such a response from me thats completely unique. It's like watching a solid gold trainwreck. Just the pure excess of crazy awesome expensive shit wrapped in a total turd you dont even know what to make of it. Ill say this though his movies almost always entertain me and i dont even feel bad about it.


you just have to be a little drunk, is all.
 
just caught double Ozu, Tokyo Story and Early Summer.

whenever Hollywood shit reaches critical mass and all your hope in cinema is lost, Ozu restores it in five minutes. Amazing works
 
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