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The Official Last Movie You Saw Thread (Part 2)

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  • Joneslab
    Senior Member
    • Oct 2014
    • 39604

    #301
    The Guest.

    This is on Netflix and got big reviews when it came out last year. It's made by the same guy who made the excellent You're Next, but I thought this one was stale and at times campy. It sort of sits in that netherworld between horror and suspense, and the reveal when you find out what's going on just elicits a shrug rather than the shock the filmmakers want you to feel. The performances are good but the overwrought--intentionally in some ways, I think--action sequences end up giving the film an almost darkly comic feel without generating many laughs.

    Oldboy is a similar type of movie on Netflix that gets the balance between "What in the world is going on?" and hilarity just right. Skip The Guest.

    Comment

    • KCKUKFan
      Senior Member
      • Nov 2014
      • 14228

      #302
      Hail, Ceasar! - Probably the worst Coen Brothers film that I've ever seen. Certainly on the lowest tier of their work. A lot of vignettes that go nowhere and a whole lot of big celebrities with next to nothing to do. No plot to really speak of, and no real laughs, either. This film doesn't even work as a lark. 1.5/4.

      The Finest Hours - Almost shockingly old-fashioned Disney flick about a Coast Guard team dispatched to rescue the a sinker tanker in the middle of a Noreaster. The film is charming and durably well-made, but you've seen it a thousand times before. Sure to entertain non-judgmental moviegoers, probably a pass for everybody else. Seems better than it really is because of it's spring release date, amongst a sea of garbage. 2.5/4.

      The Witch - Well-made, well-acted, well-written, well-paced, but almost ZERO entertainment value. Felt like a pretentious film school project made by a talented filmmaker with no grasp on how to actually entertain the audience. 2/4.

      Comment

      • KCKUKFan
        Senior Member
        • Nov 2014
        • 14228

        #303
        Originally posted by Will Lavender
        The Guest.

        This is on Netflix and got big reviews when it came out last year. It's made by the same guy who made the excellent You're Next, but I thought this one was stale and at times campy. It sort of sits in that netherworld between horror and suspense, and the reveal when you find out what's going on just elicits a shrug rather than the shock the filmmakers want you to feel. The performances are good but the overwrought--intentionally in some ways, I think--action sequences end up giving the film an almost darkly comic feel without generating many laughs.

        Oldboy is a similar type of movie on Netflix that gets the balance between "What in the world is going on?" and hilarity just right. Skip The Guest.
        What about "Oldboy" was hilarious, exactly?

        That was one of the most depressingly nihilistic movies I've ever seen.

        Comment

        • Joneslab
          Senior Member
          • Oct 2014
          • 39604

          #304
          Originally posted by KCKUKFan

          What about "Oldboy" was hilarious, exactly?

          That was one of the most depressingly nihilistic movies I've ever seen.
          I don't know, I just find it fiendishly funny for some reason.

          But dark, dark humor. It is one of the only "suspense" movies that I can think of where I laughed out loud a few times. Usually I like when thrillers kind of stay in their lane. There's a fine line between comedy and silliness.

          Comment

          • KCKUKFan
            Senior Member
            • Nov 2014
            • 14228

            #305
            Room - A masterpiece of mood and acting. Brie Larson should take home the Oscar gold, and the kid who plays her son is almost as good. A mini masterpiece, this is a must-watch.

            The Big Short - Wildly funny... until it's not. Adam McKay (Will Ferrell's career director) steps out of his comfort zone and makes a meta, goofy movie about a deadly serious topic, the financial crisis on the late 00s. All the A-list actors are at the top of their game, and McKay presents all the convoluted details in creative ways so that it's easier to swallow. Highly recommended.

            Comment

            • Joneslab
              Senior Member
              • Oct 2014
              • 39604

              #306
              Circle.

              Another one from Netflix, this is a sort of high-concept social experimentation film in the design of something like Exam or Cube. The set-up: a group of people wake up in a circle on what appears to be an alien spacecraft, and every couple of minutes they have to vote to see which person is killed off next. It's simplistic in scope and design, and the filmmakers try to compensate for this by adding in these philosophical arguments about who should die. Generally the characters act in absurd ways, and there's this patina of comments-section preachiness that runs through the entire movie.

              But for all that it kind of sticks with you, and has three or four genuine surprises--including the person who ends up escaping. Recommended if you like single-setting, stripped-down movies about ideas.

              Comment

              • TrueblueCATfan
                Senior Member
                • Oct 2014
                • 16273

                #307
                Triple 9........pretty good if you like movies about dirty cops.....

                Comment

                • Wonderstruck
                  Senior Member
                  • Oct 2014
                  • 962

                  #308
                  The Revenant.

                  3 out of 5

                  *Cinematography was outstanding
                  *Scenery was fantastic
                  *That bear scene was ridiculous
                  *Tom Hardy was excellent

                  But the story plodded along and I kept thinking, "Are we ever going to get to the end of this?"

                  For what it is, I'm not surprised it was nominated for an Academy Award, but for my tastes, it was just okay. I'll likely never watch it again.

                  Comment

                  • TrueblueCATfan
                    Senior Member
                    • Oct 2014
                    • 16273

                    #309
                    Originally posted by Wonderstruck
                    The Revenant.

                    3 out of 5

                    *Cinematography was outstanding
                    *Scenery was fantastic
                    *That bear scene was ridiculous
                    *Tom Hardy was excellent

                    But the story plodded along and I kept thinking, "Are we ever going to get to the end of this?"

                    For what it is, I'm not surprised it was nominated for an Academy Award, but for my tastes, it was just okay. I'll likely never watch it again.

                    Well it didn't win best picture last night but Leo did get the best actor award

                    Comment

                    • surveyor
                      Administrator
                      • Oct 2014
                      • 14474

                      #310
                      Finally saw The Martian yesterday.

                      That film would have been totally different if the crops Watney grew was marijuana instead of potatoes.

                      He would have ended up not doing a damned thing and die from abject laziness.
                      Extremism is so easy. You've got your position, and that's it. It doesn't take much thought. And when you go far enough to the right you meet the same idiots coming around from the left.

                      Clint Eastwood

                      Comment

                      • Joneslab
                        Senior Member
                        • Oct 2014
                        • 39604

                        #311
                        Goosebumps

                        A clever iteration of the R.L. Stein children's books. Begins in sappy YA-novel land, but by the second half it's a lot of fun. The special effects are sometimes a little flat, and the ending opened all kinds of weird philosophical quandaries that I don't think the filmmaker's intended, but for what it is it's fun if you have kids.

                        Jumanji is better, but this is still recommended for a rental.

                        The Revenant.

                        A lot has been written on this in this thread, but I have to say that I really enjoyed it. As everybody in the free world has said by now, the visuals are what make it. I loved the swirling, restless camera; I loved the fact that these natural events--a meteorite crashing to earth, an avalanche--keep happening in the background; I liked the way the camera gets so close to the actors that you can sometimes see their spit on the lens.

                        This is a movie about breath and smoke and nature and blood and death, and it's wrenching and unforgettable. Highly recommended.

                        Comment

                        • George
                          Senior Member
                          • Oct 2014
                          • 10355

                          #312
                          Originally posted by Will Lavender
                          Goosebumps

                          A clever iteration of the R.L. Stein children's books. Begins in sappy YA-novel land, but by the second half it's a lot of fun. The special effects are sometimes a little flat, and the ending opened all kinds of weird philosophical quandaries that I don't think the filmmaker's intended, but for what it is it's fun if you have kids.

                          Jumanji is better, but this is still recommended for a rental.

                          The Revenant.

                          A lot has been written on this in this thread, but I have to say that I really enjoyed it. As everybody in the free world has said by now, the visuals are what make it. I loved the swirling, restless camera; I loved the fact that these natural events--a meteorite crashing to earth, an avalanche--keep happening in the background; I liked the way the camera gets so close to the actors that you can sometimes see their spit on the lens.

                          This is a movie about breath and smoke and nature and blood and death, and it's wrenching and unforgettable. Highly recommended
                          .
                          I agree with all of this, but I don't think it was the master class in storytelling and realism that some have made it out to be. I got annoyed by lots of little things - arrows fired from dinky homemade bows that were able to plunge six inches deep into the hull of a boat; Glass' ankle ****************ed at a 90 degree angle, only to be healed up and ready to support weight within a couple of weeks. Nothing major, individually, but as a whole the small stuff nicked up the film enough to cause problems for me.

                          And the story, as much of a natural, visceral, minimal experience as it was supposed to be, was still pretty thin. And made up. I knew the story pretty well going into the movie, so I was aggravated by the complete fabrication of the half-Indian son and his subsequent murder. There was enough complexity in the actual (as "actual" as we know, anyway) decisions made by Glass' companions to have made for a compelling on-screen story. In fact, I think it would have been more effective to remain faithful to the source material and let the audience decide whether or not Fitzgerald was villainous or justified. I can easily sympathize with the "true" version of the story, which would have made a film adaptation all the more complex.

                          Comment

                          • surveyor
                            Administrator
                            • Oct 2014
                            • 14474

                            #313
                            Originally posted by Will Lavender
                            The Revenant.

                            A lot has been written on this in this thread, but I have to say that I really enjoyed it. As everybody in the free world has said by now, the visuals are what make it. I loved the swirling, restless camera; I loved the fact that these natural events--a meteorite crashing to earth, an avalanche--keep happening in the background; I liked the way the camera gets so close to the actors that you can sometimes see their spit on the lens.

                            This is a movie about breath and smoke and nature and blood and death, and it's wrenching and unforgettable. Highly recommended.
                            If such effects and overall cinematography were available in 1970, we'd have been talking about how Richard Harris won the Oscar for his performance and this one was a mere copy. As it is, The Revenant is a hugely more riveting adaption of Glass's story than was Harris' turn, and that's not a knock against Harris. I loved the original growing up, but it plods along in a number of places.
                            Extremism is so easy. You've got your position, and that's it. It doesn't take much thought. And when you go far enough to the right you meet the same idiots coming around from the left.

                            Clint Eastwood

                            Comment

                            • Joneslab
                              Senior Member
                              • Oct 2014
                              • 39604

                              #314
                              Originally posted by Downes Van Zandt
                              And the story, as much of a natural, visceral, minimal experience as it was supposed to be, was still pretty thin. And made up. I knew the story pretty well going into the movie, so I was aggravated by the complete fabrication of the half-Indian son and his subsequent murder. There was enough complexity in the actual (as "actual" as we know, anyway) decisions made by Glass' companions to have made for a compelling on-screen story. In fact, I think it would have been more effective to remain faithful to the source material and let the audience decide whether or not Fitzgerald was villainous or justified. I can easily sympathize with the "true" version of the story, which would have made a film adaptation all the more complex.
                              Actually the movie is an adaptation of the novel by Michael Punke, not the actual history.

                              I read this week that Punke, because he's a high-ranking government employee bound by ethics rules, has never been able to do any kind of publicity even though the book came out a decade ago. Don't think he's ever been allowed to even give interviews.

                              Comment

                              • George
                                Senior Member
                                • Oct 2014
                                • 10355

                                #315
                                Originally posted by Will Lavender

                                Actually the movie is an adaptation of the novel by Michael Punke, not the actual history.

                                I read this week that Punke, because he's a high-ranking government employee bound by ethics rules, has never been able to do any kind of publicity even though the book came out a decade ago. Don't think he's ever been allowed to even give interviews.
                                I knew that. When I said "source material," I was referring to the actual history. Should've clarified.

                                Comment

                                 

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                                The Official Last Movie You Saw Thread (Part 2)

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