Last Movie you Watched?

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  • edited June 10 Posts: 1,746


    (some-bad-language)
  • Posts: 12,585
    The Sixth Sense.

    My wife or daughter had never seen it. Suffice to say they loved it!
  • DwayneDwayne New York City
    Posts: 2,990
    screenshot_9494.jpg
    Slave Girls 1967
    Martine Beswick stars as queen of the bikini clad brunettes who enslave the bikini glad blondes.

    ... Ok, I'm dying to know: "What happens to the redheads?!" 8->
  • PrinceKamalKhanPrinceKamalKhan Monsoon Palace, Udaipur
    Posts: 3,273
    @MajorDSmythe I watched this Elke Sommer film the other night. Have you seen it?

    the-art-of-love-1965-dvd.jpg

    She plays a nice girl character very different from her Irma Eckman character in a film in a far different genre than the world of Bond and Drummond. It's essentially in a similar vein to her co-star Dick Van Dyke's classic 1960s tv sitcom series which like this film was written by Carl Reiner who also has a small onscreen role. As early to mid 1960s comedy fluff it's pleasant if not outstanding. My only disappointment is that this was Sommer and James Garner's only film together and despite their billing their characters never directly interact.
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    Posts: 24,690
    I haven't seen that one yet, @MajorDSmythe. I will check it out.
  • ImpertinentGoonImpertinentGoon Everybody needs a hobby.
    Posts: 1,414
    Skyfall!
    It's a really good film, you guys.
    I have been slowly going through the Craigs again and at least the first three just really hold up. He's so good and the films are just really good at pulling you along. Yes, the reasons for why any of the things in the tube chase happen make absolutely no sense. It's still a great sequence.
    Looking forward to seeing whether my feeling on his later work as Bond change...
  • Posts: 15,761
    500 Days of Summer. I had watched it ten years ago, it hadn't made a great impression on me, I had found the male lead infuriating, but for some reason, rewatching it, I really enjoyed it. I'm not sure if it's a smart anti-romcom or simply trying to be smart, but I connected with it this time.
  • LeonardPineLeonardPine The Bar on the Beach
    Posts: 4,362
    Ludovico wrote: »
    500 Days of Summer. I had watched it ten years ago, it hadn't made a great impression on me, I had found the male lead infuriating, but for some reason, rewatching it, I really enjoyed it. I'm not sure if it's a smart anti-romcom or simply trying to be smart, but I connected with it this time.

    Adore that film! Loved Chloe Grace Moretz as the younger sister and voice of reason! I must give it a re-watch...
  • Fire_and_Ice_ReturnsFire_and_Ice_Returns I am trying to get away from this mountan!
    edited June 12 Posts: 25,978
    Mathis1 wrote: »
    Mathis1 wrote: »
    THE SHADOW (1994)
    Continuing my 90's look at comic book heroes, after Dick Tracy. This is Russell ( Highlander) Mulcahys film of the mysterious crimefighter, "The Shadow knows!" Alec Baldwin plays him and his alter ego Lamont Cranston. John Lone (Year of the Dragon) plays the villain, and the lovely Penelope Ann Miller plays the daughter of the mad scientist ( Ian McKellan with a dodgy American accent!) who our villain kidnaps him to create an atomic bomb! The likes of Peter Boyle and Tim Curry fill out the impressive cast, in what's an enjoyable flick, though devoid of big set pieces until the climax where Mulcahy gets to indulge in his glass smashing fetish ( 'There can be only One. . Shadow!) in the nicely staged finale in a hall of mirrors! No Danny Elfman this time, but Jerry Goldsmith is a fine substitute!

    A classic IMO I have the The Shadow on Bluray, Penelope Ann Miller is hilarious when impervious to the Shadows powers 😂

    And Penelope really suits the period. She looks fab! Always had a thing for her, she was very good in 'Carlitos Way' and'The Relic' to name two! !

    Amazing woman it's easy to see why Carlito was in love with her character, Carlitos Way is pure cinema, DePalma's use of the camera is genius.



    Dwayne wrote: »
    screenshot_9494.jpg
    Slave Girls 1967
    Martine Beswick stars as queen of the bikini clad brunettes who enslave the bikini glad blondes.

    ... Ok, I'm dying to know: "What happens to the redheads?!" 8->

    I am not sure redheads had been invented yet in that prehistoric period, or the writers did not think so 😂
  • MajorDSmytheMajorDSmythe "I tolerate this century, but I don't enjoy it."Moderator
    Posts: 14,188
    @MajorDSmythe I watched this Elke Sommer film the other night. Have you seen it?

    the-art-of-love-1965-dvd.jpg

    She plays a nice girl character very different from her Irma Eckman character in a film in a far different genre than the world of Bond and Drummond. It's essentially in a similar vein to her co-star Dick Van Dyke's classic 1960s tv sitcom series which like this film was written by Carl Reiner who also has a small onscreen role. As early to mid 1960s comedy fluff it's pleasant if not outstanding. My only disappointment is that this was Sommer and James Garner's only film together and despite their billing their characters never directly interact.

    No, i've not seen that one.
  • Posts: 15,761
    Ludovico wrote: »
    500 Days of Summer. I had watched it ten years ago, it hadn't made a great impression on me, I had found the male lead infuriating, but for some reason, rewatching it, I really enjoyed it. I'm not sure if it's a smart anti-romcom or simply trying to be smart, but I connected with it this time.

    Adore that film! Loved Chloe Grace Moretz as the younger sister and voice of reason! I must give it a re-watch...

    I was surprised at how much I enjoyed it the second time around. I generally loathe romcoms of any kind. But this movie has an affectionate irony that is quite endearing.
  • PrinceKamalKhanPrinceKamalKhan Monsoon Palace, Udaipur
    edited June 14 Posts: 3,273
    Last night I watched this one I had not seen in a long, long time in a galaxy not too far away....

    star-wars-a-new-hope-episode-iv-original-poster-art-1977-style-a-tom-jung.jpg

    The first and still the best IMHO. It was neat to go back before the numerous sequels, prequels and spinoffs and just enjoy it on its own merits as a standalone adventure and not think about the many plot and character twists that would come in later series entries.
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    Posts: 24,690
    Last night I watched this one I had not seen in a long, long time in a galaxy not too far away....

    star-wars-a-new-hope-episode-iv-original-poster-art-1977-style-a-tom-jung.jpg

    The first and still the best IMHO. It was neat to go back before the numerous sequels, prequels and spinoffs and just enjoy it on its own merits as a standalone adventure and not think about the many plot and character twists that would come in later series entries.

    Still the best as far as I am concerned. A true masterpiece, born from what is often said to have been a chaotic mess of a rough cut. Its charm and wild energy, along with its standout score and perfect cast, provided a cocktail of entertainment of the highest calibre. Before there was 'A New Hope', there was Star Wars. And Star Wars is still the best.
  • Posts: 8,298
    It always amused me that Lucas played a rough cut to his pals Brian De Palma and Spielberg, who were quite critical of it, and where Lucas got the idea for the scrolling storyline at the beginning to explain things!
    Always thought that was a cool poster! I was never a fan of the franchise, but agree the first one is the most watchable!
  • MaxCasinoMaxCasino United States
    edited June 15 Posts: 5,059
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    Last night I watched this one I had not seen in a long, long time in a galaxy not too far away....

    star-wars-a-new-hope-episode-iv-original-poster-art-1977-style-a-tom-jung.jpg

    The first and still the best IMHO. It was neat to go back before the numerous sequels, prequels and spinoffs and just enjoy it on its own merits as a standalone adventure and not think about the many plot and character twists that would come in later series entries.

    Still the best as far as I am concerned. A true masterpiece, born from what is often said to have been a chaotic mess of a rough cut. Its charm and wild energy, along with its standout score and perfect cast, provided a cocktail of entertainment of the highest calibre. Before there was 'A New Hope', there was Star Wars. And Star Wars is still the best.

    I agree with you all 100%. But I'm happier that even Kathleen Kennedy let the original print of SW 77 be shown.

    https://www.theguardian.com/film/2025/jun/12/it-was-simply-mind-blowing-readers-remember-seeing-star-wars-for-the-first-time

    P.S. I never call it A New Hope. I always call it the original Star Wars. It just feels right to me.

    As for my last watched movie, Ballerina (2025). It was fun mindless action and violence. Ana de Armas is a joy to watch. She in a way gets her Paloma spinoff. Keanu Reeves does his usual acting performance. But, I imagine that he gave his salary for helping others, so no one complains. Gabriel Byrne is underrated, I'm surprised that he didn't get a bigger career. Lance Reddick will be missed in more ways than one. It makes me want Bond to use a flamethrower some time soon. Even as part of the gunbarrel sequence.
  • MajorDSmytheMajorDSmythe "I tolerate this century, but I don't enjoy it."Moderator
    Posts: 14,188
    Time Cut (2024)
    An anaemic scifi/horror film that feels embarrassed to be a horror film. The film is edited around the kills, so nothing is shown only the before and after.
    A teenager in 2024, accidently travels back to 2003, days before her older sister was murdered by a local serial killer, and tries to change events at the risk of her own future.

    The Furies (2019)
    By comparison, this b-movie Aussie mashup of The Hunger Games and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, in spite of it's budget, didn't shy away from some brutal kills.

    Dillinger (1973)
    No disrespect to Warren Oates and Ben Johnson, but every time I see this film, it's Richard Dreyfuss that always surprises me. I am so used to seeing him play affable characters. Even though Baby Face Nelson come into the film high on his own infamy, Dillinger takes him aside and pimp slaps the insolence out of him, he still turns out to be the most unhinged of Dillinger's gang.
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