Last Movie you Watched?

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  • RoadphillRoadphill United Kingdom
    edited August 2020 Posts: 984
    The World's End.

    The final part of the Edgar Wright/Simon Pegg trilogy. Much like the others, it's perfectly enjoyable fluff. Interestingly , as I'm sure some of you know, Pierce Brosnan has a cameo in it.

    What with Timothy Dalton starring in the second part, Hot Fuzz there is some strong Bond connections with these films.
    They really missed a trick, not having Sir Rog play Simon Pegg's stepdad in Shaun Of The Dead.
  • 007InAction007InAction Australia
    Posts: 2,353
    Roadphill wrote: »
    The World's End.

    The final part of the Edgar Wright/Simon Pegg trilogy. Much like the others, it's perfectly enjoyable fluff. Interestingly , as I'm sure some of you know, Pierce Brosnan has a cameo in it.

    What with Timothy Dalton starring in the second part, Hot Fuzz there is some strong Bond connections with these films.
    They really missed a trick, not having Sir Rog play Simon Pegg's stepdad in Shaun Of The Dead.

    Edgar Wright could be a good choice for a bond film.
  • Fire_and_Ice_ReturnsFire_and_Ice_Returns I am trying to get away from this mountan!
    edited August 2020 Posts: 23,353
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    @Fire_and_Ice_Returns, doubt I ever tire of Commando, it hits a sweet spot for me.

    Its a good one, along with the Terminator films (1 and 2), Total Recall, Conan the Barbarian and Predator I revisit the film a lot.
  • Creasy47Creasy47 In Cuba with Natalya.Moderator
    Posts: 40,473
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    @Fire_and_Ice_Returns, doubt I ever tire of Commando, it hits a sweet spot for me.

    Its a good one, along with the Terminator films (1 and 2), Total Recall, Conan the Barbarian and Predator I revisit the film a lot.

    I rewatched Total Recall for the umpteenth time a few weeks back, it holds up so well. That score is brilliant.

    Another one of my favorites of his that I rarely see discussed is Raw Deal. Spent a pretty penny years back to get that one on blu-ray, I love it so much.
  • Fire_and_Ice_ReturnsFire_and_Ice_Returns I am trying to get away from this mountan!
    edited August 2020 Posts: 23,353
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    @Fire_and_Ice_Returns, doubt I ever tire of Commando, it hits a sweet spot for me.

    Its a good one, along with the Terminator films (1 and 2), Total Recall, Conan the Barbarian and Predator I revisit the film a lot.

    I rewatched Total Recall for the umpteenth time a few weeks back, it holds up so well. That score is brilliant.

    Another one of my favorites of his that I rarely see discussed is Raw Deal. Spent a pretty penny years back to get that one on blu-ray, I love it so much.

    Raw deal was one of the first Arnie films I watched, I only have it on DVD currently. The 80's was the Golden era of Arnie films for me, as much as I like 90's films True Lies, The Last Action Hero and even Eraser was ok (I watched all three of those films at the cinema) pretty much every film after them has been below his earlier high standards.
  • Posts: 3,336
    GoldenGun wrote: »
    Ostře sledované vlaky
    CLOSELY OBSERVED TRAINS

    Quirky Czechoslovak coming-of-age comedy from 1966, that won the Academy Award Best Foreign Language Film and happens to be one of the funniest films I've ever seen.

    Really enjoyed this one aswell
  • Posts: 6,814
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    @Fire_and_Ice_Returns, doubt I ever tire of Commando, it hits a sweet spot for me.

    Its a good one, along with the Terminator films (1 and 2), Total Recall, Conan the Barbarian and Predator I revisit the film a lot.

    I rewatched Total Recall for the umpteenth time a few weeks back, it holds up so well. That score is brilliant.

    Another one of my favorites of his that I rarely see discussed is Raw Deal. Spent a pretty penny years back to get that one on blu-ray, I love it so much.

    I was disappointed with 'Raw Deal', after a good run of action movies from Arnie! Though I should have expected the worst when i saw the Director, John Irvin, who one critic once wrote "couldnt direct an action scene if you put a gun to his head!"
  • edited August 2020 Posts: 235
    I just rewatched The Karate Kid and the sequels.
  • ThunderfingerThunderfinger Das Boot Hill
    Posts: 45,489
    Mazouni wrote: »
    I just rewatched The Karate Kid and the sequels.

    What are the sequels called? The Karate Youth and The Karate Adult?
  • Posts: 9,770
    Woodstock the movie


    If you are into the hippy movement and haven’t seen it well I don’t know what to tell you it’s a great film and I love it


    Films in 2020
    1. Batman Begins
    2. Jaws 2
    3. Woodstock the movie
    4. Sherlock Holmes a game of shadows
    5. Ronin
    6. The breakfast club
    7. Rolling stone gimmie shelter
    8. Octopussy
    9. The temptations
    10. Stand by me
    11. The Art of war
    12. No direction Home
    13. Rise of skywalker
    14. Casino Royale 1954
    15. Pearl Harbor
    16. Little women
    17. Journey greatest hits live
    18. The Grateful Dead movie


    Bond films
    1. Octopussy
    2. Casino Royale 1954


  • Posts: 2,896
    The Gang's All Here (1943)

    Busby Berkeley's last hurrah. He was always slightly insane, but this time he has Carmen Miranda and Technicolor, and the results are bonkers. As usual with this sort of musical the plot is an afterthought. The musical sequences feature brilliant camerawork, with dazzling crane shots moving from the stage to dance sequences too big for any stage, (and vice versa). "Brazil," the opening song, exemplifies the collapsing of theatrical and screen space. "The Lady in the Tutti Frutti Hat" features Carmen Miranda in the world's largest chapeau and rows of showgirls doing things with bananas. The finale involves polka dots, a kaleidoscope, and disembodied heads. The use of color was psychedelic long before anyone knew what that meant. See it on Blu-Ray if you can; your eyes will have an orgasm.
  • ThunderfingerThunderfinger Das Boot Hill
    Posts: 45,489
    LOLITA (Adrian Lyne, 1997)
    maxresdefault.jpg
    Excellent film, but not a masterpiece like the Kubrick version from the 60s. The story is exactly the same, so I suppose both films must be true to the book?
  • GoldenGunGoldenGun Per ora e per il momento che verrà
    edited August 2020 Posts: 6,786
    Had some giallo fun with Le orme (aka FOOTSTEPS ON THE MOON) and Perché quelle strane gocce di sangue sul corpo di Jennifer? (aka THE CASE OF THE BLOODY IRIS). Both solid visually impressive thrill rides like they can only make them in 1970's Italy.

    After that went for an indistructable classic: THE GODFATHER. As a teenager I remember having trouble getting through it. But as an adult I'm hooked at the screen and in awe of its greatness. Spotted a gorgeous Alfa Romeo in the Sicily segment btw.
  • Posts: 6,814
    Mazouni wrote: »
    I just rewatched The Karate Kid and the sequels.

    What are the sequels called? The Karate Youth and The Karate Adult?

    I'm reminded of that classic encounter in Blackadder series, when he meets Pitt the younger, who tells him he has a brother
    "Who's that, Pitt the toddler?, Pitt the embryo?...Pitt the twinkle in the milkmans eye?"
  • Fire_and_Ice_ReturnsFire_and_Ice_Returns I am trying to get away from this mountan!
    Posts: 23,353
    Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn)
    I forgot I had this film, it was a painful experience.
  • Creasy47Creasy47 In Cuba with Natalya.Moderator
    Posts: 40,473
    Mathis1 wrote: »
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    @Fire_and_Ice_Returns, doubt I ever tire of Commando, it hits a sweet spot for me.

    Its a good one, along with the Terminator films (1 and 2), Total Recall, Conan the Barbarian and Predator I revisit the film a lot.

    I rewatched Total Recall for the umpteenth time a few weeks back, it holds up so well. That score is brilliant.

    Another one of my favorites of his that I rarely see discussed is Raw Deal. Spent a pretty penny years back to get that one on blu-ray, I love it so much.

    I was disappointed with 'Raw Deal', after a good run of action movies from Arnie! Though I should have expected the worst when i saw the Director, John Irvin, who one critic once wrote "couldnt direct an action scene if you put a gun to his head!"

    Unless he had someone else supervise the action scenes, I thought they were pretty well managed and gritty enough in Raw Deal, from the opening assault to the closing quarry drive-by/club assault.
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    Posts: 23,547
    Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn)
    I forgot I had this film, it was a painful experience.

    I think this was a pleasant surprise. The trailer made it look awful but I thought it did the Harley Quinn stories from the N52 and Rebirth justice.
  • edited August 2020 Posts: 235
    Mazouni wrote: »
    I just rewatched The Karate Kid and the sequels.

    What are the sequels called? The Karate Youth and The Karate Adult?

    The Karate Kid Part 2 and The Karate Kid Part 3.
  • Agent007391Agent007391 Up, Up, Down, Down, Left, Right, Left, Right, B, A, Start
    Posts: 7,854
    Mazouni wrote: »
    Mazouni wrote: »
    I just rewatched The Karate Kid and the sequels.

    What are the sequels called? The Karate Youth and The Karate Adult?

    The Karate Kid Part 2 and The Karate Kid Part 3.

    The Good One and The Crap One, really.
  • Fire_and_Ice_ReturnsFire_and_Ice_Returns I am trying to get away from this mountan!
    Posts: 23,353
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn)
    I forgot I had this film, it was a painful experience.

    I think this was a pleasant surprise. The trailer made it look awful but I thought it did the Harley Quinn stories from the N52 and Rebirth justice.

    I have not really followed Harley beyond BTAS, I bought Suicide Squad digital comics though not really got into them. I love DC and know all the characters, I did not think many of them were well realised, having not read Harley in New52 or watched the new animated show I realise the characters maybe accurate to those versions.
  • DaltonCraig007DaltonCraig007 They say, "Evil prevails when good men fail to act." What they ought to say is, "Evil prevails."
    edited August 2020 Posts: 15,690
    Unhinged (2020).

    UNHINGED-Official-Trailer-Starring-Russell-Crowehttps-www-youtube-com-watch-time-continue-8-v-3x-IO1.jpg

    Russell Crowe is having a tough day. A woman honks at him during rush hour. Russell Crowe snaps and spends the next few hours making her life a living hell.

    This was a a vey entertaining 90 minutes revenge flick. Crowe is electrifying as a man who has given up on life and won't put up with any more bullsh*t. The action scenes are very well staged. All the car chase sequences are full of practical stunts, which was a pleasure to see. And the moments when Crowe beats people up to a pulp were very brutal (he kills a man by smashing his face in with a coffee cup).

    Special mention to the lead actress, Caren Pistorius, who really held her on alongside Crowe, giving a lot of emotional depth to her character.

    All in all, Unhinged is a very fun way to spend 90 minutes watching Russell Crowe go ballistic.
  • Posts: 235
    Mazouni wrote: »
    Mazouni wrote: »
    I just rewatched The Karate Kid and the sequels.

    What are the sequels called? The Karate Youth and The Karate Adult?

    The Karate Kid Part 2 and The Karate Kid Part 3.

    The Good One and The Crap One, really.

    The remake with Jackie Chan is the crap one in my opinion.
  • Agent007391Agent007391 Up, Up, Down, Down, Left, Right, Left, Right, B, A, Start
    Posts: 7,854
    Mazouni wrote: »
    Mazouni wrote: »
    Mazouni wrote: »
    I just rewatched The Karate Kid and the sequels.

    What are the sequels called? The Karate Youth and The Karate Adult?

    The Karate Kid Part 2 and The Karate Kid Part 3.

    The Good One and The Crap One, really.

    The remake with Jackie Chan is the crap one in my opinion.

    I don't even consider that one. As far as I'm concerned, the series ended with Part III and picked up again when Cobra Kai came out.
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    edited August 2020 Posts: 23,547
    Mazouni wrote: »
    Mazouni wrote: »
    Mazouni wrote: »
    I just rewatched The Karate Kid and the sequels.

    What are the sequels called? The Karate Youth and The Karate Adult?

    The Karate Kid Part 2 and The Karate Kid Part 3.

    The Good One and The Crap One, really.

    The remake with Jackie Chan is the crap one in my opinion.

    I don't even consider that one. As far as I'm concerned, the series ended with Part III and picked up again when Cobra Kai came out.

    There's good stuff in the "China" one, apart from the fact that there's no karate in that film, of course. ;-) Unlike the rest of the world, I don't hate Jaden Smith; he brings the Smith charm to that film. The images of China are beautiful too. The Bieber / Smith family get-together during the end titles was arrogant and unnecessary, but other than that, I have no issues with this film. In fact, it's technically and narratively a lot better film than KK3 and TNKK. Ralph Macchio and his little bonsai tree is about the only thing KK3 has going for it, and that means a lot. Even Hilary Swank's debut film, while redundant, has a far more engaging story than KK3. But both pale in comparison to the far more accomplished remake. Jackie Chan is usually not my guy, but here at least I buy him as an actor.
  • edited August 2020 Posts: 235
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    Mazouni wrote: »
    Mazouni wrote: »
    Mazouni wrote: »
    I just rewatched The Karate Kid and the sequels.

    What are the sequels called? The Karate Youth and The Karate Adult?

    The Karate Kid Part 2 and The Karate Kid Part 3.

    The Good One and The Crap One, really.

    The remake with Jackie Chan is the crap one in my opinion.

    I don't even consider that one. As far as I'm concerned, the series ended with Part III and picked up again when Cobra Kai came out.

    There's good stuff in the "China" one, apart from the fact that there's no karate in that film, of course. ;-) Unlike the rest of the world, I don't hate Jaden Smith; he brings the Smith charm to that film. The images of China are beautiful too. The Bieber / Smith family get-together during the end titles was arrogant and unnecessary, but other than that, I have no issues with this film. In fact, it's technically and narratively a lot better film than KK3 and TNKK. Ralph Macchio and his little bonsai tree is about the only thing KK3 has going for it, and that means a lot. Even Hilary Swank's debut film, while redundant, has a far more engaging story than KK3. But both pale in comparison to the far more accomplished remake. Jackie Chan is usually not my guy, but here at least I buy him as an actor.

    I think they need to change the name to The Kung Fu Kid instead of The Karate Kid since that film has no Karate in that film.
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    Posts: 23,547
    Mazouni wrote: »
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    Mazouni wrote: »
    Mazouni wrote: »
    Mazouni wrote: »
    I just rewatched The Karate Kid and the sequels.

    What are the sequels called? The Karate Youth and The Karate Adult?

    The Karate Kid Part 2 and The Karate Kid Part 3.

    The Good One and The Crap One, really.

    The remake with Jackie Chan is the crap one in my opinion.

    I don't even consider that one. As far as I'm concerned, the series ended with Part III and picked up again when Cobra Kai came out.

    There's good stuff in the "China" one, apart from the fact that there's no karate in that film, of course. ;-) Unlike the rest of the world, I don't hate Jaden Smith; he brings the Smith charm to that film. The images of China are beautiful too. The Bieber / Smith family get-together during the end titles was arrogant and unnecessary, but other than that, I have no issues with this film. In fact, it's technically and narratively a lot better film than KK3 and TNKK. Ralph Macchio and his little bonsai tree is about the only thing KK3 has going for it, and that means a lot. Even Hilary Swank's debut film, while redundant, has a far more engaging story than KK3. But both pale in comparison to the far more accomplished remake. Jackie Chan is usually not my guy, but here at least I buy him as an actor.

    I think they need to change the name to The Kung Fu Kid instead of The Karate Kid since that film has no Karate in that film.

    I have no problem with that. As I noted myself, there's no karate in this film. But I have few complaints other than that.
  • GoldenGunGoldenGun Per ora e per il momento che verrà
    Posts: 6,786
    Last night rewatched TENEBRE. It most certainly held up as one of my very favourite movies.
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    Posts: 23,547
    GoldenGun wrote: »
    Last night rewatched TENEBRE. It most certainly held up as one of my very favourite movies.

    You have impeccable taste, sir.
  • GoldenGunGoldenGun Per ora e per il momento che verrà
    edited August 2020 Posts: 6,786
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    GoldenGun wrote: »
    Last night rewatched TENEBRE. It most certainly held up as one of my very favourite movies.

    You have impeccable taste, sir.

    Your location reminds me of one particularly unsettling scene ;)

    All silly jokes aside, it's a masterpiece both visually as well as thematically.

    The fabulous camerawork, the funky electrorock music score, the gorgeous cinematography and use of colour (red objects vs. an overall toned-down colour pattern), Dario Argento at his most meta, commenting on his own work through the protagonist, and an intriguing mystery plot in true giallo fashion.

    Also, maybe less important but definitely very handsome to look at: the Bauhaus architecture of the EUR district in Rome, the elegant outfits, the Lancia Montecarlo and the Alfa GTV6 (the one from OP!), and of course Ania Pieroni & other Italian beauties.

    Shock art at its best!
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