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I just saw The Fly. It was pretty interesting, though I'm still not sure if I liked it or not.
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RottenRotz: event horizon
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HomerSimpson: Nice to see some love for Event Horizon. That and Pitch Black are two under rated sci-fi movies, imo.
oh yes,pitch black also.just watched it few weeks ago
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RottenRotz: blow
boogie nights
platoon
shutter island
taxi driver
deer hunter
LOTR trilogy
batman
blue velvet
trainspotting
the usual suspects
the silence of the lambs
the manchurian candidate
matrix trilogy
the goonies
the evil dead trilogy
the beach
the big lebowski
saving private ryan
pulp fiction
psycho
requiem for a dream
reservoir dogs
mad max trilogy
jacobs ladder
la confidential
high fidelity
goodfelas
friday
gattaca
four rooms
fear and loathing in las vegas
event horizon
fargo
donnie darkocube
casino
basic apocalypse now
american history x
a clockwork orange

..let me hear what you mean of this list.. anyone who thinks it sucks isnt right in the head
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kofeiiniturpa: Good list, I'd add a few though:

Magnolia
There Will Be Blood
Dogville
Manderlay
Stalker
Inland Empire
Lost Highway
Mulholland Drive
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly
Once Upon a Time in America
Once Upon a Time in the West
Flight of the Phoenix (1965)
Videodrome
Naked Lunch
Fly (1986)
Audition
Sympathy for Mister Vengeance
Blade Runner
Alien
these too

The Good, the Bad and the Ugly
Once Upon a Time in America
Videodrome
Fly (1986)
Blade Runner
Alien
Inland Empire
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RottenRotz: blow
boogie nights
platoon
shutter island
taxi driver
deer hunter
LOTR trilogy
batman
blue velvet
trainspotting
the usual suspects
the silence of the lambs
the manchurian candidate
matrix trilogy
the goonies
the evil dead trilogy
the beach
the big lebowski
saving private ryan
pulp fiction
psycho
requiem for a dream
reservoir dogs
mad max trilogy
jacobs ladder
la confidential
high fidelity
goodfelas
friday
gattaca
four rooms
fear and loathing in las vegas
event horizon
fargo
donnie darkocube
casino
basic apocalypse now
american history x
a clockwork orange

..let me hear what you mean of this list.. anyone who thinks it sucks isnt right in the head
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Lenny: You got a lot of good movies on that list. My favorite ones whould be evil dead, the two tarantino movies, shutter island, event horizon, fear and loathing and perhaps fargo.

As for batman I like two movies made by Tim Burton.

I love the sense of escapism in "The beach" but when it all breaks down it's painful to watch. Who want's a reality pill anyway?

Taxi driver is a interesting movie too but not one I often rewatch.

LOTR is as good of an adaption as anyone can reasonable ever hope to make of a fantasy series of that magnitude. But it's still too damn long to bother watching a bunch of times isn't it ? :P
youre right on that one
Post edited December 12, 2010 by RottenRotz
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orcishgamer: I just streamed Ip Man off of Netflix. It might be the best movie I've seen since How to Train Your Dragon.
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chautemoc: Thanks again for the recommendation. Definitely a great martial arts movie..my favourite tied with Dragon.
I'm glad you liked it. I couldn't believe how good it was when I started watching, couldn't do a thing until it was over:)
Superman & Shazam! - The Return of Black Adam.

Jerry O'Connell reprising the role of Captain Marvel he played in Justice League Unlimited along with George Newbern who played Superman. Arnold Vosloo was superb as Black Adam. It's just a shame it's a DC short as I wanted more.
I just saw Natural Born Killers again last night. It's been several years since I last saw it, but it still kicks absolute ass. A very powerful movie. I'd recommend anyone who haven't seen it to do so at their earliest convenience.
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Wishbone: I just saw Natural Born Killers again last night. It's been several years since I last saw it, but it still kicks absolute ass. A very powerful movie. I'd recommend anyone who haven't seen it to do so at their earliest convenience.
Eh, it's all right. I thought it was a little too "artsy" for its own good, but I did like the fake sitcom scene and the way Robert Downey Jr. and Tommy Lee Jones just unhinge.
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Wishbone: I just saw Natural Born Killers again last night. It's been several years since I last saw it, but it still kicks absolute ass. A very powerful movie. I'd recommend anyone who haven't seen it to do so at their earliest convenience.
I watch it every few years about, and I'm normally not the type to rewatch movies. Excellent stuff.
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TheCheese33: I thought it was a little too "artsy" for its own good
Well, I can understand that the style could be off-putting for some people. Normally it would be for me too (for instance, I absolutely loathe "2001: A Space Odyssey"), but I think it fits this movie brilliantly, and is executed well.
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Wishbone: I just saw Natural Born Killers again last night. It's been several years since I last saw it, but it still kicks absolute ass. A very powerful movie. I'd recommend anyone who haven't seen it to do so at their earliest convenience.
I really enjoyed it up until it degenerated in to just another escape from prison movie. The first two thirds were excellent, but then it just feel apart for me.
Just rewatched Cruel Intentions. Immensely more satisfying as an adult than teenager. Great film. :)
Just finished "Goodbye, Solo".

It's one of the best films I've seen this year. A small indie film about an unlikely relationship between a Sengalese cab driver and an old redneck at the end of his life. This is one of those rare films that left me haunted, and thoughtful, and demanded a re-watch. (which I'm about to start)

ps, they made this for less than $500K, which even for a small film is amazing. Rent, buy, watch...believe in the power of small movies to do great things.

http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/goodbye_solo/

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U5IGC59Q9y8
Dark City. Pretty good. Noir-ish sci-fi weirdness.
Finally saw Inception - Excellent Movie
If you want to get really really depressed for 2+ hours, watch 21 Grams.
Saw Billy Wilder's Double Indemnity yesterday. Fine movie overall and it includes one of the most misogynistic scenes I've ever seen.

Spoilers ahead:

While film noir routinely features a strong woman (the femme fatale type) the filmmakers nearly always make a point out of humiliating her at the end. Mostly, this humiliation is conducted by the movie's male protagonist, who thus gets revenge for being sexually manipulated throughout the story. Basically, he punishes the woman for the sexual desires she caused in him.

In Double Indemnity, this happens when, near the end of the movie, Phyllis Dietrichson meets Walter Neff in her home. Both apparently intend to kill each other. Dietrichson manages to catch Neff off guard and she shoots him. She doesn't aim very well, though, and only wounds his arm. She aims again, but this time doesn't shoot. Instead, she lowers her gun, steps up to Neff, embraces him and more or less admits that she just realized that for the first time in her life she cares about someone. Neff says that he doesn't believe her and shoots her.

Now, most movies of this era (Hays Code and whatnot) seem pretty tame to modern viewers when it comes to on screen violence. However, there is something really brutal about this scene that quite startled me. I think there are two main reasons for this:

1.There is no real reason for Neff to kill Dietrichson. I definitely got the impression that at this point he had already decided to turn himself in to the police.

2.The sexualized nature of the killing. Neff shoots Phyllis while she embraces him. This is basically a sexual act, the shooting Neff's orgasm, satisfying his anger and wish for revenge. After the ejaculation he discards her in her own house like a piece of trash.

The movie really has a nasty edge to it that I so didn't expect. It also worked well as a crime story – film noir is often all about the characters and the mood, with the story being a secondary concern. Double Indemnity works on both levels and I'd definitely recommend it.

Edit: Oh, something else which emphasizes the misogyny of the movie: I don't think Dietrichson's eventual refusal to kill Neff is a sign of possible spiritual redemption. It's purely in the movie to deepen the humiliation dished out to her. In the end, Neff completely dominates her, physically and emotionally.

Neff's decisions to confess to Keyes and to help Zachetti out on the other hand seem to exist to add a more sympathetic element to his character and to leave open the possibility of his redemption.
Post edited January 01, 2011 by Jaime