C
Cackalacky
Guest
I saw Beauty and the Beast with my wife and children today. I have to say that it was a very good movie and I really enjoyed it.
#marriedlife
I saw Beauty and the Beast with my wife and children today. I have to say that it was a very good movie and I really enjoyed it.
I watched RiffTrax's (the old MST3K crew) send up of "Stone Cold." The movie was an early 90s action vehicle starring Brian Bosworth. I like the MST3K format better; not having the shadows on the screen is a bit off-putting. It's also interesting that "Stone Cold" was a major studio release that had a bit of a budget and a recognizable supporting cast (Lance Henrikson, William Forsthye). As one of the Riff Trax guys quipped "Man, they actually spent some money on this movie." I guess Hollywood thought the Boz was going to become a bankable 2nd tier action star. Hey, the guy had more charisma than Steven Seagal on screen and was easier to understand than Van Damme, so maybe the idea wasn't so ridiculous.
Just saw Hacksaw Ridge. Very well done. The story itself is incredible. Not enough words to describe the heroics of Desmond Doss. Very few men like that ever walk the earth.
I watched "Out For Justice" the other night. It's been awhile since I saw it. 2 things stuck out to me. The first was it's portrayal of 1990 Brooklyn. Everyone is going around speaking Italian like it's 1920 and half the neighborhood just got off the boat. The second thing was how Steven Seagal, despite being the hero, comes off as a real prick. I actually felt bad for the bad guys in some scenes. Seagal's character was less dedicated cop and more hair-trigger violent psycho who will start breaking limbs at the slightest provocation.
Maybe that's why NYC saw a sharp decrease in crime in the 90s. It had nothing to do with Rudy Giuliani. Steven Seagal was secretly on the job for the NYPD and he viciously maimed so many criminals for very sight offenses that they couldn't commit any more felonies with their broken, useless limbs.
My mind is blown. Just watched Snow White with my daughter and I'm now 99% sure that bitch was dead at the end.
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Her prince, the angel of death, leading her to the castle in the clouds.
I watched Rifftrax's take on "No Retreat, No Surrender;" Van Damme's first movie. JCVD has a small role, playing a villainous enforcer. The movie is all around bad; if someone made it today, people would take it as a parody of cheesy 80s "Karate Kid" knock-offs. I always wonder with movies like this, do all the principles think they are making something good? Or do most of them just hold the knowledge deep down, not acknowledging it, figuring that work is work?
I watched Rifftrax's take on "No Retreat, No Surrender;" Van Damme's first movie. JCVD has a small role, playing a villainous enforcer. The movie is all around bad; if someone made it today, people would take it as a parody of cheesy 80s "Karate Kid" knock-offs. I always wonder with movies like this, do all the principles think they are making something good? Or do most of them just hold the knowledge deep down, not acknowledging it, figuring that work is work?
It was a different time period. Action movies were king in the 80's, no matter how shitty. People loved to see bad guys get shot or beat up. It was a simple formula, and the lower budget movies void of good acting and storylines delivered those goods at a far greater rate.
Golan Globus was the leader in this genre. Their movies like American Ninja, Delta Force, Death Wish, Barbarians, etc. still have huge cult followings, and I highly doubt any of their fans truly consider the films "good." They are guilty pleasures.
The death knell for shitty action movies happened in the early 90's with the Steven Segal franchise IMO.
Speaking of, Rifftrax has a number of films on Amazon Prime right now. Also, Netflix not only has about 20 various old Mystery Science Theater 3000s, the 14 brand new episodes of Mystery Science Theater 3000: The Return dropped about 24 hours ago.
It was a different time period. Action movies were king in the 80's, no matter how shitty. People loved to see bad guys get shot or beat up. It was a simple formula, and the lower budget movies void of good acting and storylines delivered those goods at a far greater rate.
Golan Globus was the leader in this genre. Their movies like American Ninja, Delta Force, Death Wish, Barbarians, etc. still have huge cult followings, and I highly doubt any of their fans truly consider the films "good." They are guilty pleasures.
The death knell for shitty action movies happened in the early 90's with the Steven Segal franchise IMO.
There were soooo many B level ninja movies at that time. Dutikoff movies were just one of many. I loved Enter the Ninja trilogy. Watched it all the time.
Finally got around to watching the Vvitch last night. Really creepy movie. Great atmosphere. Stayed true to being the time piece that it was without being annoying. I figured all the characters speaking in the old timey pilgrim dialect would drive me crazy, but it didn't really bother me. I didn't feel like I missed any lines because of it either.
It's free if you have Amazon Prime and only like 90ish minutes so I would definitely recommend it. The guys at RLM said it was one of the best movies of that year, I wouldn't go that far, but I did really enjoy it. Might have been a more intense experience seeing it on the big screen as well.
saw Hacksaw Ridge, good popcorn movie. Vince Vaughn should do more proper movies instead of shitty comedies
Last practice of the season, and this asshole thinks its the super bowl!
Finally got around to watching the Vvitch last night. Really creepy movie. Great atmosphere. Stayed true to being the time piece that it was without being annoying. I figured all the characters speaking in the old timey pilgrim dialect would drive me crazy, but it didn't really bother me. I didn't feel like I missed any lines because of it either.
It's free if you have Amazon Prime and only like 90ish minutes so I would definitely recommend it. The guys at RLM said it was one of the best movies of that year, I wouldn't go that far, but I did really enjoy it. Might have been a more intense experience seeing it on the big screen as well.
Finally got around to watching the Vvitch last night. Really creepy movie. Great atmosphere. Stayed true to being the time piece that it was without being annoying. I figured all the characters speaking in the old timey pilgrim dialect would drive me crazy, but it didn't really bother me. I didn't feel like I missed any lines because of it either.
It's free if you have Amazon Prime and only like 90ish minutes so I would definitely recommend it. The guys at RLM said it was one of the best movies of that year, I wouldn't go that far, but I did really enjoy it. Might have been a more intense experience seeing it on the big screen as well.
The Witch was an amazing movie. The accuracy from a historical perspective, the feel of the movie, the themes, how strictly they went for a retelling of New England folk tales (I didn't think they'd have the guts to go for the reveal they went with in the end). It's an A+ movie in my book. I plan on watching it around Halloween time annually now.
P.S. How in the heck did they get those two young twins to talk like that? Think about how good of a job their direction and editing must've been that they had a ton of lines in 16-17th century English and never once sounded artificial. Probably the most amazing part of the movie for me.
"Meet Dave" with Eddie Murphy. I remember it getting a lot of hate when it first came out; another nail in the coffin of Eddie Murphy's slowly dying career. It's actually a cute, funny, family friendly movie. I found it to be enjoyable and it's a good movie to watch with kids. It's not something I'll watch again and again, but it certainly wasn't bad.
"The Substitute." I'd avoided watching this movie for awhile, thinking I'd know exactly what I'd get; a B-movie about a combat vet who goes undercover as a substitute teacher to get revenge the scum who beat up his girlfriend. I was surprised that there was some genuine character development and interaction. Tom Berenger did a good job in the title role; being believable as both a hard-ass former soldier and a nice guy who cares about people. The movie is far from perfect; there's plenty of heavy-handedness, bad acting, and general cheese (my favorite is the barrel of ninja throwing stars that Berenger's character has in his house). It's nothing special, but it's not the total violent schlockfest I anticipated.