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Thread: Rate the last movie you've seen

  1. #1981
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    Hocus Pocus 6.5/10

    Silly Kids movie, but still enjoyable as an adult.

    The Outlaw Josey Wales 9.5/10

    One of my favorite westerns. Seen it many times and still never tire of it.

  2. #1982
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    This had previously passed me by, but then I saw it referenced in some article about Netflix movies (I can't recall if the article was complimentary or not, but anyway...) - I gave this a spin and really quite enjoyed it. It's based on a Dark Horse graphic novel and is directed by Jonas Ackerlund (Spun), and stars Mads Mikkelsen, Vanessa Hudgens, and Matt Lucas, and is about an assassin who is coming up to retirement at age 50 - but his boss doesn't want to pay out on the pension plan and opts to kill off his retiring assassins instead, but meets his match with Mikkelsen's professional.

    It's brash and a lot of fun, filled with very bloody and strong violence and a fair bit of T&A (at one point an olympic bonk sesh turns into a blood-spraying gun fight), and has oodles of style, but it also has a pretty good sense of pace and is rarely ever (if at all) dull. It seems as if it has been left open for a sequel, but I'm not sure if it'll ever get one (but I would like one). It's like an old school exploitation movie, but with a good budget, a slick production, and A-List stars.
    Last edited by MinionZombie; 05-Nov-2019 at 10:15 AM.

  3. #1983
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    Joker 8/10
    Good Boys 8/10
    Get that damn screwdriver out of my head!

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    Doctor Sleep: 9/10. Definitely a must-see for any King fan, or just a Shining/horror fan. Really enjoyed it. My only gripe is maybe a little bit too much fan service? Other than that, an excellent watch.

  5. #1985
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    Le Mans 66 / Ford vs Ferrari - Good solid motor flick... 8/10
    Look again at that dot. That's here. That's home. That's us. On it everyone you love, everyone you know, everyone you ever heard of, every human being who ever was, lived out their lives. The aggregate of our joy and suffering, thousands of confident religions, ideologies, and economic doctrines, every hunter and forager, every hero and coward, every creator and destroyer of civilization, every king and peasant, every young couple in love, every mother and father, hopeful child, inventor and explorer, every teacher of morals, every corrupt politician, every "superstar," every "supreme leader," every saint and sinner in the history of our species lived there--on a mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam. [click for more]
    -Carl Sagan

  6. #1986
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    'Wendy and Lucy'

    Or...Michelle Williams looks for her mutt. A slowish mover, but not boring one, by independent film maker Kelly Reichardt, sees a young woman, Wendy, drift into a one horse Oregon town on her way to Alaska. Her car breaks down and she is stranded, because she doesn't have the money to get it fixed. Wendy is travelling with her dog Lucy (the director's own dog), but they get separated and Wendy has to look for her, before she can move on.

    Reichardt's story dumps us into Wendy's life without telling us much about her. We never find out why she's on her way to Alaska, or what she hopes to do when she gets there, besides find work. She's obviously not had the best of times, though, and while not exactly a maudlin character, she does come across as a bit downbeat. This is made all the worse when her dog, Lucy, parts company with her as the dog appears to be her only real companion in life.

    Williams puts in a very convincing shift here as Wendy and as an actress I never seemed to have much regard for, as I still think of her as part of the 'Dawson's Creek' alumni, she was pleasantly surprising. There's a danger that, as a viewer, one can feel a little cold toward the main character because we are dropped into a slice of life without knowing anything about her and not finding out much by the end of the film, but Williams manages to make Wendy a genuine person and one that we can sympathise with.

    Reichardt's direction is fine, if it seems a little casual and aloof. But the simple story doesn't require much flare and it keeps the interest over its 80 minute run time.

    9/10


    'The Texas Chainsaw Massacre Part 2'

    Tobe Hooper's sequel to the excellent 'The Texas Chainsaw Massacre' misses all of the beats that made the 1974 film so great. Why Hooper decided to play the sequel almost exclusively for laughs, when the original was a pure horror movie, is quite the mystery and it never once sits comfortably. It can be said that the Sawyer family possessed some darkly humorous attributes in the first film and Hooper himself has always said that he wanted some laughs in there, but it never went into overtly camp territory like it does here. Thusly, the macabre fascination of Leatherface's clan is completely diluted and they never capture the absurd horror that they embodied in the 70's.

    The protagonists this time out are Vanita "Stretch" Brock (Caroline Williams), a late night Texan radio DJ and Boude "Lefty" Enright (Dennis Hopper), a Texas Ranger who is investigating the Sawyer family. They eventually do battle with Leatherface and his kin who are holed up in an abandoned theme park, where they have built an elaborate underground hideaway.

    While the first half of 'The Texas Chainsaw Massacre Part 2' feels relatively different, the second half repeats much of the first film, even down to letting grandpa (who is surprisingly still alive) try and kill the heroine by belting her with a hammer, despite him making a mess of it in 1974. Caroline Williams, like Marilyn Burns, spends much of the time screaming her head off too. But, unlike her predecessor, her character "Stretch" eventually fights back.

    While the original film was almost completely bloodless, the sequel up's the gore content thanks to the involvement of the great make up effects artist Tom Savini. But, unfortunately, it's just not enough to offset the poor story and the lacklustre atmosphere that is ruined by the over all comedic tone. But I suppose that Hooper figured that he'd already made one of the greatest horror films of all time, so he set out to do something different with its sequel. But in the end the result was a very bad misfire.

    'The Texas Chainsaw Massacre Part 2' wasn't very well received at the time of its release in 1987 and was outright rejected by some fans of the original, because of its comedic value. But, it has since gone on to develop a cult following of its own, like most of these movies do. It will have a certain appeal for people who like black comedies, I suppose. But if someone is a fan of the original film, they won't find the same kind of entertainment in its sequel.

    3/10


    'Rambo Last Blood'

    I'm tempted just to say that it's mostly rubbish and leave it at that, but it continues to be a source of wonder at just how much life can be dragged out of John Rambo, when his story ended in 1982 on perfectly agreeable terms. But, it's amazing that for 34 years these rubbish movies have been churned out when the quality plummeted off a cliff in 1985 and exploded at the bottom.

    This time John Rambo is ensconced on an Arizona farm, where he farts about with horses and rescues people that get into trouble from floods. He works the farm with a woman called Maria and her granddaughter Gabriela, who finds out the whereabouts of her estranged father and she goes off to Mexico to confront him about her abandonment. Obviously this doesn't go well, and subsequent events lead poor Gabriela in sex slavery as a cartel gets hold of her, and bish, bash, bosh, poor old Rambo gets dragged into another little war were he has to become a one man army again.

    Anyone familiar with Rambo movies will instantly know what to expect here as there is absolutely nothing new, except perhaps the lack of an exotic setting. Last Blood therefore returns to an American setting like 'First Blood', but that's where its kinship with that film ends. Whereas 'First Blood' was a well made and hugely enjoyable story, 'Rambo Last Blood' is a poorly made farce that makes the other sequels in the series look like masterpieces. The acting is spotty at best, with the incredibly inane dialogue doing the characters no favours and the production looks terribly cheap in many places.

    There is some entertainment to be had in the movies's final setting, in which Rambo dispatches the bad guys in a series of tunnels he has constructed under his farm and there is a delightful amount of silly carnage as the cartel's men get shot, chopped and blown to pieces when Rambo channels his inner Kevin McCallister, utilising traps he's made and weapons that he has laying around. But the film outside of this dubious enjoyment is very poorly handled indeed.

    Hopefully, this is the last we ever see of John Rambo, which is something that I said after 'Rambo III' in 1988, but this character keeps getting dusted off and dragged through the mud on an all too regular basis, so I wouldn't be surprised at all to see another Rambo movie made before Stallone shuffles off his mortal coil.


    2/10



    'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood'

    Quentin Tarantino is, without doubt, an accomplished film maker who has a definite style that he stamps upon his work. This style is readily evident in his more recent output than it was in the likes of 'Reservoir Dogs', or 'Jackie Brown' and while quirkily distinctive, it can be quite jarring. Films like 'Inglourious basterds' can throw out history or narrative sense and still be entertaining (although I disliked it immensely). But ultimately they feel worthless. Likewise, something like 'The Hateful Eight', which has a great setup and a brilliant first half, gets ruined by a terrible second half where Tarantino just abandons sense in favour of the ridiculous.

    His latest, a story set in the Hollywood hills in 1969, exhibits these quirky traits too, as Tarantino throws the historical record on the fire and constructs his own alternative history, this time concerning the infamous Manson Family's viscous attack on Sharon Tate (Margot Robbie) and several others, which is used as a backdrop for a tale about Rick Dalton (Leonardo DiCaprio), a TV cowboy who's in the midst of a career crisis and Cliff Booth (Brad Pitt), Dalton's stunt double and driver. Dalton lives next door to Tate and Polanski, which has significance to the story in the final act.

    'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood' doesn't really have all that much to say about anything in particular and despite being well acted and directed, its frivolousness results in a very underwhelming conclusion. It's a Quentin Tarantino film, through an through, and will be greeted as such by fans of his work. But, for many others in the audience, it could lead to some head scratching and wondering what it was all supposed to be about.


    5/10


    'Joker'

    Like 'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood', Todd Philips's 'Joker' leaves the viewer confused as to why it even exists. But unlike Tarantino's film, which operates in its own singular revisionist universe, 'Joker' is (ostensibly at least) part of a larger universe because it belongs to the Batman story, which makes its destruction of the Batman timeline bizarre and perplexing.

    'Joker' is an origin story about Batman's greatest adversary, The Joker, who has been part of the Dark Knight's story since issue No1 of the comic in 1940 and has been front and centre in Batman's fight against crime in the city of Gotham. But the film's main problem is that this Joker cannot possibly be the same Joker that Batman has fought for nearly 80 years, as he meets a ten year old Bruce Wayne half way through the movie, which would make the Joker an OAP by the time Bruce comes of age and embarks upon his crime fighting career. This scene, which feels incredibly ill judged (as are all of the connections with the Wayne family), completely obliterates not just the familiar Batman timeline, but also anything a possible sequel (or sequels) may have to offer should Batman make an appearance at a later date.

    This central problem aside, the film itself is a decent attempt to tell a story of a psychopath (played excellently by Joaquin Phoenix) who experiences his final turn and falls into an unrecoverable spin. But, it's nothing we haven't seen before and it's not as well handled here as it has been in other films. The obvious examples being 'Taxi Driver' and 'The King of Comedy', which have been discussed in conjunction with this film since its first appearance.

    'Joker' is a depressing look at Arthur Fleck, a 40 something who still lives with his mother in a manky 1970/80's New York (Gotham) apartment which she never appears to leave. She is cared for by Arthur, who also has to make money by getting gigs as a clown in a two bit agency that has him doing work for kids in a hospital one day and holding a sign for a closing down sale the next. His life is something that nobody in their real minds would ever envy and while the viewer can feel a pity for Arthur, he remains quite an unsympathetic character. Over the course of two hours, certain events conspire in Arthur's life that eventually lead to him realising his "true" self and he eventually becomes the titular character.

    Phoenix, it has to be said, is very good in the role, although Heath Ledger remains the benchmark. But unlike Ledger's madman, the Joker of this film gets a backstory that unfolds on the screen, even if much of it is obviously unreliable. His mother is competently played by Francis Conroy (of 'American Horror Story' fame), and she does well as a character who possess her own psychological issues and who is clearly an anchor, in the worst possible way, for her son. The secondary characters are all handled satisfactorily too, even if Robert De Niro looks terribly out of place.

    It's directed fine by Todd Philips, but there isn't really much to write home about in that department. It's sufficient, while never being outstanding, and it commendably manages to keep its tone throughout. Whether he returns for the inevitable sequel is unclear, and at a billion in box office returns you can bet that there'll be a sequel.


    6/10
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  7. #1987
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    The Irishman
    If you're expecting another Goodfellas or even Casino, you're not quite going to get that. Now, while there's plenty of 'gangster stuff' going on in this latest Scorcese movie, it's from a different perspective and filmmaking mentality - it's more contemplative and reflective, especially in it's latter third - but the interplay between the three main leads works wonderfully well, especially as their older mindsets begin to take hold and they either feel their power slipping through their fingers or see the sum total of their lives' decisions and how that has affected them (and their family).

    Much has been said about the CGI 'youth-ing' of the main characters and, aside from a couple of slightly wonky shots, it works surprisingly well. There's the odd bit of 'young face on an older body' that sneaks in here or there (e.g. DeNiro looks a little too 'stooped' in his forties on occasion), and a brief flashback to WWII and a young DeNiro is the most obvious (perhaps half of it being down to the audience just knowing that DeNiro isn't that young), but it's surprising how you accept it throughout the vast majority of the film. You get focused on the characters and the story instead of looking at the CGI, because it's not trying to be flashy. Plus, it also helps that we go backwards and forwards in time, so the 'spectacle' of seeing these characters through their ages works well.

    It's a mighty long film (3 hours and 20 minutes before the 10 minutes of credits kick in), but I never found myself checking my watch or checking the timeline to see how far I'd got.

    It'll certainly require more viewings to really let it all sink in - but it's definitely recommended viewing.

  8. #1988
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    Mid 90s
    Jonah Hill's debut as a writer/director, about a young kid outsider who befriends a group of skaters in the 1990s. It's kind of like Clerks meets Kids meets the Big Brother skate videos. I was really impressed with the subtle character studies going on, seeing the machinations of the core group of kids play out with their paths beginning to diverge and how they all deal with their own perceptions of themselves, their friends, and their families. I knew I'd enjoy it, but I didn't know I'd enjoy it as much as I did. Really worth checking out.

  9. #1989
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    Quote Originally Posted by MinionZombie View Post
    Mid 90s
    Jonah Hill's debut as a writer/director, about a young kid outsider who befriends a group of skaters in the 1990s. It's kind of like Clerks meets Kids meets the Big Brother skate videos. I was really impressed with the subtle character studies going on, seeing the machinations of the core group of kids play out with their paths beginning to diverge and how they all deal with their own perceptions of themselves, their friends, and their families. I knew I'd enjoy it, but I didn't know I'd enjoy it as much as I did. Really worth checking out.
    "Skate Kitchen" is sooo much better. A real depiction of modern-day skaters. Plus it's way less homophobic. AND better tricks. Just all-around improvement.

  10. #1990
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    Quote Originally Posted by MinionZombie View Post
    The Irishman
    If you're expecting another Goodfellas or even Casino, you're not quite going to get that. Now, while there's plenty of 'gangster stuff' going on in this latest Scorcese movie, it's from a different perspective and filmmaking mentality - it's more contemplative and reflective, especially in it's latter third - but the interplay between the three main leads works wonderfully well, especially as their older mindsets begin to take hold and they either feel their power slipping through their fingers or see the sum total of their lives' decisions and how that has affected them (and their family).

    Much has been said about the CGI 'youth-ing' of the main characters and, aside from a couple of slightly wonky shots, it works surprisingly well. There's the odd bit of 'young face on an older body' that sneaks in here or there (e.g. DeNiro looks a little too 'stooped' in his forties on occasion), and a brief flashback to WWII and a young DeNiro is the most obvious (perhaps half of it being down to the audience just knowing that DeNiro isn't that young), but it's surprising how you accept it throughout the vast majority of the film. You get focused on the characters and the story instead of looking at the CGI, because it's not trying to be flashy. Plus, it also helps that we go backwards and forwards in time, so the 'spectacle' of seeing these characters through their ages works well.

    It's a mighty long film (3 hours and 20 minutes before the 10 minutes of credits kick in), but I never found myself checking my watch or checking the timeline to see how far I'd got.

    It'll certainly require more viewings to really let it all sink in - but it's definitely recommended viewing.
    Agreed on pretty much anything. I think some people will diss the digital aging right off the bat, but I keep thinking about Robert De Niro's "old man"-makeup in Bertolucci's 1900 - and that was by far much less convincing than this.

    Having said this, his body and movements are those of an old man. Like the take where he busts into the store and beats up the owner. He doesn't strike me as very powerful in that shot. His arms are also kinda short, a side effect of age - your body shrinks.

  11. #1991
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    Last Action Hero
    It's been a fair few years since I watched this, but I always liked it - and I really enjoyed seeing it again. It's a shame it didn't do too well when it was originally released (it got clobbered aside by Jurassic Park), but I think it was also a film ahead of its time. It's an awful lot of fun and manages to play with the conventions of action cinema of the time whilst also entirely indulging in the same tropes without feeling awkward. Great cast, too, particularly Charles Dance who devours every scene he's in with utter glee (apparently the role was aimed at Alan Rickman, but he wanted too much money so Dance got the role and wore a t-shirt that said he was 'Cheaper then Alan Rickman' ). It's also fun to watch it as someone who's fascinated by that particular stretch of 42nd Street between 7th and 8th avenues (as shown in the movie). At the time the street was mostly shuttered with almost all of the theatres closed, but they brought it back to scuzzy life for the movie (e.g. the theatre that the kid visits is the Empire, which was later moved east down the block and is now the lobby of the AMC 25 cinema). Crackin' soundtrack, too, both the needle drops and the score.

    Quote Originally Posted by blind2d View Post
    "Skate Kitchen" is sooo much better. A real depiction of modern-day skaters. Plus it's way less homophobic. AND better tricks. Just all-around improvement.
    Modern day young female skaters in NYC, not 1990s young male skaters in L.A. If that's how this particular sub-strata of skaters were talking in 90s L.A. then, like it or not, you mustn't censor that fact. There's a big difference between depicting honest dialogue versus supporting slurs. Characters in "The Irishman", for example, say (and do!) all sorts of things (e.g. Jewish slurs, killing) but that doesn't mean the film supports such intensions (i.e. anti-semitism, murder). There must be truth in art, and it is to everyone's detriment to censor the past.

    Quote Originally Posted by EvilNed View Post
    Agreed on pretty much anything. I think some people will diss the digital aging right off the bat, but I keep thinking about Robert De Niro's "old man"-makeup in Bertolucci's 1900 - and that was by far much less convincing than this.

    Having said this, his body and movements are those of an old man. Like the take where he busts into the store and beats up the owner. He doesn't strike me as very powerful in that shot. His arms are also kinda short, a side effect of age - your body shrinks.
    Yeah, you can see the real physical effects of aging the most - e.g. how someone's head sits on their shoulders, how they move their body - on their younger incarnations. Although that was really the only main thing that revealed the truth, as-it-were. The effects were mostly done quite well and you notice it less and less and less the more you get pulled into the performances. I also thought Pesci's performance as the oldest incarnation of his character was great - such a stark physical difference to how we're first introduced to him.
    Last edited by MinionZombie; 03-Dec-2019 at 10:35 AM.

  12. #1992
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    Very much enjoyed 'The Irishman' myself, although I can understand why some people wouldn't. Teamsters racketeering doesn't have the same umph as the proper mafia types in the likes of 'Goodfellas' and I'm sure that many are going into this that are clueless about Jimmy Hoffa and whatnot.

    Like others have said elsewhere, I didn't notice the de-ageing malarkey after a while. But, yeah, De Niro's mid 70's frame gives the game away at several points. But it doesn't really matter because the story is so well told.

    Agree with you Mini, that Pesci's old man turn in the prison was excellent. The little mannerisms he does were well observed, like his left hand acting as a steadier while he struggles to eat a bit of bread with his trembling right hand.

    I think 'The Irishman' will become a Scorsese classic in the years to come and it was kinda nice to see all the old crew do one film of this type together.
    Last edited by shootemindehead; 03-Dec-2019 at 11:33 AM. Reason: .
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  13. #1993
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    Quote Originally Posted by shootemindehead View Post
    Very much enjoyed 'The Irishman' myself, although I can understand why some people wouldn't. Teamsters racketeering doesn't have the same umph as the proper mafia types in the likes of 'Goodfellas' and I'm sure that many are going into this that are clueless about Jimmy Hoffa and whatnot.

    Like others have said elsewhere, I didn't notice the de-ageing malarkey after a while. But, yeah, De Niro's mid 70's frame gives the game away at several points. But it doesn't really matter because the story is so well told.

    Agree with you Mini, that Pesci's old man turn in the prison was excellent. The little mannerisms he does were well observed, like his left hand acting as a steadier while he struggles to eat a bit of bread with his trembling right hand.

    I think 'The Irishman' will become a Scorsese classic in the years to come and it was kinda nice to see all the old crew do one film of this type together.
    Aye. There were really only two bits that 'stuck out' to me, in terms of the de-aging. One was De Niro's character in WWII. Perhaps it was the look of the lighting on his face, or that his head was possibly on another actor's body ... there was just something a bit off or 'soft' about the look, but it was only in a few shots. The second was a shot of De Niro, when he was still a trucker, in the cab of his truck - there was something about where his face and neck joined in the 2D image, or the jawline specifically, that seemed a smidge 'off' when he turned or tilted his head, but again it was only a couple of shots and brief.

    Yep. Pesci's performance in his character's final days was powerful. You could see a mind going soft, the glint disappearing in the eyes, in addition to the obvious physical frailty. Indeed, that scene where they were eating bread with wine was quite touching, the weight of their entire lives and this terrible decision they had to make/enact.

    Obviously, because it's popular and getting a lot of press, there is the inevitable slew of Twitter chumps who bleater on about how it was shit (even though they admit they fell asleep during it and don't even like Scorcese movies!!!), you know, that typical contrarian 'look at me and my hot take' Twitter garbage ... you know, the sort of people who count the number of lines Anna Paquin has and then totally miss the entire point (and power) of her character.

    I think it's hard to regard "The Irishman" as a masterpiece at this point as it's only just come out and it's being lined up against the previous work of these artists - however, with time, I'm sure it will 'age in' to their filmographies and it will then be easier to regard it as such. It's impossible to take something brand new and then sit it right alongside another film (e.g. Goodfellas, or Casino), which the viewer will have watched numerous times over many years, and expect the same reaction. Once it 'beds in', though, and with repeated viewings, I think "The Irishman" will reveal even more of its treasures - and as you say, it was such a joy to have Scorcese/De Niro/Pesce - and Pacino - all together on this epic project. It's also nice to see other familiar faces in the orbit of Scorcese (e.g. Bobby Cannavale, Stephen Graham, Ray Romano) in the mix as well.

  14. #1994
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    'Ad Astra'

    Bradley spends two hours flying through space to see his daddy, Tommy, in a story that could have been a half hour long. But besides that, 'Ad Astra' looks the business and sounds great too. It's one of the finest looking films I've seen in ages, but it's story is the weakest link without a doubt. It's a film that requires a lot of patience to sit through and can be disappointing if you go into it expecting to be blown away. It's also hampered a bit by a rather silly ending, which was unnecessary and unfortunate.

    Pitt is fine in his role, but he's not given much to do. Frankly, I've never found him to be anything more than a pretty face in most things, but he's as good here as he has been in anything else really. Tommy Lee Jones turns up and says his lines and everyone else is...fine? There's nothing outstanding in terms of acting here.

    'Ad Astra' is really a film watched for it's visuals and on that ground, it works very well. Set in the near future, so 50+ years, the tech looks good and doesn't feel ridiculously advanced. For instance, equipment on the spaceships are still button based, so it does away with the nonsense of touch screen tech that we see in the likes of 'Prometheus'. You can't swipe when you have a space suit on, but you can press a large button. So, everything feels generally realistic. There's a nice scene on a moon port and a colony on Mars and they don't come across as entirely illogical and the space travel sequences have a genuine atmosphere to them.

    There are one or two tense moments that almost feel tacked on, but they play out in a relatively pleasing manner, so as not to derail Brad's journey too much. There is also a scene involving Brad Pitt and a sewer full of water that just didn't add up. But, really, I cannot stress how thin the script is and I can imagine that there were a lot of disappointed viewers walking out of this.

    6/10 (maybe a 7 on another day) <- mainly for how it looks, Hoyte Van Hoytema did a great job.
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  15. #1995
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    Quote Originally Posted by MinionZombie View Post

    Modern day young female skaters in NYC, not 1990s young male skaters in L.A. If that's how this particular sub-strata of skaters were talking in 90s L.A. then, like it or not, you mustn't censor that fact. There's a big difference between depicting honest dialogue versus supporting slurs. Characters in "The Irishman", for example, say (and do!) all sorts of things (e.g. Jewish slurs, killing) but that doesn't mean the film supports such intensions (i.e. anti-semitism, murder). There must be truth in art, and it is to everyone's detriment to censor the past.

    .
    Yes, I already said modern. Which, for skateboarding, is the most important thing, is it not? Constantly changing and evolving. Plus we have way more footage and stuff from that period and time without the help of Jonah Hill, whereas footage of present day girls? Not so much outside of Instagram and specialty sites like skateism. I'm not interested in censoring the past, but more interested in the present, and possible futures. Skate Kitchen features profanity. It features illegal drug use. It's just a better movie. That's all I'm saying. Not saying things need to be censored, just... Big Brother was a shitty magazine. I get why people liked it, but yeah, being "edgy" is just... a little cringe, right? Plus girls look better on boards than most (not all) cishet white dudes. IMO, obviously.

    Now to be on topic, I really liked "Murder Party". (Yes, it's old and has been on Netflix forever, but meh). Just a fun ride throughout. Excellent cinematography. Actors hit all their marks perfectly, far as I could tell. Just a great comedic slasher flick. 9/10.

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