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Thread: Rate the last movie you've seen

  1. #2266
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    Quote Originally Posted by shootemindehead View Post
    I would love to see someone really have a go at trying to put Stoker's book on the screen (big or small), but I think it's just one of those unfilmable novels. And TBH, the best part of it is the beginning with Harker and Drac milling about in his castle. Everything thereafter pales quite badly in comparison. Into the bargain, Dracula, himself, practically disappears for most of the middle section and it can be quite dull without him.
    As you would say: "Aye."

    Best trivia question in the entire genre: How does Dracula die in the book? Hardly anyone's even heard of Quincy because in most film versions he's either omitted or his character is folded into another.
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    'Stalker'

    Andrei Tarkovsky's very loose adaptation of Boris Strugatsky's novel 'Roadside Picnic' is, today, hailed as a classic amongst certain quarters but I came away from it with mixed feelings I have to say. The same "mixed feelings" as was the original critical reaction to it when it first appeared in 1979. The story, what little of it there is, concerns a man, the "Stalker", who acts as a paid guide for two enlightenment seekers, the "Professor" and the "writer", as they traverse The Zone, an exclusion area that is the site of a meteor that crashed to earth over 20 years previously and has altered the natural landscape (plants have no scent, geography is fluid) and, seemingly, made it uninhabitable for humans. However, in The Zone there is a building with a room that will grant anyone who walks into it their innermost desire. But this may come with a hefty price.

    'Stalker' is a unique film, unlike anything that was done before, although has been copied to a certain degree in the 40 odd years since it was made, most notably in 'Annihilation' from 2018, which I actually consider to be a much better film over all. But, unlike 'Annihilation', Tarkovsky's film demands the viewer's own interpretation on what the meaning of the film is and so wide open to cinematic exegesis it is that ultimately it renders the film without any real coherent point. This isn't a bad thing in itself, films don't necessarily have to have a point, clear or otherwise. But for a piece that runs at over two hours and forty minutes it ends up a somewhat gruelling journey to nowhere in particular.

    And 'Stalker' is a slow film...molasses slow. It takes a long time to do much of anything at all. But, in saying that, it's not dull and the first hour or so is incredibly intriguing. It's the middle section that gets bogged down, and coupled with the relatively unsatisfying finale, the whole thing can leave the viewer wondering just what it was they sat down to watch. But maybe, in the end, that is exactly what Tarkovsky wanted.

    However, where 'Stalker' completely succeeds is in its 1.66:1 cinematography which is never anything less than an captivating sight, even if I do consider the stylistic choice of shooting the bookend sequences in sepia a poor one. But the fantastic vistas - it was mostly shot in Estonia - imbue the film with an otherworldly feeling that helps to transport the viewer to another place despite the fact that everything was shot in real world locations. Simple scenes of mostly empty fields broken up here and there with the odd rusted vehicle or an strangely angled telegraph pole that the land is gradually reclaiming does wonders for the film's atmosphere. An atmosphere that's shrouded in a deep, deep, gloom. No matter what part of 'Stalker' is on the screen, its visuals create the impression that this world is a dark and depressing one with many places that have been abandoned by man, both in The Zone and outside of it. The opening and part of the closing sections, shot in the sepia I mentioned, portray a very rough life for the protagonist and his family. In contrast the scenes inside The Zone, shot in colour, are disturbingly desolate while at the same time very beautiful in parts. Regardless of that, the world of 'Stalker' is not one where any rational being would want to live.

    The soundtrack, too, is remarkably complimentary and works well in helping the viewer into the film, while remaining as sparse as it is unobtrusive. Eduard Artemyev uses his instruments in such a fashion that his subtle notes crawl in the viewer's subconscious adding greatly to the general unease of what we're looking at.

    Acting wise, 'Stalker' is mostly low key, but with some highly charged moments. Some of the monologues as well as the poetry let it down a bit, but don't distract too much. Although Alisa Freindlich's spoken to the camera moments feel quite stagey and ill fitting. But everyone plays their part with convincing enthusiasm, and despite not being a Russian speaker, lines appear to be delivered with feeling even with the heavy use of overdubs which was the order of the day in Russian cinema of the time.

    'Stalker' is a strange film and not one to approach lightly. It isn't something to sit down to for relaxation and I can see that many people would be put off by its lack of substance and long running time. But if you're prepared for such "challenging" arthouse fare, you may find it a rewarding experience.


    7/10





    'The Shape of Things to Come'

    A 1979 movie that has little to do with the superb 'Things to Come' from 1936 and even less with the H.G. Wells book that spawned both, that was made on the back of the success of 1977's 'Star Wars' in a period when every studio was trying their damnedest to reproduce what made George Lucas's film so successful and failing miserably. This independent Canadian production was no exception.

    Ostensibly starring Jack Palance as the stupidly named "Omus" (which I couldn't help but hear as Humus), as the new leader of Delta 3, a planet responsible for the production of Raddic-Q2. This is an anti-radiation drug necessary to sustain the remaining human survivors of Earth's robot wars, who have fled to the moon leaving their former home a radioactive wasteland. Omus withholds shipments of Raddic-Q2 unless the leaders of the moon grant him his demand of being supreme leader. His demand is refused by the people on the Moon and Dr. John Caball (Barry Morse), his son Jason (Nicholas Campbell) and the moon colony leader's daughter Kim (Anne-Marie Martin) head off in a starship called Starstreak to try and stop Omus before he can send his army of robots to invade.

    And yes, 'The Shape of Things to Come' is as bad as it sounds. It's such a cheap production that even TV efforts like 'Buck Rogers in the 25th Century' would be forgiven for having a laugh at its expense. Omus' robots look more like rejects from the design concepts of Robby The Robot and are impotent in any effort to convince that they are an army of killer droids. And the friendly robot name Sparks, reprogrammed from one of Omus' collection, looks like something assembled for a kids costumed party. The miniatures and spaceship effects, too, are bottom shelf quality and even lack the dubious charm that such efforts general inspire.

    It's nice seeing Barry Morse get a role in the wake of 'Space 1999' and the always watchable Jack Palance is fine in another scenery scoffing part. But there's nothing Morse can do to elevate the awfulness of the whole thing and Palance is the kind of bad guy who spends most of his time in a single room plotting the destruction of something, because the budget is so tight. So there's little for him to do either. Everything ends up feeling so amateurish and there's no entertainment to be had at all despite any effort put into the proceedings by everyone concerned.

    And while there are certainly worse Star Wars knockoffs around, such as 'Starcrash' or 'War of the Robots', 'The Shape of Things to Come' ends up just being dull because there's not enough to poke fun at or is just isn't as all out enjoyably campy as something like 'Flash Gordon'.


    2/10
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  3. #2268
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    Hooligan 9/10

    Sean Bean narrates a look at football hooligans - their history, different incarnations around the world and why England's draconican crackdown (along with new American and Middle Eastern owners) has allowed the game to flourish there. This is contrasted against Argentina where uncontrolled hooliganism continues to this day and how it has gutted the life and soul out of football in Argentina. Highly recommended not just for the football fan, Sean Bean makes this truly entertaining. Give it a watch!
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    'The Parallax View'

    Classic 70's conspiracy thriller directed by Alan J. Pakula and starring Warren Beatty as an Oregon newspaper reporter who gets drawn into a quagmire of events in the wake of a political assassination in Seattle and its fallout in the subsequent years.

    'The Parallax View' from 1974, with the exception of an ill fitting car chase, is a talky but never boring movie who's story stays exciting throughout and you never know who to trust or who's going to get it next. Along with 'Three Days of the Condor', it is probably the best of the conspiracy based efforts that were in vogue in Hollywood on the back of murders in the preceding decade of such figures as the Kennedy brothers and Martin Luther King. It has a wonderfully paranoid plot involving a shadowy organisation who have an impossibly deep reach that allows them to engage in their nefarious activities which unfolds interestingly by giving the audience just enough to keep it interested in where things are going to go.

    Warren Beatty is well cast as the reporter who gets entangled into the story, despite his initial disregard, and is supported well by veterans like Hume Cronyn and familiar bit part faces like William Daniels and Bill McKinney, who most people will remember as the hillbilly who has the way with poor Ned Beatty in 'Deliverance' from a couple of years earlier.

    Its yarn, while being a little silly if you look into it, stays compelling because the tone remains consistent throughout, which is something which a lot of film makers could do well to bear in mind these days. Pakula keeps the viewer invested because his characters take what's happening to them seriously, therefore we take what's happening seriously too and the tension is held tightly right up to its final moments.

    Although 'The Parallax View' was released to mixed reviews initially, it's probably no surprise that Pakula was given the reins of 'All the Presidents Men' a year later. A movie based on real conspiratorial events involving Richard Nixon's administration and their bugging of the DNC headquarters in the Watergate building in Washington.

    Highly recommended.

    9/10


    'The Norliss Tapes'

    A 1973 made for TV movie that was supposed to be the launch pad for a series which, unfortunately, never took off. 'The Norliss Tapes' is about a writer, David Norliss (Roy Thinnes), who's working on a book denouncing supernatural phenomena and charlatans. His preparation for this book is recorded on a series of tapes, the first of which his publisher listens to when David goes missing. The tape reveals that Norliss had been investigating a case regarding Ellen Cort (Angie Dickinson) and her claims that her dead husband, James, who had been a cripple and later dabbled in the arcane, has come back to life.

    The movie is a hokey and at times laughable take on the undead, with a central monster that's never more than a curious blend of zombie and vampire and rendered in pretty ineffectual blue makeup. The kind of blue makeup that plagued George Romero's 'Dawn of the Dead' 5 years later, and it's doubtful that the undead James Cort would raise little more than a snigger from modern audiences. But 'The Norliss Tapes' is still highly entertaining almost in spite of itself. The is in part due to the actors involved and how they grip the absurd material. Roy Thinnes, who may be remembered from 'The Invaders', works well as the central hero, Norliss, and Angie Dickinson, already a veteran of TV and movies lends a certain sophisticated air to everything as Ellen Cort. Claude Akins turns up too, as the sheriff who wants to keep a lid on everything.

    'The Norliss Tapes' was never picked up by NBC, the US network that premiered it, which is a great shame as it's premise lends it to what would have been a promising TV series where each week a new tape of Norliss's would have revealed a little bit more of what he was investigating for his book eventually leading to the discovery of the author's whereabouts. I'm surprised, too, that in the near 50 years since it first aired nobody has picked up the idea and run with it since as it would still make for an interesting show.

    7/10


    'Hammer House of Horror'

    'Hammer House of Horror' was an entertaining ittle series of just 13 episodes that exploited the - waning in popularity - Hammer name to put on air some odd stories involving cannibalism, werewolves, witches, doppelgangers and ghosts. All done with every expense spared of course. Yet, a few of the episodes are well remembered by those who first saw them on ITV 40 years ago despite their cheap nature. Largely because a lot of them were so damned odd for the time. Horror TV shows weren't that uncommon, but 'Hammer House of Horror' hit a couple of beats that lasted in the memories of many people. Quite a few folk who saw the episode entitled 'The House that Bled to Death' can easily recall its nastiest moment, for instance.

    A lot of British stars and non-stars also appeared giving an added umph to many of the episodes. People such as Diana Dors, Denholm Elliot, Jon Finch, and Hammer stalwart Peter Cushing all lined up to lend a hand elevating what were fairly mediocre stories it has to be said. The best of which were probably, 'The Two Faces of Evil' and 'The Silent Scream'. But every episode had a good atmosphere to it, where nothing ever seemed quite right and you never knew what was hiding around the corner.

    'Hammer House of Horror' displays that uniquely British style of horror that was very common throughout the 1970's thanks largely to the Hammer themselves and the likes of Amicus, their nearest rival. It has a manner that's hard to categorise yet is instantly recognisable to those would be familiar with it. Although that style would more than likely be completely lost on most people today. Viewed now, it is little more than an interesting relic of the TV of yesteryear, whose most eager respondents would be the people that were already viewers at some point before. Others, I would say, would merely see it as an odd remnant of a TV past that includes stuff like 'Tales of the Unexpected' and 'Sapphire and Steel'.

    7/10
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    Quote Originally Posted by shootemindehead View Post

    'Hammer House of Horror' displays that uniquely British style of horror that was very common throughout the 1970's thanks largely to the Hammer themselves and the likes of Amicus, their nearest rival. It has a manner that's hard to categorise yet is instantly recognisable to those would be familiar with it. Although that style would more than likely be completely lost on most people today. Viewed now, it is little more than an interesting relic of the TV of yesteryear, whose most eager respondents would be the people that were already viewers at some point before. Others, I would say, would merely see it as an odd remnant of a TV past that includes stuff like 'Tales of the Unexpected' and 'Sapphire and Steel'.

    7/10
    From what I remember of this series, the best episodes were the one with Peter Cushing, and the one where a couple are staging a supposed "haunting", it's all a scam in the end, but then there is hell to pay.

  6. #2271
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    The one with Cushing is great even if the ending is a little silly. It's called 'The Silent Scream'. The one with the fake haunting was called 'The House that Bled to Death'. It, probably, has the most famous sequence of any episode.
     
    A load of terrified kids at a party getting splattered with blood.
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  7. #2272
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    Quote Originally Posted by shootemindehead View Post

    'The Norliss Tapes'

    A 1973 made for TV movie that was supposed to be the launch pad for a series which, unfortunately, never took off. 'The Norliss Tapes' is about a writer, David Norliss (Roy Thinnes), who's working on a book denouncing supernatural phenomena and charlatans. His preparation for this book is recorded on a series of tapes, the first of which his publisher listens to when David goes missing. The tape reveals that Norliss had been investigating a case regarding Ellen Cort (Angie Dickinson) and her claims that her dead husband, James, who had been a cripple and later dabbled in the arcane, has come back to life.

    The movie is a hokey and at times laughable take on the undead, with a central monster that's never more than a curious blend of zombie and vampire and rendered in pretty ineffectual blue makeup. The kind of blue makeup that plagued George Romero's 'Dawn of the Dead' 5 years later, and it's doubtful that the undead James Cort would raise little more than a snigger from modern audiences. But 'The Norliss Tapes' is still highly entertaining almost in spite of itself. The is in part due to the actors involved and how they grip the absurd material. Roy Thinnes, who may be remembered from 'The Invaders', works well as the central hero, Norliss, and Angie Dickinson, already a veteran of TV and movies lends a certain sophisticated air to everything as Ellen Cort. Claude Akins turns up too, as the sheriff who wants to keep a lid on everything.

    'The Norliss Tapes' was never picked up by NBC, the US network that premiered it, which is a great shame as it's premise lends it to what would have been a promising TV series where each week a new tape of Norliss's would have revealed a little bit more of what he was investigating for his book eventually leading to the discovery of the author's whereabouts. I'm surprised, too, that in the near 50 years since it first aired nobody has picked up the idea and run with it since as it would still make for an interesting show.

    7/10
    I love this TV movie. I have the DVD that came out ages ago. Loved this movie as a kid. For some reason, I was really scared by James Cort's through the window motel entrance scene when I was kid. this movie has serious nostalgic value. Love it. This was done by Dan Curtis, the same dude who did "Kolchack: the Night Stalker", "Dark Shadows", and "Burnt Offerings."

    Angie Dickinson is HOT as fook in this but that is another story. Ray Thinnes kicks fuckin' ass as usual. Gotta be one of the most underrated actors ever.

    My brother and I came up with an ending for "Supernatural" that tied it into "The Norliss Tapes." It involved Sanford Evan's grandson coming on the Winchester's radar via the last of their father's little hiding places. Sanford's grandson was still trying to find Sargoth and David Norliss 45 years later.
    Last edited by Mike70; 20-Mar-2021 at 01:02 AM. Reason: d
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    Hehehe, it's thanks to Roy Thinnes that whenever I meet someone I still check their hands, no exceptions!

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  9. #2274
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mike70 View Post
    I love this TV movie. I have the DVD that came out ages ago. Loved this movie as a kid. For some reason, I was really scared by James Cort's through the window motel entrance scene when I was kid. this movie has serious nostalgic value. Love it. This was done by Dan Curtis, the same dude who did "Kolchack: the Night Stalker", "Dark Shadows", and "Burnt Offerings."

    Angie Dickinson is HOT as fook in this but that is another story. Ray Thinnes kicks fuckin' ass as usual. Gotta be one of the most underrated actors ever.

    My brother and I came up with an ending for "Supernatural" that tied it into "The Norliss Tapes." It involved Sanford Evan's grandson coming on the Winchester's radar via the last of their father's little hiding places. Sanford's grandson was still trying to find Sargoth and David Norliss 45 years later.
    It's the first time I saw it, although I had been aware of it for years. But there's something that was strangely compelling about some of those American made for TV movies from the 70's. It's a pity nobody has picked up the idea though. As I said above, it still strikes me as a good scenario for a TV show and given the fact that everything is remade now, regardless of the quality of the original idea, it weird that there hasn't been any movies to run with a horror based TV show that would allow for a different story each week but tied around a logical wrapping story. I mean, surely there would be an appetite for it?
    I'm runnin' this monkey farm now Frankenstein.....

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    Quote Originally Posted by shootemindehead View Post
    It's the first time I saw it, although I had been aware of it for years. But there's something that was strangely compelling about some of those American made for TV movies from the 70's. It's a pity nobody has picked up the idea though. As I said above, it still strikes me as a good scenario for a TV show and given the fact that everything is remade now, regardless of the quality of the original idea, it weird that there hasn't been any movies to run with a horror based TV show that would allow for a different story each week but tied around a logical wrapping story. I mean, surely there would be an appetite for it?
    This kind of 70s trash is what I know and love in film. Check out "The Cat Creature" from 1973. It's a TV flick like Norliss. There are good copies of it up on Youtube. It's classic hokey trash if there ever was and is highly recommended.
    Last edited by Mike70; 20-Mar-2021 at 09:57 PM. Reason: d
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  11. #2276
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    Save Yourselves!
    A low-key sci-fi comedy about a young couple from Brooklyn who are addicted to the Internet and their phones. Looking to improve themselves, they head off to a cabin in the countryside and turn off their phones ... however, when they eventually can't resist turning them back on again they discover that aliens have invaded Earth.

    It's a quirky, fun flick. I just went on the premise and that it stars one of the actresses from GLOW, and ended up having a good time with it. The third act kinda loses a bit of direction and the ending maybe lacks a bit of confidence, but overall it's well worth checking out. The term "decorative pouffe" really tickled me, also.

  12. #2277
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    Go For Broke! (1951) MGM 8.5/10 The only deductions for this movie are for some of the hokey dialogue. This is an OUTSTANDING war movie. It's about the 442 Regimental Combat Team in Italy. The 442 was unit comprised entirely of Japanese-American (Nisei) soldiers led by a mix of white and Nisei officers. This film succeeds both as war film and as social commentary. The message of this film is simple - Americans of Japanese descent are not "Japs", "Nips", etc. They are Nisei - Japanese-Americans - Period.
    Highly recommended if ya are a WWII fan.
    Last edited by Mike70; 05-Apr-2021 at 12:58 AM. Reason: Your mom asked me if she could leave the wet spot
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  13. #2278
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    Woof. The longer it went on, the more it turned into a shambles of arty-farty twaddle. Based on the critically acclaimed book by Steve Erickson, it starts out kinda interesting, a movie-obsessed skinhead (James Franco, who also directs) moving to Los Angeles to work in Hollywood only to become obsessed with an actress (played by Megan Fox). No matter how many times they say "fuck continuity", it's no excuse for the utterly garbled storytelling or bizarre mangling of Hollywood film history. And what does the title mean, anyway? Is it referring to the total lack of chemistry between Fox and Franco? The second half is littered with weird scrappy montages conveying ... I dunno, the pain of creativity or some wank? ... and despite the odd entertaining aside (e.g. the burglar who ends up watching Sunset Blvd with Franco's character) it's just a wanky mess that thinks its being profound when it's more like the stoned ramblings of an annoying idiot at a party. There's some kind of curious plot thread about a 'secret movie hidden inside all the movies frame-by-frame', but this part of the story is told so poorly it just flies out of nowhere far too deep into the film and makes no fucking sense whatsoever. I kept hanging in there hoping it'd get better, and then beyond the mid-point I was like "well, I've seen more than half now, so I might as well finish it", but the longer it went on (and it feels long) the harder it became to sit through.
    Last edited by MinionZombie; 05-Apr-2021 at 10:31 AM.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Mike70 View Post
    Go For Broke! (1951) MGM 8.5/10 The only deductions for this movie are for some of the hokey dialogue. This is an OUTSTANDING war movie. It's about the 442 Regimental Combat Team in Italy. The 442 was unit comprised entirely of Japanese-American (Nisei) soldiers led by a mix of white and Nisei officers. This film succeeds both as war film and as social commentary. The message of this film is simple - Americans of Japanese descent are not "Japs", "Nips", etc. They are Nisei - Japanese-Americans - Period.
    Highly recommended if ya are a WWII fan.
    Thanks for the tip, sounds like an interesting flick.

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    Death Walks on High Heels...0/10.

    This movie really isn't a zero, it just has the distinction of pissing me off more than any film I think I've ever seen. This movie was about Nicole for an hour. We got to know Nicole. Her job, her living situation, her married boyfriend, etc. Basic premise of the movie: Nicole's dad was involved in a huge diamond heist. His partners tried to screw him over and before he died, he hid the diamonds. The bad guys think Nicole has them.

    Now, and I must draw a deep breath, I've seen countless movies and never, ever, have I SEEN THE MAIN CHARACTER IN A MOVIE KILLED OFF AFTER AN HOUR...exhales...like I said, this movie was about Nicole and her life. She wasn't a sidekick, a colorful character, or the friend who has to die to prove the threat is real. THE MOVIE WAS ABOUT HER...until it wasn't.

    I'd like to go back in time and kick the director and writer in their dangly bits. Bastards the both of them.
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