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Last movie you saw

Discussion in 'Other Off Topic Forum' started by PrettyBoy, Jun 21, 2009.

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  1. tomc

    tomc Two Time F1 World Champ

    Apr 13, 2014
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    Two. 1965. A short directed by the great Indian auteur Satyajit Ray. Ray contrasts a rich boy who looks down - figuratively and literally - upon a poor boy. The rich boy, confined in his house has all the toys one could ask for, but finds no joy in them. The poor boy is outside and finds pleasure in the crudest, homemade playthings. Not content with his own unhappiness, the rich boy seeks to undermine the happiness of the poor boy. A lot of deep messages about materialism in 12 min with not a word uttered.

    Was restored some years back to honor Ray by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.



    Highly recommended.

    T
     
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  2. Remy Zero

    Remy Zero Two Time F1 World Champ

    Apr 26, 2005
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    Babel - A slightly older movie starring Brad Pitt. 9/10

    Mission Impossible - Slightly longer than your average movie, but scores a solid 7/10
     
  3. tbakowsky

    tbakowsky F1 World Champ
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    Sep 18, 2002
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    Took my 2 girls to see the "Meg 2" The Trench. Silly movie..and that is EXACTLY what it's supposed to be. No political agenda in sight..hardly a swear word to be heard..Zero gore..couple of jump scares..fun movie for kids. As a movie..it's a solid 3 out of 10. As a silly movie..it's a 10.
     
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  4. flash32

    flash32 F1 Rookie
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    Exactly

    Ninja turtles.. excellent for kids

    Somewhere in queens ..good movie especially if from Brooklyn or Queens

    Gran Turismo

    Flash

    Heart of stone

    Sent from my moto g power using Tapatalk
     
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  5. tomc

    tomc Two Time F1 World Champ

    Apr 13, 2014
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    Tom C
    Although most well known for her films with Yasujiro Ozu, Setsuko Hara made two films with another titan of Japanese cinema, Akira Kurosawa - 1946's No Regret for Our Youth and The Idiot, 1951. The latter is based on the Dostoevsky play of the same name. It's good to OK, but at 166 min it's a bit of a slog. Hara is the highlight as she plays a temptress, a nice departure from her usual virginal roles.

    No Regret for Our Youth is the much better picture IMO. It's the story of a silly, young girl coming of age to be a person of great moral substance and courage set amid the upheaval in Japan during the period immediately before and after WW2. Hara gets to show off much greater acting range than in her Ozu films. Also, the great Kurosawa cinematography is on display in this one of his earliest films. Highly recommended....T
     
  6. DIGMAN52

    DIGMAN52 F1 Rookie
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    Jan 30, 2004
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    I just did 5 days at the Telluride Film Festival. It was our first time, and made a few rookie mistakes. We saw some good movies, and some weird ones, and learned that's just life in the Film Festival world.

    Good ones were :
    The Holdovers - Paul Giamatti play a crabby boys school professor who has to stay on campus over the Christmas Holiday with a cook and a group of boys. Kind of a Breakfast Club with a new take

    Rustin - a story about the guy that pushed MLK and others to have a March on Washington in 1963. Didn't expect to like is, but the acting is really good.

    Daddio - a 2 person film where Sean Penn is a taxi driver who picks up Dakota Johnson (50 shades of grey) at the airport, and engages her in conversation while they are stuck in traffic coming into NYC. Thought it would be tough to pull off with just 2 people, but it was actually really good. Her facial expressions could tell their own story, as he watched her in the rear view mirror.

    NYAD - about the long distance swimmer who tried to swim from Cuba to the US. Annette Bening is Diana Nyad, and Jodie Foster is her best friend who takes on her coaching for the attempts.

    The Royal Hotel - with the blonde girl from Ozark was dark but pretty good.

    Saltburn - about a dorky college guy who befriends the cool rich guy, and goes home with him over the holidays. Lots of twists and turns, and dark, but worth streaming.


    We heard The Bikeriders was good. Tuesday with Julia Louis-Dreyfus was weird, and that Poor Things with Emma Stone was crazy but good.

    Janet Planet had several friends walking out of it. All of us Strangers was weird , and would be a hard pass for me.

    Being up at 9,500' elevation in Mountain Village, it's hard to have a bad day. I recommend going to this Festival
     
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  7. tomc

    tomc Two Time F1 World Champ

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    Cool! The new restoration of The Unknown (1927) - Tod Browning, Lon Chaney and a young Joan Crawford in hot pants! - was shown at Telluride. Would have loved to see that...T
     
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  8. Sunshine1

    Sunshine1 F1 Rookie
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    Jan 22, 2011
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    The last movie we saw a few days ago was “my big fat greek wedding #3”. Not that good, we should have waited for the movie to be available on iTunes. The last movie before this one, last month, was “Mission Impossible” (great).
     
  9. tomc

    tomc Two Time F1 World Champ

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    The original BFGW was great. My wife any I saw it on a cruise ship. Directly mirrors our family setups - mine is huge, ethnic Sicilian family and she's the only child of two only children parents.

    BFGW2 was a dud IMO. Sounds like 3 is the same...T
     
  10. tomc

    tomc Two Time F1 World Champ

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    Priest of Darkness, 1936. Notable as one of only three films directed by Sadao Yamanaka that is not lost. Yamanaka died in 1938 in Manchuria after being drafted. His films are said to have influenced other noted Japanese directors, notably Ozu. POD is also the earliest extant film of the great Setsuko Hara, whose films I've been binging. POD revolves around Hara's struggles to keep her brother on a straight and narrow path. Hara is only 16, but all the traits that would make her a legendary actress a decade later are on full display. If you buy into the plot line that her innocence and resolve are such that people with formerly evil motives would forego their own self interest to help her, then you'll like the picture. I do, and therefore, I did! Recommended.

    The Daughter of the Samurai. 1937. Stars Setsuko Hara and Sessue Hayakawa. German/Japanese co-production. Revolves around the conflict between East and West in the run up to WW2. It's OK, but dated. Mildly recommended, but more as a historical document than as cinema.

    A Ball at the Anjo House. 1947. A great film that deals with the loss of status and fortune by a family with the dissolution of the Japanese peerage post-WW2. They decide to hold one final ball before their house is sold. Class struggle abounds as once noble elites are humbled, while erstwhile commoners rise in ascendancy through both honest work and nefarious means. While the lost of privilege comes with obvious downsides, the movie points holds out hope for the potential advantages in the classless society to come. Highly recommended.

    T
     
  11. mikesufka

    mikesufka F1 Veteran
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    How does that work ? They have a movie theatre that you show up and watch a bunch of short films ? How do they handle all the people ?

    I love Telluride - need to get back there.

    MDS
     
  12. DIGMAN52

    DIGMAN52 F1 Rookie
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    You can go to their website to see what the ticket options are. We went with some regulars, so went with their recommendation of buying the Acme pass, which has one large theatre in Mountain Village that holds around 500. All the other movies are in the Town of Telluride at 5-7 venues, only one being the old movie theatre. The rest are in small venues they arrange around town.

    Each day there will be a list of what movies are playing where, and they move them around so you have a chance to see most of them you want to. At our venue, for something we knew would be popular, we sent out a line holder 45minute - 1 hour ahead of the movie time. At around the 30 minute before point, they start letting people in, according to what passes they have. We only had one movie, the Sean Penn / Dakota Johnson, that we were some of the last to get seats in. For the rest, not an issue.

    We had heard that in town, you would have to wait a little longer, as the lower level patrons and non sponsors can line up as well. They usually have some tickets available for walk ups for $20 each.

    We saw 2-3 movies a day, and really had a fun time with it. I would recommend going.
     
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  13. tomc

    tomc Two Time F1 World Champ

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    Still binging my way through Setsuko Hara's non-Ozu films...

    Tokyo no josei - 1939 - may be the closest thing I've seen to a Japanese pre-code! Hara plays a women determined to break into the male world of selling cars. Pretty gritty for 1939. Recommended.

    Aoi sanmyaku & Zoku Aoi sanmyaku - 1939 - interesting idea, a two-part movie released a week apart. Hara is a progressive teacher involved in the struggle between traditionalism and modernity, a recurring theme in Japanese cinema of the time. Would have been better as a single 90 minute movie.

    Repast - 1951 - directed by Mikio Naruse - Hara has the task of encouraging her niece to not be so rash after her first argument with her new husband, while her own marriage of 5 years is in a rut. Contrived happy ending brings it down a notch. Her husband is a dolt; Hara should have kicked him to the curb.

    Sudden Rain - 1956. Also directed by Naruse. Not seen many of his films, but this is more or less a re-working of Repast. Meh.

    Tokyo no koibito - 1952 - two screen legends - Toshiro Mifune and Setsuko Hara - play against type in this comedy about simple Tokyo folk. Drama is added by the sickness/death of their friend, a tea-house girl, played spectacularly well by Yoko Sugi. Recommended.

    T
     

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