Johncarllos
Super Robot
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« Reply #2550 on: 22 June 2012, 21:08:25 » |
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I disagree. I hated every single character and the choices they made. Also, reading interviews with Ridley Scott, it made me hate the film even more. [spoiler] Turns out they are pissed at us because we killed Jesus who was an Engineer, so we are like children who got out of control and had to be stopped.[/spoiler] Posted on: June 18, 2012, 11:27:32 AM
Going to see Brave today with my girlfriend. I think she's more pumped for it than I am. The trailers got on my nerves. Posted on: June 22, 2012, 11:26:27 AM
Huh. For a Pixar movie, that was disappointing. WAY less action than expected. I didn't get teary eyed or excited of even laugh much. Does anyone else agree?
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I can skin anything smaller than a bobcat in 30 seconds.
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Speed Racer
Super Robot
Posts: 1134
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« Reply #2559 on: 6 March 2013, 17:32:53 » |
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There's plenty of haters out there for the new Star Trek universe, who are against the use of lens flares, the fact that they would dare have someone else be James T. Kirk and crew, the fact that it made Star Trek cool again, the whole "parallel dimensions" thing, and most of all, reusing stuff from the original show (ideas, characters, the name Star Trek, etc.). Some of the biggest Star Trek whiners ever. Posted on: December 23, 2012, 07:51:32 PM
Got a rare chance to watch three movies in one day. Haven't done that in a long-ass time. Something From Nothing: The Art of Rap (2012) is a decent documentary by Ice-T where he interviews a lot of rappers about where they got their start, what their "method" is, etc. If you like rap, you'll be interested the whole time (some awesome freestyles and discussions of who influenced who), but Ice-T isn't the best interviewer and thankfully it ends before it starts feeling like a fluff piece. The Parallax View (1974): Largely forgotten thriller starring Warren Beatty as a journalist who quickly gets in over his head when trying to find out why people who were present at an assassination three years previous are now dropping like flies. A pretty decent film, it really reflects the feelings of the 1970s. You've got an immense amount of paranoia in the film - you can't trust the government (either due to being corrupt or inept), are corporations in on everything, why are things being covered up, etc. Watching movies like Dirty Harry, All the President's Men, The Conversation, and The Parallax View really gives you an idea of the attitude of the 1970s that Hollywood reflected - lack of trust in the government, tons of shady #####, police are corrupt, etc. It makes me wonder why Hollywood doesn't go for this kind of stuff anymore - the closest we've got is George Clooney's movies, but they barely scratch the surface like these films did. Maybe it's because Hollywood is far more chummy with Washington nowadays, or maybe today's audiences would just watch a movie like The Conversation and be like "Duh. We know that all of this ##### is happening, this isn't shocking." Last film was ParaNorman (2012), which I thought was an excellent children's film. The animation was well done, and there was plenty of humor to keep adults and children entertained throughout without feeling like you're dumbing down the story. I'd like to see more films like this instead of more crap like Shrek and Ice Age.
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Never insult seven people when you only have a six-shooter.
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Speed Racer
Super Robot
Posts: 1134
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« Reply #2563 on: 16 April 2013, 14:47:42 » |
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Watched Expendables 2 and Seven Psychopaths over the weekend. I enjoyed Expendables 2, although I feel like Jean-Claude Van Damme's bad guy wasn't explored at all. In fact, none of the characters are really explored...which kind of bothers me 2 movies in. Seven Psychopaths is excellent. I love Martin McDonagh's stuff. Posted on: March 18, 2013, 03:19:16 PM
My girlfriend and I saw G.I. Joe: Retaliation and Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters at the drive-in. Neither of the films were particularly good, but they were fun for what they were. Hansel & Gretel I'd watch again if it was on TV. I've also started watching Ordinary People again. We had to read it for my 11th grade English class and then watch the movie - at the time, I thought both sucked balls. However, I still think about it every once in a while, so I wondered if I was just too young to "get it". I'm 30 minutes in, and the verdict thus far is, yeah, young Speed Racer was too young for it. I really want to see 42.
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Never insult seven people when you only have a six-shooter.
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Speed Racer
Super Robot
Posts: 1134
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« Reply #2587 on: 10 September 2014, 00:50:19 » |
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Had a RoboCop marathon and watched the entire series while taking care of my son.
The first RoboCop movie is an American classic. No discussion is needed.
RoboCop 2 was weird, because they failed to continue the discussion of RoboCop's humanity by brushing it away in the first twenty minutes of the movie. Which should have been a strong point to the series, and something that could have been constantly examined throughout got tossed away because they felt the need to keep it as an action movie, which if you watch the first RoboCop movie...it really isn't an action flick. In fact, the movie doesn't really get going until the second half as it meanders through a bunch of barely explored ideas and trying to imitate the social satire of the first. It really feels like it was cobbled together from two different scripts. Cain is a throwaway villain, but the action is satisfying. Not great, but a decent follow-up.
RoboCop 3 was amazingly "meh". I liked how it handled the fear of Japan taking over everything, but again, they dumped the social satire in replace of PG-13 action. I hated the whiz kid character that they threw in, and it just became a generic action film. Crappy way for the trilogy to end.
Part of the problem is that in all reality, RoboCop should never have had any sequels and just stayed "as is". Clarence Boddicker is to RoboCop as the Joker is to Batman - no one else had the "Bitches, leave" attitude that sold the bad guy so well. I was surprised with the route that they took The Old Man in with RoboCop 2, turning him into a vile business man whose main concern was the bottom line, not so much introducing products that helped make a better world. He's a very different character from what was seen in the first film. The kid gangster was also interesting, but only because he's got social commentary within the character. All other villains in the series are bland because they're just "the bad guy".
The 2014 remake of RoboCop I found to be "meh", but I enjoyed the ideas that they put forth with the movie, returning to examine RoboCop's humanity. The acting was good, but overall the movie was average. They tried going back into the satire with Samuel L. Jackson, doing a Bill O'Reilly impression, but in my opinion, it wasn't enough. The fake ads really sold it. I'd be interested in a sequel to the movie, but it doesn't seem like we'll be getting anything - you figure they would have announced it by now.
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Never insult seven people when you only have a six-shooter.
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Speed Racer
Super Robot
Posts: 1134
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« Reply #2593 on: 3 August 2015, 06:13:37 » |
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I've watched the first half of Man of Steel. I like what I've seen so far. Posted on: November 17, 2014, 02:18:30 PM
Wife is sick, so I watched The Princess Bride with her. I had yet to see it - I liked it. Posted on: November 22, 2014, 10:57:42 PM
I saw Inside Out and Ant-Man this week. Enjoyed both movies. Ant-Man's 3D was probably the best use of 3D in a Marvel movie thus far.
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Never insult seven people when you only have a six-shooter.
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