I Frankenstein ... Garbage!!!!!!
The Equalizer is the craziest fucking movie I've seen in a long time. The leaps of scale and logic were mind boggling. It was one of the silliest messes I've ever watched and I enjoyed the whole God damn thing.
It starts out so small scale and jumps to I shit you not, Denzel single handedly killed the entire Russian mafia/the most powerful businessman on Earth effortlessly, all because a Russian pimp beat up a hooker he sort of cared about slightly.
Also, the whole main climax of the movie is set to that one song from that Game of Thrones trailer.
That movie terrified me as a kid. The mirror scene and the bloody clown especially frightened me. As an adult, I like the build up better than last bit of terror with the tree and the rope and stuff. Craig T Nelson is great too. Also, my dad's mom looked just like the old lady at the end of the film. I mean exactly, quite uncanny. We used to go to her house and say, "This house is clean."Saw Poltergeist for the October horror challenge. Longer review here: http://boxd.it/3Ylcz
But I really loved it. This was one of the few big name horror movies that I had never seen.
Hmph. I was twelve.Haha! It was over half your lifetime ago. Were you even a teen when it came out?
I'm sure you were very mature for your age.
That's the movie my wife wants to watch tonight. She hasn't seen it yet ... it'll be interesting.Here's my thing for From Dusk Till Dawn, my second scary October movie. http://letterboxd.com/neoraven/film/from-dusk-till-dawn/
This movie and FMJ are both 2 sided movies where I prefer the first half. When I watched FDTD, I thought it was strictly a horror flick. It was my first Tarantino movie, and so I wasn't familiar with his style at all. So, I was knocked out by the first part, and really let down by the second. Realism, and then boom, craziness.Here's my thing for From Dusk Till Dawn, my second scary October movie. http://letterboxd.com/neoraven/film/from-dusk-till-dawn/
GasBandit used to have a funny bone, but it got shot off in The War.Watched Hot Shots again last night for the first time since it was in theaters.
Oh god, this was so much cornier than I remember it being. It was almost painful.
This is pretty much how I feel about FDTD as well. I was already familiar with Tarantino when I saw it, but it just didn't mesh well for me. It felt like two different movies smooshed together. I always feel like it takes too long to get to the monster-horror, and by the time you do, it's not the tone/pacing you're used to. It's not a bad movie, just not a solid one, in my opinion.This movie and FMJ are both 2 sided movies where I prefer the first half. When I watched FDTD, I thought it was strictly a horror flick. It was my first Tarantino movie, and so I wasn't familiar with his style at all. So, I was knocked out by the first part, and really let down by the second. Realism, and then boom, craziness.
Godzilla (2014)
It wasn't the worst Godzilla movie I've seen. That's honestly the best thing I can say about it. It was pretty bland.
If Bryan Cranston had played the son's character, it would've still been more interesting. He has the acting power to bring life to even a dull, under-written character just from the way he performs.Killing Bryan Cranston was so stupid. If you're not going to let it be 2 straight hours of monsters fighting, you probably should keep the only remotely interesting character alive.
By the time Marvel Studios gets done with him, it'll almost be time for a remakeSlither (2006)
Started Nicktoberfest a bit late, sadly, as this was my first horror flick to watch so far due to life circumstances - three days into October. Ah well. Anyway.
It's a shame this movie turned out to be a box office flop. I think it's received a solid cult following, though. It should. It's a lot of fun in that monster drive-in kind of flick. Blatantly ridiculous at times, but with some fantastic special effects, I forgot how much I enjoyed this movie.
I wonder if there's a remote chance we could get a sequel, now that writer/director James Gunn hit the big time with Guardians of the Galaxy. Probably just wishful thinking.
Hell, by the way Hollywood works these days, it's already time for a remake.By the time Marvel Studios gets done with him, it'll almost be time for a remake
Every x-man has the secondary power of 'plot mechanic'.Though I have no idea when Shadowcat got that time projection power.
I would like to amend this slightly. I would not skip through the opening ice-cutting scene. That one was good enough to keep.Frozen
[...]I would have no problem watching it again...though I would very likely skip ahead through the first ten minutes.
Bonus: you can now use Roger Murtaugh's signature line in your everyday life without irony.Hadn't watched it in decades. Still holds up. Powerful and unpretentious - 80s without being "oh god 80s."
Except for Mel Gibson's hair.GasBandit said:Lethal Weapon Hadn't watched it in decades. Still holds up. Powerful and unpretentious - 80s without being "oh god 80s."
Best bet: they wanted to keep Kitty Pryde relevant to the story (because she was the one sent back in time in the original comic), so they decided to make her the one to send Wolverine back in time.X-Men: Days of Future Past
Finally got around to watching this.
Wow. Now this is a proper X-Men movie. Heavy on the story and performances, relatively light on the spectacle. This is how you tell a proper story.
Though I have no idea when Shadowcat got that time projection power.
I should also stipulate I fell asleep before the disbelief suspension shattering fist fight at the end.Except for Mel Gibson's hair.