Nerdlingr wrote: » Yeah love Take Shelter.
Harry Palmr wrote: » Framed 1975 Dir Phil Karlson Joe Don Baker is a high stakes gambler who gets er Framed. Very much of it's era in terms of the look with the kind of flared collars you could land a plane on. The themes are quite interesting in a way. Baker is rich within his own world but completely cussed and anti-establishment making common cause with a local black deputy who is sick of being on the "dirty end of the stick" all his life. The cops and the politicians are out to get him so he'll get them back. The violence is of the nasty eye gouging/nostril pulling variety and feel plausibly painful and bloody. No one just springs back up having been lamped.
Tony EH wrote: » Always had a bit of an aversion to Mann's films (never understood the "Manhunter is better than Silence" crowd either), but 'Heat' is a pretty great film. Pacino is a bit too Hoo Ha in it for my liking, but DeNiro and Kilmer are very good, and that 20 minute bank robbery sequence is worth the price of admission alone. .
Deleted User wrote: » I love Manns very distinctive style. Thief has it in a abundance too. My favorite of his is The Insider, which might well be my favourite film of all. Last of the Mohicans, Heat and The insider back to back was some amazing streak of filmmaking he went on, he lost his mojo a bit after that, although Public Enemies is very good.
pixelburp wrote: » Heat (1995) Remains Michael Mann's best film and re-watching with an older head, what struck this time was all the material surrounding that visceral action the film's arguably more famous for. Perhaps superficially cliché at first blush; with its depiction of cop and prey as thematic brothers, while wading through disastrous personal lives. Yet there was this atmosphere of a stylish, existential dream to the setting and its mood. While the action set pieces still had that raw unfiltered impact, the quieter scenes came off positively somnambulant. Of lost souls emotionally adrift from the rest of the planet. Elegant and understated, despite the ostensible headline genre - and occasional Al Pacino outburst.
Tony EH wrote: » Always had a bit of an aversion to Mann's films (never understood the "Manhunter is better than Silence" crowd either).
Tony EH wrote: » Always had a bit of an aversion to Mann's films (never understood the "Manhunter is better than Silence" crowd either), but 'Heat' is a pretty great film. Pacino is a bit too Hoo Ha in it for my liking, but DeNiro and Kilmer are very good, and that 20 minute bank robbery sequence is worth the price of admission alone.
pixelburp wrote: » Attack the Block (2011) John Boyega's breakout role, a low-fi sci-fi horror set in a London council estate, the heroes a set of hoodie scumbags. As the film opens with the gang mugging a woman (who also gets wrapped up in the alien invasion), the script makes the youths as scary and nasty as the creatures invading their home - despite them being the ostensible heroes. Joe Cornish doesn't lionise or absolve the hoodies, adding enough context to give depth to their peacocking violence. The actual "alien" part of the film remains great, the monster design showing good use of a small budget, Cornish also adding a touch of showy scale to the Council Estate location.
TICKLE_ME_ELMO wrote: » I watched The Kid Who Would Be King a few weeks ago. It's, I think, Cornish's follow up to Attack the Block. I really enjoyed it too. It has the nostalgia feeling of things I watched as a kid without laying it on too heavy by actually setting it in the 80's/90's. I didn't realise until after watching this that Joe Cornish is Joe from Adam & Joe. I have distinct memories of seeing bits of their TV show when I was probably too young to be watching it and finding it hilarious.