TICKLE_ME_ELMO wrote: » It was shot on film and seemingly entirely in real locations so maybe it was just poor choice of shots or settings. For what it's worth, I hated everything about The Florida Project
Harry Palmr wrote: » Murder on the Orient Express (2017) Dir Kenneth Brannagh A fairly needless filming given the 1974 version is fine but not too bad, it improved from a shaky opening with a bit too much flimflam and annoying swooping "CGI camera" nonsense as the train moved through the mountains. When the avalanche arrived things calmed down visually and we could do the story. Obviously if you have read the story or seen previous film there's no real tension or revelation. I see the sequel Death on the Nile is pencilled in for December release and Brannagh has ambitions for a series. Back in the 70s/80s they quickly lost steam after "Nile" and ended up as desperate low budget, non-star star-studded productions.
pixelburp wrote: » Official Secrets (2019) Slightly dry in places, lacking those vital edges of tension found in better films of journalism pursuing political corruption. That the endeavour failed, with our world irrevocably changed by the resulting illegal war, left a flavour of regret & melancholy to the story too (most evident in its sober postscript of the death toll in Iraq). Good performance by Keira Knightley though, earnest without adding too much of that cloying martyrdom you sometimes get with these stories of whistle-blowers.
Harry Palmr wrote: » Stewart's agent (Lew Wasserman) struck a very big points deal (for this and another film) with Universal the first example of that as we understand the tactic. Made about 600,000 in the end and everyone said "what a brilliant idea" and followed suit where possible. Wasserman later became the head of Universal Studios when he took it over.
shrapnel222 wrote: » finally got around to watching antiviral, Brandon Cronenberg's first film. Crazy if not implausible future, crazy film. Overall found it a little laborious in parts but a great debut. much preferred his 2nd film though (possessor) as it seemed a lot more polished. definitely one to watch for the future
Tony EH wrote: » 'Winchester 73' The director, Anthony Mann
AMGer wrote: » Winchester 73 is easily in my top 10 Westerns of all time. And on Anthony Mann, I’m a big fan of his Westerns. He did 5 in total with James Stewart, Winchester 73 is the best but the others are good aswell (Bend of the River seems to get the most praise but The Far Country is my personal favourite). He had a few good Westerns without Stewart aswell, The Furies, Tin Star, and Man of the West with Gary Cooper & Lee J Cobb. Man of the West would definitely be worth checking out.
AMGer wrote: » Stewart himself actually said he didn’t think he’d have survived in the movie business if he hadn’t done Westerns post WWII, and it started with Winchester 73.
Fysh wrote: » I caught H.P. Lovecraft's The Deep Ones as part of the Grimmfest line-up. It was somewhere around the "ok" mark - felt very much like a throwback to the Stuart Gordon & Brian Yuzna Lovecraft films, in terms of quality and narrative. It's basically "Dagon" only with an AirBnB owned by a Californian cult in place of a boat accident off the coast of definitely not Barcelona some unspecified part of the USA. I like cosmic horror and have enjoyed the likes of The Colour Out Of Space, Mandy, Spring and The Endless. TDO didn't really work for me as it's clearly trying to be something more like Dagon, Reanimator or From Beyond.
Tony EH wrote: » I don't think Lovecraft makes much sense outside of the 20's. 'The Color Out of Space' kinda gets away with it and it's only my affection for the Stuart Gordon movies that gets them a pass, but I haven't seen anything else that does justice to the original stories unfortunately. Most of the efforts really only trade on a name and have nothing to do with the Lovecraft story at all. H.P. Lovecraft's mythos is ripe mining though, but they have to be period pieces to be truly successful. In a world of 24hr surveillance, mobile phones and hi-tech, his cosmic entities can't compete. There was a crowd called the HPLHS who tried a couple of (very) low budget films. One was a faux silent effort of 'Call of Cthulhu' which wasn't bad, and the other was a talkie of 'The Whisperer in Darkness' which was pretty good, albeit with accepted limitations. I'd like to see them do something with a larger budget. But there's as much chance of that happening as there is of Cthulhu awakening from his slumber.
Fysh wrote: » I thought both of the HPLPS efforts were really good, but I think they've pivoted largely to audio dramas now. I expect it's more cost effective for them. In larger terms, i think part of the problem woth Lovecraft on film is that Lovecraft's writing is both pretty damn purple to begin with, but also very poor in terms of character - so it lends itself badly to direct adaptation. So e.g. the likes of Panos Cosmatos' films, or the Benson/Moorhead collaborations are a better approach because they borrow the things that work while building new stories around proper characters and storytelling techniques.
johnny_ultimate wrote: » An American Werewolf in London