Fysh wrote: » But a white director wouldn't have made the same film, which is Johnny's point. It is notable for the fact that it is a mainstream "horror" film that had an explicitly black perspective in the writing and direction. Whether the resultant film works for you is a different matter, but asserting that it's only well-received because of some sort of audience equivalent of Affirmative Action is a bit silly at best, IMO.
johnny_ultimate wrote: » World of Tomorrow: Episode Three - I'm not sure if Don Hertzfeldt has basically committed his career to making these 30 minute masterpieces every few years, but I'm not going to complain if he has.
ButtersSuki wrote: » That's not really what I said to be fair. Nor did I say a white director would have made the film. I'd like if we could take colour out of the mix and judge a movie on its merits - crazy I know?!
S.M.B. wrote: » No idea how I never heard of these short movies before the buzz surrounding this recent episode. Going to catch up on all three this week. Really enjoyed episode 1.
glasso wrote: » 2018 Oscar nominations for "Get Out" Best Picture Best Director Best Original Screenplay (Won) Best Actor No way that film deserved those 4 nominations (in pretty much the biggest award categories) on simply its own merit.
johnny_ultimate wrote: » Enjoy, they’re all a trip! Assume you’ve seen It’s Such A Beautiful Day?
Del.Monte wrote: » "Run All Night" (2015) Netflix https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7uDuFh-nC-c Another Liam Neeson vehicle but one of the better ones. Bucket loads of shootings, stabbings etc as our hero tries to protect his son from his (Neeson's) long-time best buddy's quest for revenge for the death of his own son at Neeson's hands. 10/10
Harry Palmr wrote: » Neeson really has turned into Charles Bronson for the 21st century
D'Agger wrote: » The Trial of the Chicago 7 (2020) Conflicted about this because the story is well told in typical Sorkin style so I did enjoy it overall, particularly because one or two elements of the story will have you wondering just how much creative license was taken. With that said, the performances are all solid, without being standout. Given the cast perhaps I was expecting more but I thought Redmayne was quite average, Gordon-Levitt was solid, Baron Cohen was fine....only Mark Rylance really stood out for me as having a really good performance. But the final scene went for 'powerful' and honestly felt like a throwback to the 90's or something, I felt it built up, built up and then utterly missed the mark - perhaps they advertised too clearly how it was going to end but I just threw my eyes to heaven when it did happen. 6.5/10
p to the e wrote: » Baraka. This epic meditation on life, death and everything in between hasn't aged at all and the 8k restoration (a first of its kind) only adds to this masterpiece. The non narrative presentation doesn't take a stance on any of the issues it films but rather just shows you the way the world is (or was in 1992) and lets you decide. Some of the scenery of rainforests, tribal celebrations, deserts and even dilapidated cityscapes, like the long gone Kowloon city, are stunning but are juxtaposed with cold manufacturing processes like battery hens or dark eras like Auschwitz or Tuol Sleng. The director Ron Fricke was the cinematographer for the Qatsi trilogy so he has experience with such ambitious projects. I was lucky to see his follow up "Samsara" when it was in the cinema so had been meaning to watch this for some time. I managed to find it on Youtube recently so it's worth a watch if you have c90 minutes available.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TRBJSKSBy-w
Del.Monte wrote: » "Run All Night" (2015) Netflix Another Liam Neeson vehicle but one of the better ones. Bucket loads of shootings, stabbings etc as our hero tries to protect his son from his (Neeson's) long-time best buddy's quest for revenge for the death of his own son at Neeson's hands. 10/10
Harry Palmr wrote: » Del.Monte is an aficionado of such films. If he says it's a 10 it's a 10!
Tony EH wrote: » 'The Evil Dead' Sam Raimi's ridiculously popular cheapy from 1981 - he actually started making it in 1979 - wasn't a hit with me when I first saw it in the late 80's. It was, to all intents and purposes, banned for much of the decade and when it was finally released on video, it was heavily cut. But with all the hype surrounding it, it simply couldn't have lived up to any expectations. That and the fact that it was made for a couple a quid and a bag of chips meant that the impression it left wasn't that deep. In the years after, 'Evil Dead II' became the only film of the series that I could say was enjoyable, with 'Army of Darkness' being relegated to a dumb waste of time where it always sat for me. However, on recent viewing, 'The Evil Dead' revealed itself to be a very different film than I remembered and much more enjoyable than I recalled. In fact, I can say that it's the best of the series, although it's really a very different beast to anything that came after it. Modelling itself more after a straightforward horror rather than the silly Three Stooges slapstick of later movies, it has a completely different atmosphere altogether. There is still fun to be had, of course, but you won't see any of the nonsense that goes on in the likes of 'Evil Dead II'. In 'The Evil Dead' we're introduced to Ash Williams, the ever tormented protagonist of the series, who travels to a remote cabin in Tennessee with his girlfriend Linda, his sister Cheryl and their 2 mates, Scott and Shelly. There they discover in the basement, the Book of the Dead (the film's original title) and a tape recorder with strange incantations, which they play (of course) and summon up a Kandarian demon who possesses Ash's companions and turns them into deadites. It's all a load of bunkum of course, but it's impossible not to admire the sheer effort put into everything by the young and inexperienced film makers which results in a very pleasing, messy, grindhouse, classic shot on delightfully grainy 16mm film. It's story isn't anything to write home about and it's been done to death in subsequent years too (in fact it was a staple of horror years before), but that doesn't take anything away from it and at a mere 85 minutes, it races by in short order. 8/10 *As an aside, the commentary track on the blu ray by Bruce Campbell is a great listen.
Fuascailteoir wrote: » Isin't it on that film that the coen brothers cut their teeth as well?
El Gato De Negocios wrote: » Evil Dead is a smashing movie and easily in my top 10 horror GOAT. It causes me severe rage when people say they prefer EDII to it. EDII is essentially National Lampoons present Evil Dead, it only exists because ED made a few quid but to get a wider release they essentially remade ED, cut out some of the nastier elements like the sexual assault by tree or pencil in the ankle and changed the color of the blood to greens and blues so it essentially isnt blood. EDII is a bit of craic but it is in no way shape or form a horror movie, likewise AOD. ED though, thats a bona fide horror classic.