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What have you watched recently? 3D!

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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,796 ✭✭✭4Ad


    Creation Stories.
    Story of Alan McGee and his Creation Record label..
    I really enjoyed it but I love the music and bands, goes stupid towards the end..
    Ewen Bremner is very good in it though.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 635 ✭✭✭dubstepper


    Shocker (1989)
    Craven really did have more piss poor efforts throughout his career than classics. Other than Last House on the Left, Hills have eyes, Elm Street and Scream, his catalogue is pretty dire.


    People under the stairs is also very good. As is serpant and the rainbow.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,363 ✭✭✭✭Del.Monte


    Airforce One is Down on Amazon Prime


    Serbian rogue army officer wants revenge on the West.



    Poorly acted, poor special effects, no likeable characters and, apart from the Russian Foreign Minister, nobody able to act. Corny is the best description. 4/10.



  • Moderators, Arts Moderators Posts: 23,997 Mod ✭✭✭✭TICKLE_ME_ELMO


    I watched Minari tonight and was bit disappointed, to be honest. I get why it's an important film, and it's not a bad film, but as far as the story goes it felt like something I've seen before multiple times.


  • Posts: 18,962 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Shiva Baby - 2020

    A short film drama very much set in the New York Jewish suburban milieu about a fairly lost young woman feeling the usual Jewish parent expectation pressure about what to do in life. Oh and she has a very questionable side hustle. It all comes to a head at a funeral after party. Interesting and doesn't overstay its welcome.

    6.5 / 10


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  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    The Father Anthony Hopkins delivers a whirlwind of a performance here, most brutally showing Alzheimers in all its misery. I can't remember a more sobering final act of a film, and I hope he picks up best actor for the bravery alone it took to make this and perform his final scene.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,484 ✭✭✭run_Forrest_run


    The Vanishing (the original one, 1988)

    When Mark Kermode said it's in his top 10 of movies that scared him I had to watch it. Awfully disappointing really. Maybe at the time, it was scary (the ending?) but by today's standards, I thought it was fairly poor, to be honest.


  • Posts: 18,962 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Drive - 2011

    I hadn't seen it since the first viewing in the cinema. It's short on lead character dialogue which serves to create an enigmatic aura about him. Yet this man of few words is decisive when called upon to be so and the film's tension is heightened by this deliberate scarcity of the verbal form. There is little fat here and it's all the better for it. I'd forgotten that the moments of violence were so intense and graphic. A finely judged soundtrack completes the picture.


    7.8 / 10


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,706 ✭✭✭cmac2009


    glasso wrote: »
    Drive - 2011

    I hadn't seen it since the first viewing in the cinema. It's short on lead character dialogue which serves to create an enigmatic aura about him. Yet this man of few words is decisive when called upon to be so and the film's tension is heightened by this deliberate scarcity of the verbal form. There is little fat here and it's all the better for it. I'd forgotten that the moments of violence were so intense and graphic. A finely judged soundtrack completes the picture.


    7.8 / 10

    I'm not a huge fan of rewatching films but I make an exception for this.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,152 ✭✭✭The Raging Bile Duct


    The Dry with Eric Bana is a great little Aussie thriller. Bana plays Aaron Falk, a federal agent who returns to the hometown he left abruptly as a teenager to attend the funeral of his childhood friend, Luke, who is apparently responsible for a murder suicide. Although intending to leave as quickly as possible, Falk is persuaded by Luke's parents to look at the case to try and clear their son's name. While investigating with the local cop, Falk starts to believe the case isn't as clear cut as many believe and that the case might have a connection to the death of one of their friends 13 years before. The films switches between the present and the past leading up to the tragic death of Aaron's friend. The flashbacks to a summer in his adolescence playing in the river with his friends highlights the devastation caused to the community by the drought it is now suffering and Falk's return acts as a tinderbox reigniting old tensions. Well worth a watch.


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  • Posts: 18,962 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    The Dry with Eric Bana is a great little Aussie thriller. Bana plays Aaron Falk, a federal agent who returns to the hometown he left abruptly as a teenager to attend the funeral of his childhood friend, Luke, who is apparently responsible for a murder suicide. Although intending to leave as quickly as possible, Falk is persuaded by Luke's parents to look at the case to try and clear their son's name. While investigating with the local cop, Falk starts to believe the case isn't as clear cut as many believe and that the case might have a connection to the death of one of their friends 13 years before. The films switches between the present and the past leading up to the tragic death of Aaron's friend. The flashbacks to a summer in his adolescence playing in the river with his friends highlights the devastation caused to the community by the drought it is now suffering and Falk's return acts as a tinderbox reigniting old tensions. Well worth a watch.

    read the Jane Harper book a couple years back so may not watch this as the style of the book's writing would not be easy to bring across imo - may give it a go sometime tho.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,056 ✭✭✭darced


    The Vanishing (the original one, 1988)

    When Mark Kermode said it's in his top 10 of movies that scared him I had to watch it. Awfully disappointing really. Maybe at the time, it was scary (the ending?) but by today's standards, I thought it was fairly poor, to be honest.

    I only seen this last year, scary? Maybe not but an absolutely brilliant film.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,152 ✭✭✭The Raging Bile Duct


    glasso wrote: »
    read the Jane Harper book a couple years back so may not watch this as the style of the book's writing would not be easy to bring across imo - may give it a go sometime tho.

    I don't know how faithful it is to the book but from reading up on it, fans of the book have enjoyed the film. The cinematography is great at capturing the arid desolation of the drought-striken town. I'd have only one niggle about a very convenient plot point, in I guess you'd call the epilogue, which I don't know if it's how it happened in the original book or was as a result of the script tying up loose ends. Apart from that, I enjoyed it a lot and it had me guessing the whole way through.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,383 ✭✭✭S.M.B.


    glasso wrote: »
    Drive - 2011

    I hadn't seen it since the first viewing in the cinema. It's short on lead character dialogue which serves to create an enigmatic aura about him. Yet this man of few words is decisive when called upon to be so and the film's tension is heightened by this deliberate scarcity of the verbal form. There is little fat here and it's all the better for it. I'd forgotten that the moments of violence were so intense and graphic. A finely judged soundtrack completes the picture.


    7.8 / 10
    Can't believe this is 10 years old, also can't believe I still have not watched it or any Winding Refn movie for some reason.


  • Posts: 18,962 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    I don't know how faithful it is to the book but from reading up on it, fans of the book have enjoyed the film. The cinematography is great at capturing the arid desolation of the drought-striken town. I'd have only one niggle about a very convenient plot point, in I guess you'd call the epilogue, which I don't know if it's how it happened in the original book or was as a result of the script tying up loose ends. Apart from that, I enjoyed it a lot and it had me guessing the whole way through.

    it's more about the childhood events that are related to the present day. there is a lot of flashback stuff in the book which works in the written word but I find doesn't really work in film. don't know if they left this out in the film or not but it was a big part of the book.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,152 ✭✭✭The Raging Bile Duct


    glasso wrote: »
    it's more about the childhood events that are related to the present day. there is a lot of flashback stuff in the book which works in the written word but I find doesn't really work in film. don't know if they left this out in the film or not but it was a big part of the book.

    The flashback stuff works really well in the film.
    I think it does a great job of showing how Aaron's perception of what had happened in the past coloured his opinion of Luke but he hadn't known that Luke came up with the alibi not to protect himself but to protect Aaron. He only discovers that after Luke's girlfriend tells Aaron that Luke was with her on that day.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 548 ✭✭✭barrymanilow


    darced wrote: »
    I only seen this last year, scary? Maybe not but an absolutely brilliant film.


    What is the remake like ? any good?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,503 ✭✭✭✭Mad_maxx


    Doctor Sleep

    really enjoyed it until it completely falls apart in the final twenty minutes or so at the lookout hotel


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,484 ✭✭✭run_Forrest_run


    Mad_maxx wrote: »
    Doctor Sleep

    really enjoyed it until it completely falls apart in the final twenty minutes or so at the lookout hotel

    totally agree


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 635 ✭✭✭dubstepper


    I find a lot of Stephen King's works fall apart near the end.


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  • Moderators, Arts Moderators Posts: 23,997 Mod ✭✭✭✭TICKLE_ME_ELMO


    dubstepper wrote: »
    I find a lot of Stephen King's works fall apart near the end.

    The book ending for Doctor Sleep is different from the film ending. I'm pretty sure I prefered the film ending.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,862 ✭✭✭mikhail


    The book ending for Doctor Sleep is different from the film ending. I'm pretty sure I prefered the film ending.
    It is. The hotel is destroyed at the end of King's The Shining, but not in Kubrick's. Dr Sleep treads the line between adapting King's Dr Sleep (a sequel to his own book) and being a sequel to Kubrick's The Shining.

    I slightly preferred the book, to be honest. The film just jarred in comparison with Kubrick's. For example, reducing the woman in room 327 to a tiredly repeated punchline was as tone-deaf as I'd feared going into it.


  • Moderators, Arts Moderators Posts: 23,997 Mod ✭✭✭✭TICKLE_ME_ELMO


    mikhail wrote: »
    It is. The hotel is destroyed at the end of King's The Shining, but not in Kubrick's. Dr Sleep treads the line between adapting King's Dr Sleep (a sequel to his own book) and being a sequel to Kubrick's The Shining.

    I slightly preferred the book, to be honest. The film just jarred in comparison with Kubrick's. For example, reducing the woman in room 327 to a tiredly repeated punchline was as tone-deaf as I'd feared going into it.

    I haven't read or seen The Shining, but did read and watch Doctor Sleep, so I was going in with very different eyes, I guess.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,854 ✭✭✭✭silverharp


    Nightcrawlers is great, just saw it for the first time last night

    A belief in gender identity involves a level of faith as there is nothing tangible to prove its existence which, as something divorced from the physical body, is similar to the idea of a soul. - Colette Colfer



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,363 ✭✭✭✭Del.Monte


    "Secret State" (2012) 4 part mini-series on Amazon Prime.


    secretstate-posting-20121102.jpg

    Excellent, realistic thriller starring Gabriel Byrne as the UK Prime Minister surrounded by disloyal ministers, and military/industrial interests as he tries to find out who was behind the death of his predecessor - Iran or the military/industrial complex. There'sa lot more going on in the background but I cannot say more without giving too much. 10/10


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,484 ✭✭✭run_Forrest_run


    Lake Mungo - enjoyed it, 90 mins get in, scare, get out, perfect.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 40,061 ✭✭✭✭Harry Palmr


    Whiplash Young would-be Buddy Rich goes to school to be schooled by abusive tutor.

    If you love post war jazz and drums you'll love this! :)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,363 ✭✭✭✭Del.Monte


    "No Country for Old Men" (2007) on Amazon Prime.




    Don't know how I missed this Coen Bros classic before but I really enjoyed it - if one can really enjoy murder/mayhem? If there's one disappointment
    it's the ending - did they run out of time, film, money or ideas?
    8/10


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,706 ✭✭✭✭Tony EH


    Ah no way Del. The ending is brilliant.


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  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Entertainment Moderators Posts: 36,711 CMod ✭✭✭✭pixelburp


    The ending is a total gear-change, but it's magnificent. Understated, and a total downer but also, it's right there in the title. It is truly No Country for Old Men and in the last moment comes the realisation.


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