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What Was The Last Movie You Watched?


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On 07/01/2024 at 13:16, Zetterlund said:

I doubt I'll ever enjoy another creature horror movie as much again now that everything is 100% CGI. The aliens in the first 2 were so terrifying because of their realistic movements and interactions with people, before they turned into Jurassic Park velociraptors in the later films.

I thought the one in alien 3 was quite good since it was birthed from a dog, was a decent change since we'd seen the human form aliens

And while it got a shit load of criticism, i didnt mind alien 3, would have been a good way to end it

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2. Scala!!! - Cinema

An enjoyable trip through 70s/80s miscreant cinema and all the wronguns it attracted, told in this documentary through a tonne of interviewees reflecting on their time spent at the Scala cinema. That results in quite a lot of tubby, bald folk talking about when they were cool and took hardcore drugs man, but it was far more enjoyable when the talking heads were accepting of the fact that they weren’t cool and that this place was a sort of pilgrimage where weirdos could come together and meet others with the same kind of interests scolded by normal society. Some of the stories of what happened in the screenings sounded like absolute hell, but it does really play into the idea of cinemas being communal spaces that can provide all sorts of experiences beyond what you’re watching on the screen. While I don’t like the notion of the films being incidental, the doc tells a bunch of stories of how Scala was more than just somewhere to watch a new release. There’s archive footage, maybe some recreations, drawings which paint the cinema like being straight out of an X-rated Beano magazine, and there’s a variety to the interview locations which add a wee bit of character to the piece.

All of that made me consider the fact that those communal counter-cultural spaces have pretty much all been moved online, something that is both depressing and affirming. It’s amazing that you can connect with someone on the other side of the globe about a film that no one else in the world has seen, but that human interaction becoming dehumanised words on a screen is a disheartening turn of events. Films like Dumb Money from last year and Belle from 2022 have tackled these ideas by showing the world as it is now, but Scala!!! giving us a glimpse into the past definitely adds a different dimension to how the internet has shaped community – even if that’s just an unintentional by-product of the documentary.  

It’s a shame that I can’t find any list of all of the films showcased in this, but when I do I’m sure my watchlist is gonna double in size – even with the weirdo pervert films.

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18 hours ago, 54_and_counting said:

I thought the one in alien 3 was quite good since it was birthed from a dog, was a decent change since we'd seen the human form aliens

And while it got a shit load of criticism, i didnt mind alien 3, would have been a good way to end it

I don’t really remember the film very well but was incensed by the illogical numbering. Should have been Alien III or Aliens II.

see also Rambo III. I mean don’t actually see it, that would be horrible, I meant just as another example of the same thing.

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8 hours ago, coprolite said:

I don’t really remember the film very well but was incensed by the illogical numbering. Should have been Alien III or Aliens II.

see also Rambo III. I mean don’t actually see it, that would be horrible, I meant just as another example of the same thing.

It was Alien3, to be fair. Alien cubed. Not a sequel, but a three-dimensional Alien, ironically not shot in 3D.

If you're familiar with the making of the picture, you'll know that they wouldn't have had the money to shoot in 3D, even if they'd wanted to.

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The Jackal. Bruce Willis and Richard Gere starred. Watched it on the iPlayer last night.
 

“An imprisoned I.R.A. fighter is freed to help stop a brutal, seemingly "faceless" assassin from completing his next job”

 

Decent action film with some suspense added too, it’s the usual FBI/Bruce Willis/15 kills that will keep you entertained enough anyway.

 

7/10.

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On 07/01/2024 at 01:58, DA Baracus said:

 

 

Here's a top fact for you all; when Ripley takes the elevator down to save Newt and the emergency announcement says that there is 15 minutes to reach the minimum safe distance, the actual scene is indeed 15 minutes!

1/96 hours ?!

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2 hours ago, FifeArab said:

The Jackal. Bruce Willis and Richard Gere starred. Watched it on the iPlayer last night.
 

“An imprisoned I.R.A. fighter is freed to help stop a brutal, seemingly "faceless" assassin from completing his next job”

 

Decent action film with some suspense added too, it’s the usual FBI/Bruce Willis/15 kills that will keep you entertained enough anyway.

 

7/10.

For some reason it's always all over the streaming services. Must be cheap as chips.

Saw it in the cinema and all I remember is that I quite liked the title theme, and Richard Gere's Irish accent is fucking hilarious, so it's a recommendation from me for those reasons alone.

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The Beekeeper - Jason Statham's latest action vehicle. My expectations were fairly low, but good god it is one of those films that's so stupid you can actually feel your brain cells jumping out of your ears as it goes. What turns out to be a revenge mission for a wee bit of fraud ends up being spun ridiculously far with constant tortuous bee analogies rammed in your face, and what on earth is Jeremy Irons thinking being in this?

 

It goes all the way to the president of the US, and the final act sees Statham casually punching out heavily armed secret service agents whilst walking up the stairs in the same manner you'd head to the toilet for a dump. It's a damning indictment on the FBI, SWAT teams even by normal dumb action rules.

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1 hour ago, BFTD said:

For some reason it's always all over the streaming services. Must be cheap as chips.

Saw it in the cinema and all I remember is that I quite liked the title theme, and Richard Gere's Irish accent is fucking hilarious, so it's a recommendation from me for those reasons alone.

Aye, it seems to be on BBC IPlayer permanently.

IIRC a young Jack Black appears providing some goods for Bruce Willis?

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3. Priscilla - Cinema

Not sure if this counts as a 2024 release here. A few places have it as being released in the UK on January 1st, but I'm pretty certain there were screenings before New Year. I'll go with Google though and put it as 2024. 

I really liked this. The plot kicks off immediately with Priscilla sitting in a diner before some guy asks her if she wants to go to a party at Elvis' gaff. I can sometimes find this a bit off-putting when they don't give you some necessary time getting to know the main character's normal life before it gets turned upside down, however it worked really well for me here as the first chunk of the film feels like a dream - a kind of fictionalised whirlwind romance between a star and a normie. It's clear that Priscilla thinks that being attached to Elvis gives her life value and she becomes lost when that's taken away from her, kind of like a drug. 

When she moves to Graceland with Elvis longer term, it becomes obvious that that whirlwind romance was just that. Life is suddenly much more boring (Coppola's speciality) and there are a bunch of visual things to indicate that she doesn't belong there. Firstly, she looks absolutely tiny compared to Elvis and his posse, who are perfectly empty characters, something that is drawn attention to when the maid comes into the room and is the only one in that scene to meet her at the same eye level. It also uses colour nicely to make Priscilla pop or blend into a frame, giving off the impression that she doesn't really belong there. There's one scene where Elvis destroys an old house in Graceland because it's bringing down the vibe, and Priscilla is, from what I remember, the only one wearing a white and black outfit which is the same colour scheme as the house's exterior, drawing a connection between her and this other thing that Elvis carelessly destroys once he's bored of it. I could be wrong about that but it sticks out in my mind. Finally, the cinematography gives a haziness to a lot of the interior scenes and strong backlighting through the windows, and Graceland itself is a gated place closed off to the world. These things made me think that Priscilla is both letting a world full of life pass her by to live this one with Elvis, and also that she's getting to experience a world that so many dream to experience - and it's really dull. I know those are kind of conflicting ideas, but they're the crux of Priscilla's development as she learns to forge her own path. I watched May December the night before I saw this and that's actually an interesting counterpoint depicting what could've happened to Priscilla if she stayed with Elvis. They're two really different films with completely different qualities, but they also link up well in terms of subject matter. 

I hadn't seen Jacob Elordi in anything until Saltburn, but I like the confident creepiness he has in both that and Priscilla. Again linking to May December, he gives off a slightly similar vibe to Charles Melton's character in that film; both of their lives have been greatly affected by their environments and that has bred these men who have the veneer of cocksureness but have a real immaturity bubbling underneath. Cailee Spaeny is, as far as I remember, in every single scene of the film, which is no mean feat given that she needs to both hold her own while blending into the superstardom of Elvis Presley. Both performances really worked for me, even if Elordi's accent reminded me a lot of Nic Cage in Raising Arizona. 

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On 30/12/2023 at 19:01, Ewanandmoreagain said:

The Courier - ( BBC I player )

Very good film    Very well acted 

A testament to brave people doing right

  Reveal hidden contents

I was under the impression that they all got out successfully , but no.

Presumably that was the real man at the end.

( Benedict seemed to go in for the method acting , not just the hair )

 

 

 

Incredible story and I'm amazed he's not more generally known. Considering it was obviously in the media at the time, it seems like a forgotten story. 

Also on iPlayer, I watched My Old School recently and still can't get my head round how it was all able to happen. I can remember it being in the news but couldn't remember the details. It's the story of a 32yo pretending to be school age to go back to school in Bearsden. Told through interviews with classmates and teachers, animation and Alan Cummings voice-syncing the guy's interview. Bonkers. 

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Killers of the Flower Moon: 

Yeah it’s at least an hour too long, but it’s Scorsese’s second masterpiece in a row.  
 

Something all over the place with the dialogue levels though - everybody indoors yells and outdoors mumbles.  

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Boudica: Queen of War

2/10. Absolute fucking garbage. Olga Kurylenko is abysmally terrible in this as the eponymous character. The real life story/myth could be an excellent film, but this isn't it. It needs a lead who has can actually act and actually have presence. This has neither.

For some reason Boudica has the force in this, but never utilises it other than to summon her Magic sword.

The two is only for a couple of the deaths in the battle scenes (which are woefully short).

 

Everything Everywhere All At Once

10/10. Exceptional film. Think this was my 4th or 5th viewing, although until tonight hadn't seen it in over a year I think. One of my all time favourites. I love everything about it. It's funny, it's moving, it's stupid, it's weird, it's at times disgusting, it's got pro wrestling and kung fu, it has spine chillingly cringey papercuts, it has award statues in arses, it has hot dog fingers, it has muscular pinkies, it had a racoon controlling a chef, it has googly eyes, it has sentient rocks and it has loads of other stuff. It makes me laugh and makes me cry. I fucking love it.

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The Beekeeper (cinema) - absolutely bog-standard entry in the never-more-popular 'middle-aged white man seeks violent retribution' genre.

If you like these films, this is absolutely fine - essentially a fast food rip-off of John Wick, but who doesn't like a burger now and then. Jason Statham does lots of nasty things to a bunch of comically evil bad guys, and that's all you need to know. There's a load of abysmal po-faced bee metaphors throughout the running time, but they're easy to ignore once things kick into high-gear and Statham becomes an absolutely untouchable death machine.

There'll no doubt be(e) a sequel in which they try to poorly explain Statham's backstory, but so long as it contains another round of crunchy violence I'll likely watch it; I'm a bit of a sucker for these things. If you're on the fence, you can probably wait for the small screen - it was nice seeing it in the cinema, but I'm sure it'll be entirely acceptable on your telly too.

(I took my mother to this because she loves Death Wish and Jason Statham, and she claims it's the best film she's seen in years, so make of that what you will)

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Decided to opt for an easy life this year and just log new movies / movies I saw at the cinema, mostly because I've been off work and watched a ton of shite I can't be bothered going through. So...

The Beekeeper -- I saw a review on Letterboxd where the reviewer said that if they'd woken up from a years-long coma and someone had shown them The Beekeeper right after they'd woken up, they might not be able to tell exactly what year it was, but they'd know within five minutes that it was the second week in January. As such, as a January movie, I think this compares pretty well with January movies of old. This time last year I was watching The 355 and this is much better than that. Generally, I thought this was an awful lot of stupid fun that wasted no time in explaining much to anyone, just got in, got the job done, and fucked off, and that's pretty much what I'm looking for in tower attack style action movies. The CGI is ropey, swathes of it make little sense, it affords scammers with far too much sophistication, but it made me laugh, made me punch the air a couple of times, and you can't say fairer than that. Ready for the inevitable sequel in the second week of January 2025. 7/10

Role Play -- Haven't we done this already, where the beautiful woman is secretly an assassin? In fact, hasn't Kaley Cuoco done this already? Either way, when Chat GPT is asked to write a romantic comedy script from now on, it should really be programmed to stay away from this trope otherwise five years from now, every single movie released is going to be about a beautiful woman who is secretly an assassin. 2/10

Rebel Moon - Part One: A Child of Fire -- I don't think it's as bad as a lot of reviews would have you believe, but holy shit does Zack Snyder -- let's be generous and say "riffs" rather than "steals" -- from pretty much every IP you can name. Aside from the very obvious -- again, let's be generous -- "tip of the hat" to Star Wars, there are -- generously -- "homages" to Game of Thrones, Harry Potter, The Hobbit, Gladiator, Dune, District 9, The Matrix, and others. I spent a decent amount of the runtime waiting for a depressed robot to appear and claim his brain was the size of a planet. And of course, from borrowing from so many other things, it ends up not being as good as any of them and makes about as much sense as any jumbled mess can. It is, though, fairly pretty and I guess it's ambitious, and it gets an extra half point by being 15 minutes shorter than I was expecting thanks to a lengthy end credits sequence. 4/10

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18 minutes ago, MSU said:

Decided to opt for an easy life this year and just log new movies / movies I saw at the cinema, mostly because I've been off work and watched a ton of shite I can't be bothered going through. So...

This is exactly what I intend to do with reviews on here. Only thing is I'm not nearly as prolific as your good self at heading along to the cinema so I'll probably only manage 20 or so for the full year.

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21 hours ago, MONKMAN said:

The holdovers.  

Paul Giamatti, Dominic Sessa and Davine Joy Randolph are all excellent.  Just a thoroughly brilliant film.

I'm gonna be patient/stupid and wait 11 months to watch this as it seems like a proper family Christmas film. 

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On 13/01/2024 at 17:34, Savage Henry said:

Killers of the Flower Moon: 

Yeah it’s at least an hour too long, but it’s Scorsese’s second masterpiece in a row.  
 

Something all over the place with the dialogue levels though - everybody indoors yells and outdoors mumbles.  

I was going to go and see it in New York in November as I had an evening to kill on my own (I wasn't going to Pink as MSG, no fucking way). Googled it to see how long it was and didn't bother. Did an open top bus tour instead.

Anyway, back on topic, I watched Saltburn at the weekend. It was interesting to say the least. Especially the scene that reminded me of Equus, all those years ago. Barry Keoghan's accent was all over the place though.

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4. Poor Things - Cinema

I saw this in 35mm at the Glasgow Film Theatre and I can't really imagine seeing it any other way now as it made an incredibly striking film look even better, especially in those early scenes (the first 40 minutes, I think) which are devoid of colour but full of atmosphere similar to classic talkies and in particular some of the Universal Classic Monster films. Willem Dafoe's a mad scientist who has a Scottish accent, a patchwork face, burps out bubbles and creates weird hybrid animals, but the film focuses on his newest 'creation' - Bella Baxter, played by Emma Stone. She's an adult woman with the brain of a baby, and her performance charts the growth of her character in, for the most part, a really interesting way. It's reminiscent of a lot of sci-fi about learning to become human as she absorbs information at a rapid rate and often channels that information unconventionally - just as someone who's at once an infant and a genius would. She sells the growth of her character as she's exposed to so much of this fantastical take on real-world locations (London, Paris, Lisbon, Egypt, the sea but, importantly, not Glasgow which was where the source material was based). I really loved its sort of skewed sense of reality both in terms of its locations - which form a blend of Gothicism, fantasy and steampunk - and its language through how Bella interprets the world, kind of taking normal phrases and twisting them to make something unconventional yet also understandable. The score seems to grow with her in terms of being quite jerky with stabbing strings before becoming the really whimsical music heard in the trailer. There did seem to be an issue with the print I saw, though, as the audio levels would drop considerably for fairly long spells. 

Despite really appreciating the growth depicted in Emma Stone's performance, I didn't like her starting point. As she was portraying an adult with the brain of a child, she - and Margaret Qualley once she appears - interprets that as going for a stereotypical impression of an adult with mental disabilities which I tend to find quite uncomfortable as it always strikes me as an impression and those impressions are invariably a form of mockery. I don't think that Emma Stone was going for mockery whatsoever, and no one else does either given that she's got a great chance of winning Best Actress for this (I'd still much prefer Lily Gladstone to win), but it's not like she hasn't previously taken a role that would unwittingly cause controversy (Aloha!). Her character's comedic lines didn't vibe with me either, as I felt that they were the kinds of lazy jokes you'd find in a Marvel movie (particularly from James Gunn or Taika Waititi) where the joke is a character being hyper-literal. There are a lot of laughs elsewhere in this, though, not least from Mark Ruffalo who absolutely steals it as a vile, pompous oaf whose peak of masculinity is just as funny as its downfall. 

While I've still not seen Alps or Kinetta, I really, really like Yorgos Lanthimos' films. They thrive in being surreal, either twisting our own world to being surreal like in The Favourite, The Lobster or Killing of a Sacred Deer, or finding a corner of absurdity in a very authentic world as in Dogtooth. That's true in how these latest ones are shot, too, with The Favourite and Poor Things both utilising so many damn fisheye lens shots which I actually quite like as they sort of make you feel like you're spying on something you have no business of seeing, but I think it might turn others off. All of them also create intriguing scenarios for the film to explore ideas in, which is still true in Poor Things with its sexual empowerment/enlightenment, social norms and creation, though the issues I mentioned, while minor, are probably the biggest reservations I've had about one of his films.

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