šŸ“½ Films I have seen

And his weird obsession with The Exorcist movie and any musical biography

Downloaded it to watch soon, thanks. Tonight I watched Margin Call. It is a 2011 film but again based on the US bank collapse, it follows a 24 hour period as the shit hits the fan. Strong cast including Jeremy Irons, Kevin Spacey, Paul Bettany, Demi Moore. Interesting story if you like to know more about how quickly things unwound, but probably not more than a 7/10 otherwise.

Iā€™ll watch, thanks Bucks.

Originally posted by @TedMaul

Mark Kermode is an idiot

I note that there is no denial of Camembert and Gitannes.

what is the fourth wall?

The one you knocked down to build that bathroom

Or ā€¦ https://fttreading.wordpress.com/2012/05/31/breaking-the-fourth-wall-direct-address-in-the-cinema-4/

Rather ashamed to say Iā€™ve only just gotten around to watching American Beauty. Really rather impressed overall. Some great performances and a non hollywood ending. No idea how is slipped past my radar.

My kid and I have been into Deadpool for years reading the comics, heā€™s way too young to take to the Cinema for it though. Loved all the shorts that Reynolds put together when pitching it trying to get it made. Deadpool broke 4th wall even as a comic strip character , thought his part in th wolverine movie was awful and nothing like the deadpool we all wanted

Watched Bone Tomahawk tonight. Just out I believe and Kurt Russell stars as a sheriff in a small town, who sets out with a rag-tag bunch on a rescue mission following a kidnapping by violent persons unknown. In many ways, an old fashioned western, with plenty of time spent building the characters, the scenario and the resulting tension.

BUT - its not like any other western film for sure. Described in one review as 80% western, 20% horror, the violence, when it comes, is brutal and you need to seriously brace yourself for the final 20 minutes or so. It will not be for everyone but it is brilliantly acted, has great scenery, is darkly witty in places and wow, does it pack a punch. Loved it.

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Cheers, Bucks. Wasnā€™t aware of that coming out. Looks right up my street.

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But is it as good & as scary/horrific as Cowboys v Aliens Bucks?

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There was Oscar beef between that movie and Fight Club, which imo, is 100x better than that movie. When I saw your post, I googled American Beauty vs Fight Club, and found even more. This is an article which compares four films from the same year, the two Iā€™ve already mentioned, Office Space and The Matrix, and finds common ground.

There was the Best Picture winner at the Oscars, American Beauty. There was the groundbreaking action/science-fiction franchise-maker, The Matrix. There was the dorm-room cult classic Fight Club and the endlessly quotable Mike Judge magnum opus Office Space. And all these films had as their protagonist a white male middle-class guy whose primary motivation is disliking the fact that he is gainfully employed at a stable, well-paying, boring office job.

Certainly in real life most of us would probably rate ā€œboring office jobā€ as a better life choice than ā€œfast-food worker,ā€ ā€œpedophile,ā€ ā€œanarchist domestic terrorist,ā€ or ā€œguerrilla freedom fighter in a post-apocalyptic hellscape.ā€ And yet Lester Burnham and Fight Clubā€™s Narrator seem to get a spring in their step and a lightness in their heart from being liberated from making a decent paycheck and being able to afford groceries and mortgage payments. Hell, Neo throwing away material comfort in return for, essentially, living on a decrepit submarine comes with the reward of being able to stop bullets with his mind and fly.

What we have, in other words, in all of these films is a Hollywoodized Buddhist message that material comfort isnā€™t everything and that freeing ourselves from attachments to material things like jobs and mortgages is the key to true enlightenment and happiness.

ā€¦ I know, right? If I have any millennial-aged friends around who care at all about movies, ripping into the 1999 Iā€™m Employed, Boo-Hoo Tetralogy is a ritual. Going around in a circle talking about why we want to punch Lester Burnham in the face is classic generational bonding for us millennial film buffs at our social gatherings in our parentsā€™ basements, as is waxing poetic about how much weā€™d like to escape into the Matrix, the simulated reality where the Machines keep us enslaved by giving us steady paychecks and nice apartments.

Brilliant.

Saw the new Michael Moore earlier this week. Moore normally annoys me - his films strike me as pretty much propaganda pieces which play to the anti-American sentiment. But watching it the States with some very left wing friends put a different context on it - they are genuinely horrified by some of the things their country does, and the ā€˜any tactic to wake a country up to how things could be differentā€™ approach made more sense. Momentarily.

You sound like a borderline communist Lou, with your lefty friends

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Michael Moore is a brilliant man, never afraid to show the truth, watching the Martian tonight.

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I saw that the other day and really enjoyed it. I didnā€™t notice Michael Moore in it though.

Ha Ha Iā€™m yet to see him as well.

Totally. First Tory I ever met in my life was Chertsey.

Communism is great until you get to the hierarchy bitā€¦