Recent movies reviews/recommendations/warnings
#581
Posted 2017-July-07, 19:58
Side note: It was shown in theater that responds to requests. The guy who asked for this one did so as a tribute to his recently deceased wife. Becky requested that if I do anything such as that I should pick a somewhat more cheerful movie. I don't know the guy so I minded my own business but I would have liked to have heard his story.
#582
Posted 2017-July-07, 21:22
kenberg, on 2017-July-07, 19:58, said:
Side note: It was shown in theater that responds to requests. The guy who asked for this one did so as a tribute to his recently deceased wife. Becky requested that if I do anything such as that I should pick a somewhat more cheerful movie. I don't know the guy so I minded my own business but I would have liked to have heard his story.
I thought this was a pretty good movie, too. Not too far-fetched and well acted.
#583
Posted 2017-July-08, 18:14
Winstonm, on 2017-July-07, 15:12, said:
The opening scene in La La Land is brilliant in these days of green screens. Yes, Gosling can't sing, but the rest is wonderful.
I turned off Moonlight about 2/3 the way through. Was bored out of my mind.
Lion was OK - kind of a nice story.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#584
Posted 2017-July-08, 22:42
Phil, on 2017-July-08, 18:14, said:
I turned off Moonlight about 2/3 the way through. Was bored out of my mind.
Lion was OK - kind of a nice story.
I thought Gosling was better than Stone in the first half of the movie. The last 30 minutes dragged to me. The initial scene was indeed a highlight.
#585
Posted 2017-October-23, 13:10
2018---<<<< a new mobster epic by Scorsese<<<<de Niro <<<Pacino <<<Pesci <<<Keitel <<<< what else could we want?
#586
Posted 2017-October-23, 13:30
Aberlour10, on 2017-October-23, 13:10, said:
2018---<<<< a new mobster epic by Scorsese<<<<de Niro <<<Pacino <<<Pesci <<<Keitel <<<< what else could we want?
Brando - RIP
#587
Posted 2017-October-24, 07:58
Aberlour10, on 2017-October-23, 13:10, said:
2018---<<<< a new mobster epic by Scorsese<<<<de Niro <<<Pacino <<<Pesci <<<Keitel <<<< what else could we want?
Don't make me laugh. All excellent actors, and I'm a real Al Pacino fan, but the late James Gandolfini (The Sopranos) was more of a gangster's gangster than all these guys put together.
And if you want the movie hardman of hardmen, then our home grown Ray Winstone would just look at these guys and make then wet their pants!
#588
Posted 2017-November-27, 20:11
Saw "Magnus" on Netflix. Enjoyed it. It's a documentary about the Norwegian chess phenom.
#589
Posted 2017-December-06, 09:19
Quote
2. EX LIBRIS: THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY (Frederick Wiseman) In his wonderful, expansive and wholly absorbing documentary, Mr. Wiseman goes deep into the New York Public Library down grand and humble halls, and past open and seeking faces for a portrait of a cultural and social institution that is democracy incarnate.
3. FACES PLACES (Agnès Varda and JR) In this glorious, vividly personal work, Ms. Varda both wanders through France and into the past alongside the visual artist JR, meeting new friends and seeking out old. Ms. Varda is often described as one of the greatest female directors alive, which is true. She is also one of greatest.
4. THE FLORIDA PROJECT (Sean Baker) Mr. Baker makes heartbreakers about people usually ignored by movies: a porn actress and the forgotten elderly woman she befriends in Starlet; two transgender female prostitutes in Tangerine. In The Florida Project, he tells a deeply American story of children and adults struggling at the margins of Disney World, creating a 21st-century Grapes of Wrath with psychedelic color and gobs of spit.
5. GET OUT (Jordan Peele) A meme generator, a social critique and a metaphor for our times Get Out is all of these. Its also an exceptional feature directorial debut. Mr. Peele does much thats right and its worth remembering that what makes his movie memorable isnt only what he says, but also how he makes meaning cinematically with finely calibrated timing, a sense of alienated space and an indelibly haunted, haunting image of the void.
6. LADY BIRD (Greta Gerwig) The anguished teenager has been a cinematic cliché since James Dean bellowed about being torn apart in Rebel Without a Cause. Ms. Gerwigs tender, thrilling movie about an adolescent girl has plenty of drama: Our heroine throws herself from a car. Thereafter, she does more than simply survive; she becomes a person in a movie that insists female artistic self-creation isnt a matter of sacrifice but of being.
7. OKJA (Bong Joon-ho) Filled with lapidary visual touches and pictorial splendor, Mr. Bongs lovely, often funny and achingly soulful movie about a girl and her pig didnt receive the theatrical release it deserved because it was bought by Netflix, which largely seems committed to shoveling product into its pipeline. That may be the future, but its infuriating that like the villain in this movie it cant see past the bottom line.
8. PHANTOM THREAD (Paul Thomas Anderson) Two lives and two perversities become one in this ravishingly beautiful, often unexpectedly funny film, which traces the relationship between an eminent couture designer (a magnificent Daniel Day-Lewis) and his younger, surprising muse (Vicky Krieps). Its a story about love and about work, and finally as much about its own creation as the romance onscreen.
9. A QUIET PASSION (Terence Davies) In this exquisitely directed biography of Emily Dickinson (a sensational Cynthia Nixon), Mr. Davies turns images into feelings. With delicacy and transporting camera movements, he brings you into Emilys everyday life, touching close to the people that she deeply loved and into the rooms that they shared. He shows you the beauty, grace, light and shadow that flowed into her and right through her pen.
10. WONDER WOMAN (Patty Jenkins) I love all the movies on my list, but more than any other this year, Wonder Woman reminded me that we bring our entire histories when we watch a movie our childhood reveries, our adolescence yearnings and adult reservations. Ive always loved Wonder Woman in all her imperfection, including in the old TV show, and I loved her here because all my adult reservations were no match for this movie.
OTHER FAVORITES After the Storm; The Big Sick; Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story; Call Me by Your Name; The Challenge; Dawson City: Frozen Time; The Death of Louis XIV; Escapes; Girls Trip; Good Time; The Happiest Day in the Life of Olli Maki; I Am Not Your Negro; Jim & Andy: The Great Beyond Featuring a Very Special, Contractually Obligated Mention of Tony Clifton; Kedi; The Lost City of Z; Mother!; Mudbound; My Journey Through French Cinema; Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer; The Ornithologist; Patti Cake$; Personal Shopper; The Post; Professor Marston and the Wonder Women; Quest; Song to Song; Tonsler Park; Twin Peaks: The Return; The Woman Who Left; Wonderstruck.
#590
Posted 2018-January-04, 22:02
Last week we watched "The Apartment" with Jack Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine. The script is so-so but those two are so good.
#591
Posted 2018-January-06, 14:25
y66, on 2018-January-04, 22:02, said:
Last week we watched "The Apartment" with Jack Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine. The script is so-so but those two are so good.
The Apartment: Billy Wilder was a great director.
I was 21 and newly married when The Apartment came out and I found it disturbing. In some ways I was mature, I had been choosing my own path for a number of years, but I was also naive. I was a pretty straightforward person and I found all of that interpersonal duplicity and using of other people upsetting. Looking back on it at 79, I think it's a fine performance by Shirley McLaine. "I'd spell it out for you but I can't spell". A great line at a climatic moment.
Speaking of upsetting, I saw Blue Jasmine on tv the other night. I thought of Winston, since the issue of genetics comes up. I could quarrel with some of the script, but it's original and interesting. I just now looked it up and found it was written and directed by Woody Allen. Hmm. And I also liked Midnight in Paris. I have been comfortable for years thinking that if Woody Allen had anything to do with the writing or the acting that was more than enough reason to stay away. Cate Blanchett is very good, true enough, but so is Sally Hawkins and the combination is excellent.
#592
Posted 2018-January-06, 15:15
I thought that it was quite good, though the whole Kevin Costner subplot could have been excised...
#593
Posted 2018-January-07, 19:07
#594
Posted 2018-January-08, 19:38
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#595
Posted 2018-January-09, 10:07
y66, on 2017-December-06, 09:19, said:
I'm so out of it. The only ones on this list that I have seen are Wonder Woman and Get Out, both of which we both liked.
About Wonder Woman. I really liked the reviewer's comment "I love all the movies on my list, but more than any other this year, 'Wonder Woman' reminded me that we bring our entire histories when we watch a movie our childhood reveries, our adolescence yearnings and adult reservations.".
Especially, for me, "childhood reveries". I had the biggest and the best comic book collection in my neighborhood. My parents, with me along, spent many evenings in the neighborhood bar. They would give me some money and send me to the local drug store where I bought comic books. Lots of comic books. There have been many philosophical, sociological, psychological etc studies of comic book heroes. What were Batman and Robin really up to in the Bat Cave? Here is the basic fact: Comic books were a lot of fun to read. I was 6 when the war ended. Both Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck helped us win it. Pluto helped too, as I recall. Wonder Woman was great. She might well have been an early feminist, I had no position on that issue at the time. The Wik tells me that Robotman goes back to 1942. I recall discussions with friends about the correct pronunciation. We settled on Row Boat Man. And there was Mr. Mxyzptlk from the fifth dimension.
Was this wasted time? I don't think so. I enjoyed it. Also, when I was 13, I bought George Gamow's One Two Three --- Infinity from the same drugstore where I used to buy comic books. Of course I also bought a couple of Thorne Smith novels there. And Perry Mason and Hopalong Cassidy. I think the Hopalong Cassidy was when I was about 10 and I was shocked by the vulgarity. Not at all the upstanding citizen portrayed by William Boyd in the movies.
Anyway, Wonder Woman was a fun movie and yes, childhood memories were definitely part of the fun.
On a recent trip back to St. Paul we stopped in at the same neighborhood bar. http://www.crnook.com/ It's still there. I used to set pins at the bowling alley beneath it.
#596
Posted 2018-January-09, 14:04
blackshoe, on 2018-January-08, 19:38, said:
Here's where you're wrong. Huckabee knows that we have a modern-day Churchill.
http://thehill.com/h...mp-to-churchill
George Carlin
#597
Posted 2018-January-09, 14:06
George Carlin
#598
Posted 2018-January-09, 20:00
blackshoe, on 2018-January-08, 19:38, said:
Yep, son.
Walt Kelly was a genius. I really miss him. "Deck us all with Boston Charlie."
#599
Posted 2018-January-10, 08:34
#600
Posted 2018-January-11, 14:38
gwnn, on 2018-January-09, 14:06, said:
Adam and I saw it at the Zurich Film Festival.
I agree that it was a really memorable film, and it was very true to itself. I don't think that it went in the way that a typical Hollywood movie would go, but I think that also might not make it work for other people's tastes. I really hesitate to recommend it in general but I don't really want to give away the ending and that's what I would need to do to expand on this.