2012-04-02, 09:34 | Link #941 | |
Megane girl fan
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Diagonally parked in a parallel universe.
Age: 55
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Endless "Cheers" Soul
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2012-04-02, 12:39 | Link #942 |
Wonderful Wonderholic
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: This super duper galaxy
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I recently watched some Japanese movie called Noriko's Dinner Table. I thought it was pretty interesting. It had intriguing characters, and the plot didn't make sense until the end, which I like to see in movies. Has anyone else seen it?
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2012-04-02, 13:14 | Link #944 |
Senior Member
Artist
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: Normandy SR-2
Age: 29
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I recently saw How To Train Your Dragon again with a friend, it was just as good as I remember it being the first time I saw it. Other recent films I watched are Puss in Boots (cute and fun), Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (pretty awesome), John Carter (liked the book so much more) and Hugo (as I'm interested in film history, it was pretty nice).
I'm planning to watch Fish Tank and A Single Man soon, venturing into less familiar territory
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2012-04-02, 15:00 | Link #945 |
Paparazzi
Join Date: Mar 2008
Age: 41
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Okay... Iron Sky
Better than I expected. I expected it to be a Star Wrek with moon nazis but it was actually quite a bit more than that. Granted it's not the next Shawshank Redemption but placing it in the genre that it belongs to with films like scary movie, naked gun, hot shots etc. it held it's own remarkably well. Despite the fact that like the forementioned films most of its appeal is in individual jokes not so much the complete package unlike the other movies alike it actually had an original premise. Plot... not so much. Anyway the humor worked well. It was a far more original than other comparable films and the visuals were quite stunning considering the number of people working on them and the budget that they had available. All in all. I'd much rather watch this than for example Mars Attacks... Properly entertaining stuff even if I'm a bit reluctant to call it good per se. |
2012-04-02, 15:43 | Link #946 |
AS Oji-kun
Join Date: Nov 2006
Age: 74
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I haven't seen the movie yet, but the BBC miniseries with Alec Guiness as Smiley is terrific. I recommend the novel as well, along with most anything else by John Le Carre. The movie adaptation of The Spy Who Came in from the Cold with Richard Burton in the starring role is also excellent. Burton gives a dumpy, understated performance unlike his hammier work in movies like Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and Cleopatra. Probably Liz just brought out that side of him.
One other spy film from the 1960's worth seeing is the young Michael Caine in Len Deighton's The Ipcress File. A quick search at Amazon shows that there are copies available for R2, but nothing for R1 viewers.
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2012-04-08, 19:09 | Link #948 |
Hail the power of Fujoshi
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: hahahahahahahahaha
Age: 35
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I recently watched Love in the Afternoon (1957). I absolutely admire Audrey Hepburn. Her beauty, grace, and charm are unrivalled by present actresses. I also love watching her other works-Roman Holiday, My Fair Lady, Charade, Breakfast at Tiffany's, Sabrina and The Nun's story.
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2012-04-08, 23:00 | Link #949 |
Senior Member
Artist
Join Date: Mar 2010
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Hunger Games! It got a 85% on Rottentomatoes, a really harsh reviewing website. I'm one of those people who think alot of stuff is good... but this movie set the bar high! by 100 fold best movie I've seen all year.. Titanic 3D does not count, cos its a re-air not really new. I thought Hunger Games (books/movie) was going to be uninteresting, but I was sooo proven wrong by the movie. I might start picking up the books, with a new mind set.
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2012-04-08, 23:39 | Link #950 | |
Obey the Darkly Cute ...
Author
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: On the whole, I'd rather be in Kyoto ...
Age: 66
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2012-04-09, 16:04 | Link #951 |
Hail the power of Fujoshi
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: hahahahahahahahaha
Age: 35
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Haha, thanks! Though sometimes I feel a bit "outdated" because I am not terribly fond of modern movies. There is something about old movies that you could never find in current mainstream movies.
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2012-04-11, 17:13 | Link #953 |
Hail the power of Fujoshi
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: hahahahahahahahaha
Age: 35
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I watched Pillow Talk (1959) yesterday, starring Doris Day and Rock Hudson. I had watched them together in other films before, and I really do think they had excellent chemistry with one another. Their silly banter and subtle flirtations are highly entertaining.
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2012-04-11, 17:57 | Link #954 |
AS Oji-kun
Join Date: Nov 2006
Age: 74
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Little did we know at that time that Rock, an icon of manliness, actually preferred the company of other men. I gained new appreciation for his acting talents after learning that. He does a good job of convincing us that he has the hots for Doris in their films.
For witty banter, I recommend It Happened One Night, the 1934 Frank Capra film with Clark Gable and Claudette Colbert. In today's world where full frontal nudity isn't that unusual, it may be difficult to understand how shocking it was to audiences of the time when Claudette hitched up her skirt while trying to hitch a ride. You can see this famous sequence by clicking on the "Trailer" button on the IMDB page linked above. The Cary Grant/Katherine Hepburn collaborations in The Philadelphia Story and Bringing Up Baby should also be on your list. as should nearly anything directed by Billy Wilder, in particular Some Like it Hot.
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2012-04-11, 18:03 | Link #955 | |
Hail the power of Fujoshi
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: hahahahahahahahaha
Age: 35
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I watched "It Happened One Night", and I agreed that the movie has tons of witty banter, and oh, who could ever forget the infamous hitchhiking scene. That leg! I already watched The Philadelphia Story, so maybe I will give Bringing up Baby a try. The Bachelor and The Bobby Soxer is also one of my favourite "witty" films. (Me a huge fan of Cary Grant)
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2012-04-11, 22:23 | Link #956 |
Megane girl fan
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Diagonally parked in a parallel universe.
Age: 55
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I have to say that Bringing Up Baby is one of my all time favorite comedies, Certainly in my top ten list. If you liked the witty banter and chemistry between Day and Hudson, I think you'll like Hepburn and Grant. I highly recommend it.
Endless "Befuddled paleontologist" Soul
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2012-04-11, 23:05 | Link #957 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2009
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Oh god, Bringing Up Baby, I haven't watched that since I was a child. I loved that little leopard too.
Anyway, just caught half of The Warrior with Irrfan Khan, and now I hope to catch the beginning sometime soon. Even with just the parts I saw, it felt like something special. |
2012-04-12, 10:30 | Link #958 | |
AS Oji-kun
Join Date: Nov 2006
Age: 74
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The opening episode of Dennou Coil has a sequence where the characters are trying to find a cat named "Hepburn," though I don't recall the reference being continued much further than that. Both of these series are well worth watching if you haven't seen them before. Then there was the other leopard ....
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2012-04-12, 10:34 | Link #959 | |
Hail the power of Fujoshi
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: hahahahahahahahaha
Age: 35
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My favourite Hepburn film to date is The African Queen. She and Bogart matched each other well.
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2012-04-12, 10:58 | Link #960 | |
AS Oji-kun
Join Date: Nov 2006
Age: 74
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Just last night I heard an interview on the BBC with Bogart's son, Stephen, whose mother was Lauren Bacall. Apparently some entrepreneurs purchased the Queen, refitted it, and are now offering tours in the Florida Keys. I believe the ship will be based, appropriately enough, in Key Largo. That's a decent film, but not my favorite of the Bogart/Bacall collaborations from those late-40's Warner Brothers days. That honor is reserved for To Have and Have Not. The 19-year-old Bacall just exudes sexuality throughout that film. It's not hard to see why the two of them ended up together, even though Bogey was twice her age. One of the two BBC commentators mentioned he had never seen The African Queen, and his partner was shocked!
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live-action, movie, movies |
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