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Post by Deleted on Feb 2, 2009 22:09:04 GMT
I'm talking about the cinema, that place with the big screen where you sit in the dark with other people you don't know. I saw two films on Saturday so I will list them both: Los Bastardos - a Mexican film about illegal immigrants in Los Angeles; very gritty. Espion(s) - a French film about a pilfering baggage handler in Paris forced to become a semi-spy in London because he is the only person who can recognize the Syrian terrorists who sneaked away with the diplomatic bag full of chemical explosives. Both of them were quite good actually.  ...... 
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Post by Deleted on Feb 2, 2009 23:22:02 GMT
The Curious Tale of BenjaminButton. A beautiful homage to NOLA,great music, decent acting, gorgeous location shots. Read the F. Scott Fitzgerald short story on which it is based but very loosely,very,very loosely. Same premise about the phenomenon of aging in reverse which Fitzgerald got the inspiration from a remark by Mark Twain and apparently Samuel Butler wrote something almost identical.
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Post by bixaorellana on Feb 3, 2009 4:44:49 GMT
I saw & loved Benj.Button but cannot comment on it here because I didn't see it on the big screen.
This is embarrassing, but I'm pretty sure the last movie movie I saw what the Jack Black King Kong, when that came out. Before that, it was Zapata (the Mexican version w/Alejandro Fernandez, not the Marlon Brando one).
This may only be amusing to me, but ........ Alejandro Fernandez is known for his uni-brow, which was plucked so he could play Zapata. I always wondered if they used that excess brow hair for Salma Hayek when she was Frida.
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Post by happytraveller on Feb 3, 2009 8:27:35 GMT
The last film I saw at the mowie was Australia. I still don't know if I liked it or not. I hardly ever go to the movie... the one I saw before Australia was about a year ago: Into the wild. A brilliant movie that I can really recommend.
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Post by spindrift on Feb 3, 2009 10:12:28 GMT
I recently saw Slumdog Millionaire. This could be viewed as a 'rags to riches' story or it might possibly nudge people into thinking about the extent of deprivation in India that most of us don't want to acknowledge. It is violent and fast-moving and a profound social statement.
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Post by gyro on Feb 4, 2009 9:20:02 GMT
Why does it automatically HAVE to be in the cinema ?
(aside from, obviously, your home city is 'THE capital movie city in the world '... )
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Post by Deleted on Feb 4, 2009 9:24:45 GMT
Because that is the subject I chose. If you want to watch Star Wars on your cell phone, that is fine with me, but you should talk about it on another thread.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 4, 2009 13:19:34 GMT
I saw l'Esquive at the cultural centre last night. It's by the same director who made The Secret of the Grain.
(Looked up the English title - "Games of Love and Chance")
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Post by auntieannie on Feb 4, 2009 22:45:48 GMT
Also Slumdog Millionaire and absolutely loved it!
And the cinema is about three minutes' walk away from here!
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Post by tillystar on Feb 5, 2009 10:32:54 GMT
Defiance was last cinema film, I really loved it. There were a couple of cheesey moments (daniel Craig on white horse giving a speech was cringeworthy) but the film was good enough for them to be forgiven.
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Post by grecian on Feb 5, 2009 17:26:36 GMT
Henry V (Branagh's version..)
It's a very long film and I was glad of the break two-thirds through...Good film, mind!
Before that? A double header of Caddyshack and Happy Gilmore....I was rolling in the aisle!
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Post by Deleted on Feb 5, 2009 18:31:28 GMT
Adam Sandler is not appreciated by many at his true value.
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Post by tigronette on Feb 6, 2009 9:57:30 GMT
Since the beginning of the year, I remember watching:
Sleep Dealers - science fiction meets social realism in the maquilladoras of the future where the internet means that 'remote workers' have microchips fitted to do the movements performed by robots on the actual building sites. It's quite well put together but I found it a little one dimensional (like many political films). I have a lot of friends who loved this film though so what do I know.
Import Export - Film about how youth in central Europe are hemmed in by mediocre lives and expectations. Siedel follows two modern day Bartelbies (I'm not sure that's a correct plural) as they meekly try to refuse what has been set out for them. Very depressing and very good in equal measures.
Slumdog Millionaire - I'm pleased I watched a download of this as I'd have been pissed of about paying good money to see it legally, nuff said
Wristcutters, a love story - whimsical film about suicide, this one sounds depressing but isn't (unlike Import Export). Quite good, a film for relaxing after a busy day at work - cute with some funny scenes in it.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 6, 2009 10:54:25 GMT
I also saw Import Export recently -- very gritty and depressing!
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Post by bixaorellana on Feb 6, 2009 18:57:42 GMT
Tigronette, thanks for mentioning Wristcutters and for your great description of it. In addition to the whimsy, I enjoyed the cinematography -- the lighting really sets the mood, and the fact that it's a film that in an odd way makes you think a little harder about life.
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Post by grecian on Feb 6, 2009 20:28:02 GMT
Just got back from No Country for Old Men...again!
I still don't know what the feck is going on!
Like the cattle-killer tool though....
I must get one on E-Bay for my Boss....(Not as a present)
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Post by Deleted on Feb 8, 2009 15:37:24 GMT
Today I went to see "Role Models" which was only released on 3 screens in Paris. That is known as a "technical release" and they don't care if not a single person sees it at the cinema during the coming week. Unless there is a "technical release," the DVD cannot be released as a "film" but only as "straight to video" which appeals much less to consumers.
I have a soft spot for that kind of movie, of which I would tend to call the genre "stupid jerks make good." Stupid jerks are the people who need the most help on this planet, whereas most movies are made about good people who probably would have succeeded in their endeavors anyway, albeit perhaps not as depicted in the film.
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Post by palesa on Feb 8, 2009 15:40:28 GMT
Geeky, I am glad that I am not the only one that did not know wtf was going on in "No Country for Old Men"
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Post by bixaorellana on Feb 8, 2009 17:06:29 GMT
Oh ~~ I saw Role Models. I have to admit I frequently crave fluff. Since I watch most movies online, it's free & easy to find. And really, Role Models was not pure fluff -- it had some good stuff in it about finding acceptance and how good intentions and empathy can sometimes win the day. A movie like this is likely to be seen by a huge number of people of different ages and can actually do some good ........ and does provide entertainment.
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Post by tigronette on Feb 9, 2009 14:38:36 GMT
Last week I saw Clubbed which has good looking men, great music and natty outfits but that's about it - even the fight scenes are crap which is a crime for a wanabee gangster/action flick
I'd like to see Los Bastardos though, is it worth it?
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Post by bashtard on Feb 10, 2009 9:24:37 GMT
In the last week I saw Defiance, Slumdog Millionaire and Revolutionary road.
Defiance was my favourite as I love Russian/Soviet history. Slumdog was good unless you saw "City of God" 6 years ago which was 100 times the film, just not with a silly gameshow storyline and English language.
Revolutionary road was zzzzzzzzzzzz up until the point where Kate kills herself and the hideous couple end.
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Post by repertoire on Feb 10, 2009 10:41:10 GMT
I have seen Vicky Cristina Barcelona lately, I found Salma Hayek Penelope CRUZ performing great, and the atmosphere where movie was shot, and the music was great also...But at a whole it was a so so movie. 
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Post by Deleted on Feb 10, 2009 11:40:00 GMT
Damn those cheap pirated Turkish movies! The authentic version starred Penelope Cruz and not Salma Hayek. 
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Aussielover
member
Offline
Yo ho! Yo ho! A pirate's life for me.
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Post by Aussielover on Feb 10, 2009 23:14:48 GMT
My take on No Country is that the battle of good vs evil can never be won. It just goes on and on, and good men grow old fighting against it, only to find there is no sanctuary (No Country) at the end of it all. It also means that if you aren't able to fight back, then there are some places you just don't want to be (ie: the lawless country).
I loved the film. It was deliciously evil.
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Post by bixaorellana on Feb 11, 2009 16:01:21 GMT
What I liked about No Country is that it's literary in its pace, in the way scenes are framed so that there's lots of space for the viewer to fill in with her own imagination, and in a certain dreamlike quality it has. You could also say it's literary in the sense that the meanings can be discussed endlessly. It's full of symbolism which can be ignored and the movie enjoyed purely on the basis of its excellent suspensefulness. And one person's take on the symbolism can be fascinating to another person, who may have gotten something completely different from it. For instance, what Aussie says is not what I took away from the movie, but I'm quite willing to accept her interpretation as completely valid as well.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 12, 2009 5:57:10 GMT
Many people seem to require a clear ending to a film and are dissatisfied if all of their questions are not answered at the conclusion. Although I do understand that point of view, I am sometimes happier with open-ended movies, for example where you might be 99% sure that the guy is going to die at the end, but you are left with a 1% hope for him.
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Post by starfire on Feb 12, 2009 18:40:40 GMT
I loved 'Slumdog', best film I've seen in ages. In recent days I've watched: 'Seven Pounds' (disappointingly slow) 'Hancock' (ridiculously surreal) 'Paschendaele' (like 'Titanic' but in the trenches instead of on a ship) 'Burn After Reading' (black comedy at its best) Oh....and this is my first post on here. Hi all 
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Post by Deleted on Feb 12, 2009 18:42:49 GMT
Hi, Starfire, I'm so glad you could join us! This is a very friendly place. So far.
*glances around with a worried look*
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Post by bixaorellana on Feb 13, 2009 1:29:04 GMT
*bares teeth*
Not at you, Starfire! Hi -- it's great to see you!
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Post by repertoire on Feb 13, 2009 8:50:40 GMT
Damn those cheap pirated Turkish movies! The authentic version starred Penelope Cruz and not Salma Hayek.  Big OOPS! I always mix them.
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