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It's a very minor part - I'm not sure he has a second line - but I felt that the incongruity of "the Limp Bizkit guy appearing in an arthouse drama film" would make some smile. :p |
Fred Durst appearing anywhere is beyond the realms of acceptable behaviour quite frankly. He should be kept on display in a glass cage and be continually poked with pointy sticks.
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Most of Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring Extended.
I'll most likely be pausing at some point for sleep purposes. |
Young Guns 1 and 2
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Excellent film, beautifully made in its intimate confines, and fundamentally to me a story about fear - Sonny is scared; scared of his life and what it's becoming, scared of how he'll respond to the stresses of that life, scared of the hostage situation that he's out of his depth for, and ultimately so scared he dictates his last will and testament. Such a good piece of cinema. |
And the follow-up, watched with a friend over Discord this morning - man, no wonder so many tgirls are obsessed with Cronenberg (this is my first). Full of impactful imagery and influence (TV Glow has at least two notable scenes swiped from this), a deeply cutting film with its satires of violence and the mass media, and an incredibly prescient movie when focusing on the rise of virtual identities and a nostalgia for the hazy and analog nature of videocassettes. |
Watched Furiosa
then watched Fury Road Mad max thedn watched Road Warrior then watched Mad Max then thunderdom |
I watched the Netflix sci-fi called Life yesterday. I actually enjoyed it quite much.
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Me and You and Everyone We Know, wasn't expecting to like it as much as i did.
Back and forth forever. |
Deeply funny - the twenty seconds at the zoo with the monkeys is the hardest I've laughed at anything in a long time - and crushingly relatable. It's good to know that even though I may be a uni graduate scared of the future and filled with ennui and sexual neuroticism, I haven't gone as psychopathic as Ben did. |
not a very good movie, it's still a nice watch though somehow |
Alien 3
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Comfortably the bloodiest film I've seen in my life so far - lots of visceral horror with plenty of yonic symbolism. Had some interesting ideas about self-destruction and the nature of nostalgia, but ultimately I think some of the writing sunk it a little bit (there's a 2001 gag near the end of the film that's completely unearned). |
I rewatched Scarecrow
It got the Palme d'Or in 1973, and flopped almost everywhere It's brilliantly played (my favorite Pacino part) yet noone's showing off I wish I still had my copy of Midnight Cowboy, there's a distant connection between these two, in terms of kindness https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qWwZbb-tl_4 |
watched the SHINING for first time in decades. Beautiful to look at, but I prefer the stephen king novel.
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I've been working through the first 4 Supermans with Christopher Reeve in conjunction with a podcast.
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I've re-watched 'Threads' on Thursday on the BBC iPlayer because it was on the day before, so it was still available to view in good quality. The first time I've watched it was some years ago, I think I may have bought some VHS copy of it from some second hand shop after someone tipped me off to it. It's very bleak and still shows perfectly the chaos and destruction the capitalist system brings to human existence in colour. Everything leads up to misery. I can only compare it in terms of bleakness to watching a Channel 4 drama called 'No Child of Mine' I've seen some years ago, or a feature film like 'Lilya 4-ever'.
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Threads is a rough watch.
I've heard "The Day After" is pretty similar https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0085404/ |
My first Lynch. I think it's about Hollywood as a place of unreality, and the inevitable confusion and distress that follows from such. But fucked if I know. Great film, and not just because of the lesbianism. |
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Pretty much, yeah. The details or a specific set in stone meaning aren't really what Lynch movies are about. They're mostly about conveying themes and about how they make you feel in the moment. Beneath all the cryptic imagery and general Lynchisms lie some pretty universal and simple emotional beats, usually. One is best served interpreting his work on an emotional-sensory level rather than trying to pinpoint what each scene means exactly. At least that's been my experience. Glad you liked it. Blue Velvet and Lost Highway explore very similar themes. |
I've enjoyed this. I like it reminded me of a milder 'Buffalo 66' with a teen (?) delinquency love story to match. Recommended by friends. I am the least knowledgeable person about movies ever, so it made for nice Sunday evening viewing. David Yow is in it! |
+1 Buffalo 66
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I'm going to watch Threads at the weekend via iPlayer, been wanting to see it for a long time after hearing how bleak it is and how it still holds up despite it's age. I'm thinking it will be similar to Raymond Briggs' When the Wind Blows. Speaking of bleakness, I watched The Coffee Table. It handles taboo subjects but in an abnormal humorous way. Billed as horror but is possibly, without hyperbole, the darkest comedy I have ever seen. |
In the Mouth of Madness.
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Jumanji 1995
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The greatest movie I've ever seen? Possibly. |
I watched the 3rd Jumanji thinking i was rewatching the 2nd Jumanji (and not knowing that they ever made a 3rd), and then thinking what the hell, this all didn't happen the previous time I saw this movie a few years back.
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watched Hannibal, then RED DRAGON
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Watched it after having heard some glowing recommendations by fans of more eerie and psychological Horror. And that's exactly where it excels. The presentation is very quiet and the unease lingers. The ending is especially effective in its sad and haunting conclusion. I can't really call it a masterpiece though. Unfortunately, the narrative gets a bit muddled - plot points are introduced that don't add much to the overall movie. And its strong point - the mockumentary framing device - ultimately becomes a bit of a detriment as well. The way it is told seems somewhat lifelike, but the actions of its characters seem far-fetched. The documentary tone makes it harder to suspend your disbelief. Still, a pretty solid movie - especially for the small budget it was made with. |
I do enjoy a good low budget found footage horror. Lake Mungo is a bit of an exposition dump-fest delivered through interviews but is worth watching for that one scene alone.
Some I've seen lately: In a Violent Nature - What could probably be best described as ambient horror. Imagine Friday the 13th but instead of watching the teen characters smoke pot and shag you get to watch from Jason's POV, strolling through the woods. Quite the surreal experience and subversive. The Devil's Bath - Harsh historical reality. Stop Motion - This movie is English, so naturally is the best on the list. Oddity - This movie is Irish, so naturally is the worst on the list. Divinity - This movie is American, so naturally replaces Oddity as the worst movie on the list. The Houses October built (2011) - Found footage, mediocre. Chime - This was too vague, even by Kiyoshi Kurosawa's standards. Skinamarink - Ambient analogue horror. I had to watch this twice due to falling asleep and not knowing what was going on due to the no-fi audio quality. With subtitles enabled and possibly uppers, I highly recommend. So, bear witness these cinematic marvels, throw your Fellini and Godard in the bin. The Season of the Witch is upon us, let's be avin' yer horror recommendations. |
The City of Lost Chidren
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Watched the 'Human Centipede 2'. The first one I've watched a few years ago and liked it. I know Tom Six bangs on about the film being a series of pop films meant to offend God knows who. The first one is good and shows what you can do with ridiculous ideas and eating shit from someone's arse. The second one I thought was stunningly filmed. My partner, who's a horror freak, told me it's a reaction to how some people think watching a lot of these movies influence behaviours, which is not normally true. He has one called 'The Onania Club' about a bunch of women masturbating on people dying of cancer, world poverty and such things. Apparently nobody will put it out because of the contents. Johan Waters was one of the few people to watch it a few years ago, liked it, but advised it's best for most people not to watch it. Here's the trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Xon...nel=ASRAFMASUM
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The Onania Club: come and see, see and come :D Looks like a similar people wanking over inappropriate things vibe to Cronenberg's Crash.
I enjoyed the first 2 Human Centipede movies, not so much the 3rd. I heard somewhere Tom Six was going to make a 4th, but this could be Insomnia kicking in. A horror obsessed colleague of mine who used to love a good live autopsy told me about some of the banned scenes in Human Centipede 2, which are quite extreme. |
Psycho
then Psycho 2 |
Scream - in theaters
Scary Movie - at home Had to happen. |
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