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- a tiresome movie for sure. who cares about men and guns again and again the same fixation. depp is a great filmstar impersonating a gangster. Even the other way round this is still a tiresome...
- Take your time and enjoy this wonderful moment. We all wish you and your new wife a lifetime of love and happiness and we'll all be waiting here when you get back.
- Despair not. For I shall bar his every attempt and spare no effort in saving the man I love from the evil forces set upon our destruction and that $8.50 for a movie that I would rather see!
- Thank-YOU for keeping my comment up. The only way to get the word out about this project is via the net and on existing sites. Pietrobruno's GFE: GIRLFRIEND EXPERIENCE is being seriously...
- Thanks for the kinda spamy comment there.
11 months ago
11 months ago
11 months ago
Also saw Step Brothers this weekend, which I got a laugh out of despite poor reviews.
I'm glad you brought up this movie, because I would like to hear Jett (Maestro) & the Good Prof. Dr. review a pure comedy on this show at some point (not sure if they have before?), just to see what their sensibilities are when it comes to humor (or, for Prof. Dr.: "humour") and what they deem makes a good comedy (just laughs or must it have production value as well?).
11 months ago
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11 months ago
I just haven't heard you review one, so I'm not sure how you'd look at it from a critical standpoint.
& 'Mummymia'.....hilarious.
11 months ago
11 months ago
Your new post really struck a cord with me. Some films are indeed like comfort food or favourite music. Maybe this is how you tell a true lover of film, if films are a way that we chart our lives. I, like Jett mentioned the other day, have the ability to remember pretty much the exact circumstances in which I saw most films for the first time. As a result, if the circumstances were good then the memory of seeing that film is a positive one. The movies of the 80s, during my teenaged years, hold particular significance. 'Back to the Future' is on my list too. Another comfort film for me is 'Roxanne' since I clearly recall the stroll back home on a beautiful summer's evening, without a care in the world and in the company of my best friend.
Just last night I saw Tootsie for the first time in years. As soon as the credits began and the music started I was immediately transported back to my youth. The whole experience was very bitter sweet. I enjoyed the film all over again, but was sad to realise that a lot of time had passed since first seeing it and I have far more concerns and responsibilities now.
I never have films on in the background. I always want to give them my full attention. (How is it possible to work with all those screaming Goonies!?) Other films on my nostalgia/comfort list include 'Labyrinth', 'Broadcast News', 'Benny & Joon', 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off', 'Aliens' and 'The Blues Brothers'.
11 months ago
11 months ago
Just a few off the top of my head...'Risky Business', 'Empire Strikes Back' (shut up, Jett), 'Rocky', 'The Apartment', 'Goodfellas', 'Field of Dreams'.....
Not necessarily "these are my favorites" - just a few movies I can drop in and watch at any given time..
11 months ago
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11 months ago
Anyway - 2001 as comedy?! That's new to me. Actually for me 2001 is the total opposite. I first saw it aged 7 at the cinema and it really freaked me out! The Shining is less scary for me than 2001. All those wailing voices every time the monolith appears and that creepy final sequence in the hotel room as he watches himself become older. The film still spooks me big time today. My wife just found it over long when I showed it to her, so maybe it was the circumstances under which I first saw it that has left me with this reaction. How do the rest of you feel?
I was going to mention this after seeing the Kubrick doc that Jett kindly posted, that I find all of the Kubrick films I've seen (2001 onwards) strangely unnerving to a greater or lesser extent.
11 months ago
Me: This movie always gave me a bit of the creeps.
Wife: You mean when you were a kid? What about today?
Me: I think it's spookier to me now than it was when I was a kid.
Wife: Because of the witch?
Me: No, because of the scarecrow, lion, and tin man.
Wife: What? They're not scary!
Me: Have you ever taken a good look at them? They're hideous!
Wife: I prefer to look at their inner soul.....
11 months ago
Scariest. Movie. Ever.
11 months ago
11 months ago
Phil - I get the impression that Oz fears are fairly common, probably (like me with 2001) because it's often seen by kids at a very young and impressionable age. Mind you, lots of folks also think the sequel Return to Oz is creepy too!
Kiley - Nothing But Trouble, is that the one with Dan Ackroyd in a weird fat suit?
11 months ago
11 months ago
Weird movie, indeed.
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Our other adopted films include So I Married An Axe Murderer : 'Heed Move! Will you look at the size of that cranium? It's like a virtual planetoid!' 'She smelt of soup' ect, Life of Brian (too many quotes to mention), While You Were Sleeping: 'You're cheating on a vegetable.' Benny & Joon:" 'You're out of your tree' 'It's not my tree' " And additionally numerous bits of dialogue from Friends.
As mentioned before, it's got nothing to do with the quality of the films.
Gosh yes - definitely do a Groundhog Show Jett. I think as time goes on there seems to be more and more a case for you guys discussing topics like these on the show and talking about old stuff as well as new.
11 months ago
Groundhog day works and it always strikes me about how versatile bill murray is - i mean, he's not typical hollywood type. In fact, he's like...well, his face looks like a road map to midgard but there are times he can play some smarmy bastards that have a really strange magnetism LOL