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What did you watch this week ombres? (11/19-11/25)


Pretty good week for moi!

Here it is:

Samsara (2011 Blu-ray): “Filmed over nearly five years in twenty-five countries on five continents, and shot on seventy-millimetre film, Samsara transports us to the varied worlds of sacred grounds, disaster zones, industrial complexes, and natural wonders.” I never saw Koyaanisqatsi nor Baraka but when I had the chance to get this movie I jumped on it. I found many scenes hard to watch and many scenes were wonderful. All the stare-offs were making me uncomfortable and I often asked myself “WTF is this I’m seeing?” I was not always fond of the music but it works to hypnotize and put you in a trance-like state. It was a unique and memorable experience. 7-7.5/10

Split (2016 Blu-ray): “Three girls are kidnapped by a man with a diagnosed 23 distinct personalities. They must try to escape before the apparent emergence of a frightful new 24th.” It was a good thriller with a great final act. I loved the last 30 minutes, although I didn’t get the last scene about Mr Glass (Bruce W.) If someone can explain it to me I would appreciate it. 7.5/10

Baby Driver (2017 DVD): I love most of Edgar Wright’s movies but I only liked this one. The only reason I can see why critics are praising this action flick is the fact that the movie lives hand-in-hand with its soundtrack. Even the gunshots are in tune with the songs. I barely knew any of the songs playing (and I listen to a lot of different types of music) and not many of them seemed really great. Then there is the acting; it’s very average. There are two Oscar winners in the movie and they both do a mediocre job. Did I enjoy it? Yes, it was fun. Does it deserve all the 9’s and 10’s? I don’t think so. My rating: 7/10

Whiplash (2014 DVD): Again, this was a good film but really not my type of music. Since the story is highly concentrated on the music aspect, there is very little plot development so if you don’t particularly enjoy Jazz, all you’re left with is an interesting relationship between the teacher and the student and an amazing grand finale. That, plus some good acting and solid directing made this a thumbs up. 7/10

Les trois frères (1995 Youtube): “Three half-brothers are reunited at their mother's funeral. After being told of their inheritance they quickly spend the money, only to find out that they will not receive it after all. The men grow closer while deciding how to proceed.’’ This film is clever, well-acted and funny. I came across it by accident and Im so glad I watched it. I recommend you look it up, it has good reviews. It simply holds all the ingredients to make a great French comedy. 7.5-8/10

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[deleted]

Thank you!

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Female Prisoner Scorpion parts 2-4: early '70's Japanese exploito' series that set the bar for stylized, psychedelic, arthouse Asian gore flicks.
The female protag sets out to avenge herself on the law, the criminal underground and the Japanese penal system after a wicked betrayel and becomes a feared escapee and killer.
I think Warhol AND Tarantino both would have loved these flicks!
And Scorpion was tooooo cool...shes now my phone screensaver lol

Crushed: low budget indy about an obsessed, mentally ill woman who wreaks havoc on a dumbass guys entire life after a one night stand.
Wonky sound and lighting aside the acting was fair enough and this virtually unknown cheapie goes way darker than more mainstream crazy lady stalk and slashers of the past!
Shockingly bold and very gory...not for everyone.

Wolf Mother: a depressed prostitute and low rent criminal team up for redemption to save a small child from a pedo/ sex slave ring...heavy stuff for a minor low budget flick but damn...decent acting and 'gutsy' both in the violent action and script...
A fun 'im bored' midnighter!

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"stylized, psychadelic, arthouse Asian gore flicks."

Thats sounds right down my alley!

Crushed sounds kinda cool too.

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Amazon Prime (tons of obscure flicks free-streaming AND mostly free shipping for about $80 a year...ive used it for years!)
Enjoy!
SORRY ETA: i find i need to look up certain movies online to check runtimes and the various versions of foreign ones becaues AP does slip in the occassional edited version.
Ex: some of their '70's Italian horrors are the chopped ones...

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I thought AP was only so save on shipping. Free-streaming huh?

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Yup!!
Theyve got all sorts of genre flicks plus tons of mainstream classics
Hundreds and hundreds!
A real goldmine for fans of weirdo stuff like me;)

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This week I watched:

Fist Fight (2017) 5/10
Justice League (2017) 6/10
Flawless (1999) 7/10
For Your Consideration (2006) 6/10
A Single Man (2009) 8/10
Chips (2017) 2/10
Coco (2017) 9/10

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None of yours this week.

Have you seen some of mine? If so, rate'em too.

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I've seen Whiplash and Split. I loved Whiplash and would rate it a high 9/10. Split was pretty good and I would rate it a 7/10.

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Yeah Whiplash has a lot of fans. HAd it been another genre of music I would've rate it higher Im sure.

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Hangman (2017) - a straight to cable piece of junk starring Al Pacino as an retired detective who comes out of retirement to catch a serial killer. Pacino is really showing his 77 years and it's time to retire. Gene Hackman retired rather than embarrass himself. 3/10

Realive (2016) - a young man dying from cancer has his body frozen and is revived 60 years later - he is not exactly happy with his new life and the world around him. This is not a bad little indy film. Good premise and some good acting. 7/10

Odds Against Tomorrow (1959) - a gem of a movie starring Robert Ryan, Harry Belafonte and Ed Begley. Three men plot to rob a bank - one is a racist and one is black - lets say there are trust issues. 7.5/10

Dragonwyck (1946) - a young woman is invited to live with her much richer cousin on his vast estate in 1840s New York. There is murder/romance/class issues. Good performances from Gene Tierney and Vincent Price. 7.5/10

Seconds (1966) - I saw this listed on The Most Depressing Movie thread and had to have a look. An unhappy middle aged banker agrees to a procedure to fake his own death and start a new life. A very 1984 feel to this movie with many recognizable faces such as Will Geer, Jeff Corey, Rock Hudson, Richard Anderson and Murray Hamilton. I like it very much. 7.5/10

Twelve Monkeys (1995) - saw it back in the day. I think the 8 rating in imdb is a bit high. Still its a fun movie 7/10

The Drop (2014) - another gem starring Tom Hardy as a seemingly dim witted bartender who works for his cousin played by James Gandolfini in his last movie role. A good story line involving the Chechen mafia, an abusive boyfriend and a dog. Very well done - Hardy was great and Gandolfini did not look well. 7.5/10

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The Drop looks interesting, I added it to my watchlist.

12 monkeys: I give it a 8/10 mostly because of the directing and acting.

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Agree, this is one of Tom Hardy's strongest performances and movies. I like him in more understated, naturalistic performances like this one (but that's also my preference when it comes to acting in general).

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[deleted]

cabin fever was fun

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cabin fever was fun

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Cabin Fever: 6.5
Ghosbuster 2 7/10
Being John MAlkovich: PLan on rewatching it soon

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Split I gave 7/10

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Arrival (2016 Hulu) I’m not the biggest fan of Amy Adams, but I enjoyed analyzing this movie long after I watched it.

Tremors (1990 DVD) One of my favorite B-Creature flicks.

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Tremors never gets old
Maybe THE perfect '80s creature feature!

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I enjoyed Whiplash because I'm a former rock drummer and also a lover of jazz, the blues and r&b; it was a natural fit for me. I was also able to become absorbed by the dysfunctional " boot camp " style of relationship between the two protagonists because I grew up in a military family.

Mine was : Cold Blooded https://moviechat.org/tt7531564/Cold-Blooded-The-Clutter-Family-Murders , a very insightful, riveting documentary about a story as infamous in our nation's history as the Manson murders. Not only did it validate the film In Cold Blood ( based on Truman Capote's genre creating masterpiece ) as being " chillingly accurate " ( its billing ), it provided so much new information from first-hand accounts and rare film footage. I highly recommend it for anyone interested in documentaries. 9/10

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Re: Whiplash: You're a musician? Cool. I always wondered how accurate it was, all those times that Fletcher faulted Andrew's tempo. I can see it working for the film regardless, to illustrate how exacting Fletcher was. Still, I always watch those scenes wondering, is he *definitely* rushing or dragging, or *probably* rushing or dragging? It all sounded good to me!

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