http://nbc.com.co/the-big-lebowski-2-an ... uary-2016/jfbop37 wrote:Nobody has mentioned Lebowski yet?
Damn, guess I'm alone.
Re: Favorite Movie
77I might be crazy, but my friend talked me into taking off work and doing the Star Wars marathon at Ronnie's.
I just hope I don't fall asleep by the time the new one starts...
I just hope I don't fall asleep by the time the new one starts...
Re: Favorite Movie
78Smuggle a couple dozen tacos in with you.Carcus wrote:I might be crazy, but my friend talked me into taking off work and doing the Star Wars marathon at Ronnie's.
I just hope I don't fall asleep by the time the new one starts...
Re: Favorite Movie
79Carcus wrote:I might be crazy, but my friend talked me into taking off work and doing the Star Wars marathon at Ronnie's.
I just hope I don't fall asleep by the time the new one starts...
I will be there too.
Re: Favorite Movie
80Just watched "Unbroken" GOD DAMN! This movie should have been titled: Jesus winced at the beating this guy took.
Re: Favorite Movie
81Both of my grandmothers suffered from the effects of Alzheimer's for several years before passing. So, when I ran across "Still Alice", I was drawn in. Eyes watered up a few times too.
Re: Favorite Movie
82His name is spelt: "Verhoeven". It means, roughly, "a great need" in Dutch language. He is, indeed a good director.CaptSMRT wrote:One of the best action movies of all time, Robocop. A classic skewering of the action model by Verhoven...ultra violent, funny, mean spirited, and awesome, the struggle of Man vs Machine in 90 mins. I will never forget the day when I got picked up from summer camp and my brother telling me...you have to go see Robocop. The story of a man tortured and torn from life by violence, then resurrected as our mechanism of salvation...Robocop does exist.
It's difficult for me to make a list of a top 1000 favourite films, just as it would be to choose a "top 1000 songs". Most of the films I like are from the 1920s through 1940s. But, I like a few hundred made after that.
A few memorable ones I can think of:
"The Producers"
"Things To Come"
"Mutiny On The Bounty" ('30s version)
"Most Dangerous Game" (30's version)
"Kind hearts and Coronets"
"Captain's Paradise"
"Dracula" (1931)
"The Mummy" (Karloff)
"The Idol"
"Blazing Saddles"
"The Lavender hill Mob"
"Lloyds of London"
"D'Israeli"
"How The west Was Won"
"Sergeant York"
"Captain Blood"
"Ivanhoe"
"Schindler's List"
"A Double Life"
"Random Harvest"
"The Informer"
I could go on forever (but I need to work to earn money).
Re: Favorite Movie
86That's awesome Robb. Always nice to see people who enjoy the golden age of Hollywood. So many classics came out of Hollywood in the 30s and 40s. I mean they cranked out quality films by the truckload. 1939 alone had 10 movies that would be worthy of the top 10 of an entire decade later on. One of my absolute favorites from that era is The Maltese Falcon. Casablanca is great too but Bogart's best performance was in the Falcon.Robb_K wrote:His name is spelt: "Verhoeven". It means, roughly, "a great need" in Dutch language. He is, indeed a good director.CaptSMRT wrote:One of the best action movies of all time, Robocop. A classic skewering of the action model by Verhoven...ultra violent, funny, mean spirited, and awesome, the struggle of Man vs Machine in 90 mins. I will never forget the day when I got picked up from summer camp and my brother telling me...you have to go see Robocop. The story of a man tortured and torn from life by violence, then resurrected as our mechanism of salvation...Robocop does exist.
It's difficult for me to make a list of a top 1000 favourite films, just as it would be to choose a "top 1000 songs". Most of the films I like are from the 1920s through 1940s. But, I like a few hundred made after that.
A few memorable ones I can think of:
"The Producers"
"Things To Come"
"Mutiny On The Bounty" ('30s version)
"Most Dangerous Game" (30's version)
"Kind hearts and Coronets"
"Captain's Paradise"
"Dracula" (1931)
"The Mummy" (Karloff)
"The Idol"
"Blazing Saddles"
"The Lavender hill Mob"
"Lloyds of London"
"D'Israeli"
"How The west Was Won"
"Sergeant York"
"Captain Blood"
"Ivanhoe"
"Schindler's List"
"A Double Life"
"Random Harvest"
"The Informer"
I could go on forever (but I need to work to earn money).
Alfred Hitchcock was unbelievably good from this era as well. Rebecca is my favorite film of his.
And then of course there was the King, Clark Gable. Still the best leading man in film history. I just love the golden age stuff.
Re: Favorite Movie
87I like Hitchcock a lot, but I always have to laugh at "Foreign Correspondent" (his first film made in USA), in which he had a German, with a super-heavy German accent playing a Dutch diplomat. Couldn't they find one Dutch expat in L.A. who could act??? I know a few who lived there at the time the movie was filmed. Also, couldn't they find a couple Dutch expat children?? That American blond-haired girl who attempted the Dutch lines in the scene, describing the man who went towards the windmill, clearly never spoke a word of Dutch in her life (including while she was choking on the Dutch script lines). Americans may not know what Dutch sounds like, but they certainly could tell when someone is trying to read a language he or she has never seen nor heard before. Very amateurish of Hitch, but he never really cared for getting details right (he and his McGuffins!).ratonmono wrote:That's awesome Robb. Always nice to see people who enjoy the golden age of Hollywood. So many classics came out of Hollywood in the 30s and 40s. I mean they cranked out quality films by the truckload. 1939 alone had 10 movies that would be worthy of the top 10 of an entire decade later on. One of my absolute favorites from that era is The Maltese Falcon. Casablanca is great too but Bogart's best performance was in the Falcon.Robb_K wrote:His name is spelt: "Verhoeven". It means, roughly, "a great need" in Dutch language. He is, indeed a good director.CaptSMRT wrote:One of the best action movies of all time, Robocop. A classic skewering of the action model by Verhoven...ultra violent, funny, mean spirited, and awesome, the struggle of Man vs Machine in 90 mins. I will never forget the day when I got picked up from summer camp and my brother telling me...you have to go see Robocop. The story of a man tortured and torn from life by violence, then resurrected as our mechanism of salvation...Robocop does exist.
It's difficult for me to make a list of a top 1000 favourite films, just as it would be to choose a "top 1000 songs". Most of the films I like are from the 1920s through 1940s. But, I like a few hundred made after that.
A few memorable ones I can think of:
"The Producers"
"Things To Come"
"Mutiny On The Bounty" ('30s version)
"Most Dangerous Game" (30's version)
"Kind hearts and Coronets"
"Captain's Paradise"
"Dracula" (1931)
"The Mummy" (Karloff)
"The Idol"
"Blazing Saddles"
"The Lavender hill Mob"
"Lloyds of London"
"D'Israeli"
"How The west Was Won"
"Sergeant York"
"Captain Blood"
"Ivanhoe"
"Schindler's List"
"A Double Life"
"Random Harvest"
"The Informer"
I could go on forever (but I need to work to earn money).
Alfred Hitchcock was unbelievably good from this era as well. Rebecca is my favorite film of his.
And then of course there was the King, Clark Gable. Still the best leading man in film history. I just love the golden age stuff.
Re: Favorite Movie
88I remember in Casablanca when Humphrey Bogart chopped that giant snake in half and then stole the serpents jewel...oh wait.
Re: Favorite Movie
89You're thinking of Bogie in Ernst Lubitsch's production of Conan the Barbarian.CaptSMRT wrote:I remember in Casablanca when Humphrey Bogart chopped that giant snake in half and then stole the serpents jewel...oh wait.
Re: Favorite Movie
90I saw a YouTube video of an interview that Ingrid Bergman did , several years ago. She said that it was amazing that Casablanca turned out to be the hit that it was, and still is, because it was written as they shot it. She said that none of the actors knew how it would end, because the end wasn't written yet. They were going to shoot two endings (one with her leaving with Laszlo, and one with her staying with Rick)and pick out the best one. They shot the first one, and decided that a second one wasn't necessary. The interviewer then asked which way she would have liked it to end, and she said that she would have preferred to stay with Bogie.
Re: Favorite Movie
91Watching 12 Years a Slave...people are so GOD damned evil, and twisted, and sad. Good movie though.
Re: Favorite Movie
94Entourage: The Movie...Zero Stars
This movie was weak as fuck, even the titty shots they threw in couldn't save it. Nothing interesting happens in the much anticipated film adaptation of the popular cable TV show about Marky Mark and his crew of parasites, they never should have given that guy money. Nothing fun happens in this snooze fest, the main plot about trying to get Vince more money to finish his first directorial debut makes no sense because everyone he knows is rich, the sub plots were tepid, too much of the story focuses on the least popular character (E), and all of the cameos were lame. Do not bother with this piece of crap even on a snow day.
This movie was weak as fuck, even the titty shots they threw in couldn't save it. Nothing interesting happens in the much anticipated film adaptation of the popular cable TV show about Marky Mark and his crew of parasites, they never should have given that guy money. Nothing fun happens in this snooze fest, the main plot about trying to get Vince more money to finish his first directorial debut makes no sense because everyone he knows is rich, the sub plots were tepid, too much of the story focuses on the least popular character (E), and all of the cameos were lame. Do not bother with this piece of crap even on a snow day.
Re: Favorite Movie
97Word War II Movies
(In no particular order)
Twelve O'Clock High - For me, it may be the best war movie ever.
The Longest Day
Tora Tora Tora
To Have & Have Not - I've always thought it was better than Casablanca.
Patton
The Battle of Britain
Bridge On the River Kwai
Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo
The Raid
The Enemy Below
Sands of Iwo Jima
The Great Escape
The Winds of War, & War and Remembrance Mini Series
(In no particular order)
Twelve O'Clock High - For me, it may be the best war movie ever.
The Longest Day
Tora Tora Tora
To Have & Have Not - I've always thought it was better than Casablanca.
Patton
The Battle of Britain
Bridge On the River Kwai
Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo
The Raid
The Enemy Below
Sands of Iwo Jima
The Great Escape
The Winds of War, & War and Remembrance Mini Series
Re: Favorite Movie
98Sell me one of these movies. I am not going to watch old people fret over their silly problems without a reason.
Re: Favorite Movie
99The Shining has been on IFC a bunch and I have watched it a couple of times lately. I am having trouble seeing why people hate this movie so much, the acting is great, the story is twisted, and it has Scatman "Autobot Jazz" Crothers.
Re: Favorite Movie
100The original or the "re-make" starring that dude from the sitcom "Wings"? Probably the former, since you referenced Crothers.CaptSMRT wrote:The Shining has been on IFC a bunch and I have watched it a couple of times lately. I am having trouble seeing why people hate this movie so much, the acting is great, the story is twisted, and it has Scatman "Autobot Jazz" Crothers.