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What Is The Last Film You Watched? (Older Films)


Mr. Breathmask

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1 hour ago, The Train Station said:

Dunno how anyone can dislike the 76 version.

 

It's not that hard. It has some very high highs (most of the cast) but there are big parts that are terrible.

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7 minutes ago, Tallguy said:

 

That's fair. But Newton Howard's is pretty damn good too.

 

I don't mind the JNH one, it's got some great highlights. I even like the Max Steiner score, plus his second one. But the John Barry one just hits the sweet spot.

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18 minutes ago, filmmusic said:

Which reminds me, I really should watch soon the Christmas masterpiece that it's called: Batman Returns:)

That's a compelling statement.

 

I'm not sure why I think it's obvious that Die Hard is a Christmas movie (we just watched it the other night), I can certainly see where Batman Returns is a Christmas movie, but I totally balk at Gremlins being a Christmas movie. Weird, huh? Probably because I have very specific memories of Gremlins being a summer film. I mean, sure I have the same memories of Batman Returns being in the summer and I saw it many more times in the theater than I did Gremlins. (And summer in Phoenix is SUMMER.) And I remember seeing Die Hard (and unfortunately Die Hard 2 - ecccchhh!) in the summer as well! Arrrrgh! I make no sense!

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25 minutes ago, filmmusic said:

Why the expression?

I love Die Hard 2! Maybe more than the first one.

 

Because I HATE that movie.

 

I got to watch it once with not only a room full of fellow flight students but a couple of Air Traffic Control interns. The people who were just there for the party practically had PTSD from watching us totally savage the film. Good times. (No that's not a reference to John Amos.)

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I like Die Hard 2. It still has that 20th Century Fox action movie feel to it. The third one feels more like a Le Studio Canal or Carolco movie, which just feels off to me. It doesn't help that Fox didn't initially release it on DVD in Australia, instead it was through Village Roadshow, which irrationally annoyed me and I refused to count it as a Die Hard movie.

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I think Die Hard 2 is the only one of the franchise I haven't seen. The first one is obviously a classic, 3 is decent and 5 is one of the worst movies of the last decade.

 

The fourth is the one that means the most to me personally. Saw the trailer in theaters when we went to watch The Simpsons Movie back when I was 14. I thought the trailer was awesome so despite not having seen the previous three at that point I was so hyped for 4.0 (yep, that's how it's called here, a much better title than "Live Free or Die Hard").

 

Eventually watched it on DVD while eating chocolate cake in a Sunday evening :)

 

This was one of the coolest and most oft-seen images of Hollywood cinema in 2007:

 

Live free or die hard | THE 4TH WALL

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DIE HARD 2 has a lot going for it (Franco Nero; William Sadler; Bonnie Bedelia; decent visual effects by ILM) but it just seems to be a rehash of 1. Even McClane says "How can the same shit happen to the same guy twice?". It's Die Hard's "This never happened to the other fella". You almost expect him to wink at the camera as he says it.

It's all a bit knowing and meta.

The biggest gripe I have about 2 is the editing, especially since I know who the editor was. It doesn't have his usual sharpness about it. Shots stay on screen for a few frames too long. It's not his (it's not anyone's) best work.

As Paul Simon says, DIE HARD 2 is "alright in a sort of limited way, for an off night", but it really can't hold a candle to the immaculately constructed original.

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2007 was a cool year to be a nerdy teenage boy. The conclusion of the Spider-Maguire and Pirates of the Caribbean sagas, last Harry Potter book, 300 and Die Hard 4.0 kicking ass, The Simpsons Movie... and the first Transformers, which even as a kid I didn't care for (unpopular opinion: I prefer Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer).

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Just now, A24 said:

Die Hard? Again?! You guys have a more diverse taste in soundtracks than you have in movies. 

 

I mean what's next? White Christmas? It's a Wonderful Life?

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51 minutes ago, A24 said:

Die Hard? Again?! You guys have a more diverse taste in soundtracks than you have in movies. 

I prefer to see great movies that I have seen over and over again, than trying new movies that prove to be bad...

Anyway, this is Christmas period for me so I watch as many of my Christmas*  blu-rays/UHDs as I can.

 

*movies that are about Christmas or contain one or more Christmas scenes/settings.

 

On to watching Batman Returns now, and I will come back with my post about it.

(also, I was wondering: First Blood which I love too, has a couple of Christmas decorations here and there. Should I watch it in this period? Problems.. :P)

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8 minutes ago, John Dutton said:

unlike the Nolan Trilogy, the real masterpiece.

I like the 2nd movie due only to Ledger, but the other 2 movies (especially the 3rd).... (looking at imdb...71 in top 250 imdb films for the 3rd movie?? really!? It was one of the worst I have ever seen)

 

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The Penguin is a deformed monster who eats cats, spits bile and wants to kill children and sexually assault women, Catwoman is a 90 pound secretary who is pushed out of a high rise window by her boss and suddenly becomes an athletic dominatrix fighter who is capable of taking on Batman. Batman himself sadistically kills people without remorse. It's just a mean-spirited misanthropic weird Tim Burton movie that has nothing to do with Batman.

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I do love Batman Begins. Watched it when I was 12 and I was impressed with how cool it was. Dark and gritty and yet still somewhat kid-friendly (Nolan said he made the movie with 11 year old boys in mind).

 

TDK might be theoretically better but it's less "enjoyable" than Begins. It's kinda like the equivalent of Skyfall for the Batman franchise: the moment it stopped being fun action blockbusters and became something the artsy-fartsy "mature" crowds unironically enjoys.

 

Still, I suppose Christian Bale is the Batman of my generation, despite my hatred for TDKR (Nolan's worst film ever). And because of that Gen Zrs who overpopulate Twitter are screaming on social media how uncool Bale is compared to Pattinson.

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Pattinson is the first Batman that I just have no time for. Not the first Batman MOVIE I have no time for. But Kilmer and Clooney should have been in far better movies.

 

I think The Dark Knight is woefully overrated and The Dark Knight Rises is underrated. I like Begins a lot.

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54 minutes ago, Edmilson said:

I do love Batman Begins. Watched it when I was 12 and I was impressed with how cool it was. Dark and gritty and yet still somewhat kid-friendly (Nolan said he made the movie with 11 year old boys in mind).

 

TDK might be theoretically better but it's less "enjoyable" than Begins. It's kinda like the equivalent of Skyfall for the Batman franchise: the moment it stopped being fun action blockbusters and became something the artsy-fartsy "mature" crowds unironically enjoys.

 

Still, I suppose Christian Bale is the Batman of my generation, despite my hatred for TDKR (Nolan's worst film ever). And because of that Gen Zrs who overpopulate Twitter are screaming on social media how uncool Bale is compared to Pattinson.

To be fair, Bale does look like a dork at times.. ;)

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55 minutes ago, Edmilson said:

I do love Batman Begins. Watched it when I was 12 and I was impressed with how cool it was. Dark and gritty and yet still somewhat kid-friendly (Nolan said he made the movie with 11 year old boys in mind).

 

TDK might be theoretically better but it's less "enjoyable" than Begins. It's kinda like the equivalent of Skyfall for the Batman franchise: the moment it stopped being fun action blockbusters and became something the artsy-fartsy "mature" crowds unironically enjoys.

 

Still, I suppose Christian Bale is the Batman of my generation, despite my hatred for TDKR (Nolan's worst film ever). And because of that Gen Zrs who overpopulate Twitter are screaming on social media how uncool Bale is compared to Pattinson.

 

Actually, I think your generation worships Ben Affleck and Zack Snyder.

 

Bale is like the Millennial/Gen X-accessible version, but we've had several.

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I think TDKR is the only Bat-movie that can be considered truly bad. These days I'm more forgiving of the Schumacher films (at the very least they're hilarious and have astounding Goldenthal scores) and Batman v Superman (which has the best Bat-fight scene in a Bat-movie). 

 

But TDKR is just annoyingly bad. I can forgive a movie where it's bad but at least it put me in a good mood (like B&R) but I can't forgive a bad movie that disguises itself as a good and "serious" one despite the atrocious script.

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43 minutes ago, Edmilson said:

But TDKR is just annoyingly bad. I can forgive a movie where it's bad but at least it put me in a good mood (like B&R) but I can't forgive a bad movie that disguises itself as a good and "serious" one despite the atrocious script.

It's extremely painful..

 

 

 

 

 

...for you.

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OHMSS - annual festive season rewatch, a welcome chance to wallow in its magnificence yet again. Lazenby accepting the multi-picture deal that was apparently on the table rather than bailing is one of the great Bond 'what ifs'.

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27 minutes ago, Sweeping Strings said:

OHMSS - annual festive season rewatch, a welcome chance to wallow in its magnificence yet again. Lazenby accepting the multi-picture deal that was apparently on the table rather than bailing is one of the great Bond 'what ifs'.

 

So, DO you know how Christmas trees are grown?

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