Jump to content

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


Mr. Breathmask

Recommended Posts

It's the wine and the tomatoes.

And given Desplat's output in 2012, he's on a roll already, with RUST & BONE, MOONRISE KINGDOM, CLOCLO (and a dozen more i forgot) being very varied and, dare i say, unconventional. If there's more like this to come this year, perhaps the one or other Hollywood stand-by (looking at you, JNH) should recharge his batteries in good old Europe for a few months.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

my problem with Snow White is it's poorly edited.

Perhaps you should've been the editor?

If I had of been the film would have been shorter. Joe enjoying Alex being a bitchy but failing to make his point,

Interview with a Vampire.

My appreciation for this film as grown tremendously.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

now watching Collateral, first time ever. Not bad but typically weird Michael Mann film.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Jw has common trademarks and orchestrations among most of his scores, but the actual music never sounds the same

Desplat sounds the same period. Meaning after listening to a bunch of his score the cues are interchangeable from one score to another

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'd say thats a valid point actually. Williams knows how to vary and manipulate his trademark sounds well enough to come as something unique. Look at War Horse. It obviously takes after a lot in Williams' career, but the sounds are manipulated so well that the score itself sounds refreshing and new.

I'd say Desplat struggles more with manipulating his sound to create greater diversity in his career.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That happens to me Goldsmith and others as well. It sounds a bit like the guy, which is good if you like it, but at the same time the best ones have a specific flair to it, so in the end you're not bored by listening that style you liked over and over again,

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Goldsmith's music is terrific but you can tell the progression from Alien to Star Trek the Motion Picture, and then Poltergeist to Gremlins.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Jw has common trademarks and orchestrations among most of his scores, but the actual music never sounds the same

Desplat sounds the same period. Meaning after listening to a bunch of his score the cues are interchangeable from one score to another

That's just false. My post was a jab. Anyone with a style sounds the same to those who don't really listen.

Men In Black III

Not good. Worse than the second film, which is saying something. At least that had a strong villain and Rip Torn. The writing here is just so poor and formulaic. Poor use of CGI and green screen. Josh Brolin does a great job impersonating a young Tommy Lee Jones, but that's all I can really give the film in terms of praise. It had a couple chuckles, mainly a throwaway shot of MIB headquarters that shows Lady GaGa as an "alien to watch" or something. Elfman's score brings nothing new to the table. He revamps the theme with heavy use of electric guitar, and recycles old themes during times of "emotion." Sonnenfeld throws himself in there again in the exact same cameo shot as before. It gets worse the more I think about it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Desplat sounds the same period. Meaning after listening to a bunch of his score the cues are interchangeable from one score to another

If you were referring to just Desplat's comedy and drama scores -- you'd have a point there. When he's doing something out the box -- like Fantastic Mr. Fox or his work for Jacques Audillard films, they all have a distinct flavor to them. Over-generalizing Desplat for his woodwind work or his trademark waltzes is like generalizing Williams' signature horn trills and fanfares.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Goldsmith's music is terrific but you can tell the progression from Alien to Star Trek the Motion Picture, and then Poltergeist to Gremlins.

The progression? The strangled cat sounds from GREMLINS, the mighty horn call from FINAL CONFLICT, the quixotic rebel march of UNDER FIRE, the impressionism from SECRET OF NIMH? The man was clearly distinguishable by his meldoic and rhythmic sensibility, but to single JG out (on a Williams board, no less) for a lack of audacity takes the monday cake.

PS: COLLATERAL has not a great script, but the photography is awesome.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I really enjoy Collateral; quite a good film, maybe great. It's one of my favorite Cruise performances, and Ruffalo is good in his small role. The cinematography is indeed awesome. The digital works here, unlike with Public Enemies.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Poltergeist. It's such a enjoyable film, love to play it loud. The score is so great, it's a wonder it didn't win best Original score, LOL of course it was beaten by an even greater score.

do you think the Freelings have upgraded to an LED LCD screen yet? No way in hell they'd go plasma!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I was expecting great things from that film (after all the great things I've heard about it), it turned to be quite the disappointment.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Some of you might remember my shameful confession that I have never seen the Alien films. Well since I'm watching Prometheus this Friday, I took it upon myself to watch both Scott's and Cameron's film over the weekend.

Allow me to say, I thoroughly enjoyed them. They really surprised me and I see why they are so well-loved in the film-lover community. Picking a favourite amongst the two is a bit of a hard one. I mean James Cameron's Aliens is a gripping and exhilirating action flick, with its latter half being such a heart-racing experience, its hard not to be at the edge of your seat. My only problem with it are some bits here and there in the first half. Some attempts at comedy which I did not find amusing and some of the Marines were flat characters. But I enjoyed the character dimensions explored by Ripley.

In the end though, I'd probably pick Ridley Scott's film as my favourite of the two (by a small margin). Man, that film sticks with you doesn't it, because its still quite vivid in my head. There's such an aura of mystique and wonder around its minimalism that keeps you mesmerized in Alien and its kind of sad to see that entire atmosphere gone in the sequel (although I know Cameron was going for something different). A really enjoyable entertainer and I can see why people consider it to be a classic; I'm glad I finally dragged my lazy butt off to play these DVDs I've owned for quite a while.Now I need to play Blade Runner and hope its just as good.

Really enjoyed both films, have no clue why I didn't bother playing them before. Better late than never eh?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Be sure to follow the continuing adventures of our jolly marines when they go to Pandora and watch how Ripley turns into a Na'vi!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Haha. Pretty much. I couldn't help but think of Avatar (a film I'm not particularly fond of) the whole time during the journey to the planet....

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Indeed. After having really enjoyed Alien for the first time, I don't really want to be disappointed with Prometheus, which I've been eagerly looking forward to.

Seems like everyone here hates it here...but I keep hearing how this film is a real visual treat apparently

Be sure to follow the continuing adventures of our jolly marines when they go to Pandora and watch how Ripley turns into a Na'vi!

avatar_and_aliens_640_high_02.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It may be bloated and smaltzy (like Titanic), but nigh on everything about Avatar is executed with far more succes and CONVICTION than anything in Prometheus. One may not like Cameron's epic, but the sense that his heart was in it is utterly undeniable and objectively - it shows on screen in big broad strokes and a hugely evident self-assurance from the director.

For the sake of discussion, I simply cannot say the same about Ridley Scott and Prometheus. And the photography thing again; I'm sorry but I personally wasn't engaged like I was by his other films in that regard. It's an attractive film, of course it is, but I simply found the imagery to be befeft of poetry.

Lee - who doesn't really understand the comparisons with Avatar; which is a family action adventure and on a vastly different tonal plain.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Fair enough, perhaps you're right I can't remember those moments right now, but I'm not about to begin comparing sequences like for like. That'd be just really silly and pointless.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On your empty world I do not doubt it!

Anyway, the descent onto the planet absolutely pales in comparison to the legendary eerie descent of the crew in Aliens.

Now THAT'S how to light and shoot a miniature set ;)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It may be bloated and smaltzy (like Titanic), but nigh on everything about Avatar is executed with far more succes and CONVICTION than anything in Prometheus.

I doubt it since to me Avatar is synonymous with "Heck, I'm not even going to try anymore, I only care about 3D".

Link to comment
Share on other sites

But how do you really know? Is this the same as how you "know" all about iPads? Or the same as you "know" how good A Serious Man is? Yes, we've been here before. You're theorising blind again. Sorry Alex, but your speculation is worthless to me. Come back after you have actually seen the movie and we'll talk. Maybe you can even sing its praises till your heart's content, right? ;)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

BloodBoal, is there anything you actually LIKE besides Game of Thrones, the original LOTR movies, the BBC Robin Hood series and its score, and Zelda video game music?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Guidelines.