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Meneldor
Doriath


Jul 17, 2:22am

Post #26 of 34 (2029 views)
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Superman [In reply to] Can't Post

(2025)
That was the most comic-book looking live action movie I've ever seen. If you like you Superman bright, hopeful, and virtuous, this is the best since Superman and Superman 2. As expected, Krypto the Superdog is a scene stealer, and Nate Fillion hasn't been this fun to watch since he played Captain Hammer in Doctor Horrible's Sing-a-long Blog.



They that go down to the sea in ships, that do business in great waters, these see the works of the Lord, and His wonders in the deep. -Psalm 107


dernwyn
Forum Admin / Moderator


Jul 17, 12:58pm

Post #27 of 34 (1326 views)
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Attack on London [In reply to] Can't Post

The new Netflix doc about the London subway bombings of 7/7/2005. We were curious to see if they'd show the crowd evacuating from Kings Cross station, so that we could try to pick out ourselves and our two younger kids.

We never noticed any panic, although the roads were filled with cars and busses that had just stopped in place. They had blocked all in-country cell calls, but we managed to call my father-in-law in Massachusetts, and he called our daughter in Edinburgh to let her know the trains weren't running but we were okay. We spent most of the day in a little cafe where the owner let us take over a far corner, sitting on our luggage; she apologized that she didn't have all her meals, she wouldn't be getting her deliveries today...

We finally made it back to our hotel for the night, via a back entrance: the front entrance was blocked off because of the bus blowing up in nearby Tavistock Square. The next morning we were able to get the train north, and followed the news from there.

It was interesting to see how the police were responding and watch the forensic work involved. The show filled in a lot of what we'd missed hearing about, that first day, and we hadn't remembered about the follow-up bombing attempts.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"I desired dragons with a profound desire"


Meneldor
Doriath


Jul 21, 1:51am

Post #28 of 34 (1245 views)
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The Eagle has Landed [In reply to] Can't Post

(1976)
Another WW2 suspense/drama/action film with an all-star cast, it's pretty good, but less likeable than Guns of Navarone. IMO, the story's biggest problem is that the protagonists are German soldiers and despite being humanized in the script, it's still hard to root for them. Michael Caine does a good German accent, but his face is so recognizable that I have a hard time seeing him as anything but British. Ditto for Donald Pleasance, who at least manages to get some Blofeld vibes going in his role as the Reichsfuhrer. Donald Sutherland is a convincing Irishman and thoroughly despicable to me. Jenny Agutter's character is such an idiotic fool that I couldn't muster any sympathy for her. Larry Hagman is very nearly a self-parody as a Texan colonel shortly before taking on the role of JR Ewing on Dallas. Pacing is pretty slow and heavy on dialog until the action finally starts, which is pretty good aside from the fact that nobody actually aims their guns. Firing from the hip is a waste of ammo, people, guns have sights for a reason. Use them.



They that go down to the sea in ships, that do business in great waters, these see the works of the Lord, and His wonders in the deep. -Psalm 107


Meneldor
Doriath


Jul 27, 4:04am

Post #29 of 34 (1155 views)
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Brazil [In reply to] Can't Post

(1985)
I can see why it's a cult classic, but it's too dark and dystopian for my taste. Still, I liked the dream sequences, especially when he had wings and was flying through the clouds. Raise your hand if that surprises you. Yeah, didn't think so.



They that go down to the sea in ships, that do business in great waters, these see the works of the Lord, and His wonders in the deep. -Psalm 107


Meneldor
Doriath


Jul 28, 1:53am

Post #30 of 34 (1083 views)
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A Bridge Too Far [In reply to] Can't Post

(1977)
IMO this is still the ultimate epic WW2 movie. Nothing else came close to matching its realism, accuracy, and depth until Saving Private Ryan. And the all-star cast is mind-boggling. Sean Connery, Michael Caine, Dirk Bogarde, James Caan, Elliot Gould, Ryan O'Neal, Edward Fox, Colin Farrell, Maximilian Schell, Denholm Elliot, Gene Hackman, Anthony Hopkins, Laurence Olivier, Liv Ullmann, Robert Redford, John Ratzenberger, directed by Richard Attenborough, screenplay by William Goldman based on a book by Cornelius Ryan. As for the story, it's true, with a minimum of Hollywood dramatizations. The Dutch civilians move me to tears every time. Also, John Addison's score is one of the all-time greats.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PP34btpjeok



They that go down to the sea in ships, that do business in great waters, these see the works of the Lord, and His wonders in the deep. -Psalm 107


CuriousG
Gondolin


Jul 28, 4:46pm

Post #31 of 34 (1006 views)
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I saw that when it was released [In reply to] Can't Post

and being a teenager, I was used to movies having a couple big stars you were supposed to focus on, and pay less attention to the rest, so having all those stars was overwhelming (but still a good thing). I remember so many things going wrong, such as airlifting supplies that land in the wrong place, and various technical problems in assembling things on the battlefield. It made war more real and gritty and less "shoot from the hip and you'll win but your best friend dies because that's how we make war real."


Meneldor
Doriath


Aug 1, 2:45am

Post #32 of 34 (980 views)
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Valkyrie [In reply to] Can't Post

(2008)
Overall, I thought it was a pretty good movie, although Tom Cruise failed to convince me he was a German officer. The other actors were much more convincing. I felt a good deal of suspense even knowing that the conspiracy was doomed to fail. Oh, uh, spoiler alert, I guess...? I don't know enough of the actual history to have any opinion on how accurately the story was told. But all the planes were good; they had the right types in the right times and places, and it looked like they used real planes for all the flying and airfield scenes.



They that go down to the sea in ships, that do business in great waters, these see the works of the Lord, and His wonders in the deep. -Psalm 107


Meneldor
Doriath


Aug 9, 4:27am

Post #33 of 34 (703 views)
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You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown [In reply to] Can't Post

It was at our local theater, and it was enjoyable. The plot was a bit thin, just a pastiche of classic comic strips brought to life with an uneven through line. Singing, dancing, and acting were pretty good.



They that go down to the sea in ships, that do business in great waters, these see the works of the Lord, and His wonders in the deep. -Psalm 107


Meneldor
Doriath


Tue, 3:29am

Post #34 of 34 (253 views)
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Fantastic 4: First Steps [In reply to] Can't Post

(2025)
Meh. There was too much melodrama for it to be fun, and it was too silly for me to take it seriously. Action scenes were very predictable. It looked good though, they obviously spent piles of money on the production.



They that go down to the sea in ships, that do business in great waters, these see the works of the Lord, and His wonders in the deep. -Psalm 107

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