Last Movie you Watched?

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  • Posts: 2,081
    Bronson (2008)
    A stylized, fictionalized biographical movie about a criminal, directed by Nicolas Winding Refn, starring Tom Hardy, who is very good. The movie isn't great, but it is sort of interesting.

    The Remains Of The Day (1993)
    A drama directed by James Ivory, the leads are the excellent Emma Thompson and Anthony Hopkins. A re-watch after about 2 decades. Still good.

    Retreat (2011)
    Cillian Murphy, Thandie Newton and Jamie Bell. A really bad movie.
  • chrisisallchrisisall Brosnan Defender Of The Realm
    Posts: 17,835
    Also countless filming delays from ..... making out with Brigitte Nielsen, who he was dating at the time.
    Understandable, as she was tremendously hot, and going for Hollywood gold.... I'd give Sly a BIG break on that one. He was being played by a player IMO.
  • Posts: 12,524
    The Remains of the Day (1993) is excellent. Quite possibly my favorite Anthony Hopkins film.
  • edited August 2016 Posts: 3,336
    OK CONNERY (1967)

    ABYSMAL, but still easier to get through then CR 67
  • ClarkDevlinClarkDevlin Martinis, Girls and Guns
    Posts: 15,423
    OK CONNERY (1967)

    ABYSMAL, but still easier to get through then CR 67
    Yep! At least the story was straightforward. I still don't know whatever the hell was going on in CR '67.
  • Posts: 12,524
    I think I'll give The Lady From Shanghai (1947) a try here in a bit.
  • Posts: 12,524
    Birdleson wrote: »
    FoxRox wrote: »
    I think I'll give The Lady From Shanghai (1947) a try here in a bit.

    Another Welles masterpiece. I think that you'll be pleased.

    Indeed I was. I must say, after Citizen Kane (1941), The Lady From Shanghai (1947) ranks as my personal second favorite Orson Welles film. Enjoyed it very much.
  • 0BradyM0Bondfanatic70BradyM0Bondfanatic7 Quantum Floral Arrangements: "We Have Petals Everywhere"
    Posts: 28,694
    @FoxRox, have you ever seen The Third Man? It's not Welles directed, but the style of Carol Reed's direction does feel very much akin to how Orson himself would have approached the project. He plays a fascinating character in that, in great noir style, and features in two of the most iconic moments in cinema. Well worth checking it out!
  • Posts: 12,524
    @FoxRox, have you ever seen The Third Man? It's not Welles directed, but the style of Carol Reed's direction does feel very much akin to how Orson himself would have approached the project. He plays a fascinating character in that, in great noir style, and features in two of the most iconic moments in cinema. Well worth checking it out!

    I have seen it. It was good, and I'd rate it third place. Touch of Evil fourth. That's all I've seen so far.
  • JohnHammond73JohnHammond73 Lancashire, UK
    Posts: 4,151
    Last two movies I watched, both action movies. First up was the 1990 action sci-fi flick Dark Angel (aka I Come In Peace). Yeah, I know that Lundgren isn't the greatest of actors (and it shows in a few scenes within this movie) but this follows the general 80's, early 90's action movie format. Fun enough for me.

    Last night I watched Action Jackson starring Carl Weathers. Now, I think this is better than the critics say. Yes, it's a generic action movie but it could have gone on to be a pretty successful franchise if Lorimar didn't sell out to Sony and Warner Bros. Once that happened it was forgotten about. Weathers is great as Jackson and it had a pretty good cast all told. Only thing that wasn't great about the movie was having the singer Vanity (RIP) as her performance was pretty poor.
  • MurdockMurdock The minus world
    Posts: 16,360
    Star Trek III: The Search For Spock (1984)
    My journey continues with my second favorite Star Trek film and I had a great time watching it, especially for the first time on Blu ray. I never noticed at first but this film uses lots of red and purple lighting that mirrors the lighting used for the original series. Even the Excelsior bridge looks similar to the classic 60's Enterprise bridge. This movie gets a bum rap for being inferior to Wrath of Khan but I think it's perfectly on par with it. Christopher Lloyd plays a great villain as charismatic as Ricardo Montalban's Khan. I really love this Trek film, it's a really good continuation to Wrath of Khan's story.

    Murdock's Star Trek ranking.
    Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan
    Star Trek III: The Search for Spock
    Star Trek: The Motion Picture
  • Posts: 6,432
    Murdock wrote: »
    Star Trek III: The Search For Spock (1984)
    My journey continues with my second favorite Star Trek film and I had a great time watching it, especially for the first time on Blu ray. I never noticed at first but this film uses lots of red and purple lighting that mirrors the lighting used for the original series. Even the Excelsior bridge looks similar to the classic 60's Enterprise bridge. This movie gets a bum rap for being inferior to Wrath of Khan but I think it's perfectly on par with it. Christopher Lloyd plays a great villain as charismatic as Ricardo Montalban's Khan. I really love this Trek film, it's a really good continuation to Wrath of Khan's story.

    Murdock's Star Trek ranking.
    Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan
    Star Trek III: The Search for Spock
    Star Trek: The Motion Picture

    Agreed not forgetting a fantastic score by James Horner, one of my favourites of the series.



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  • Lancaster007Lancaster007 Shrublands Health Clinic, England
    Posts: 1,874
    Murdock wrote: »
    Star Trek III: The Search For Spock (1984)
    My journey continues with my second favorite Star Trek film and I had a great time watching it, especially for the first time on Blu ray. I never noticed at first but this film uses lots of red and purple lighting that mirrors the lighting used for the original series. Even the Excelsior bridge looks similar to the classic 60's Enterprise bridge. This movie gets a bum rap for being inferior to Wrath of Khan but I think it's perfectly on par with it. Christopher Lloyd plays a great villain as charismatic as Ricardo Montalban's Khan. I really love this Trek film, it's a really good continuation to Wrath of Khan's story.

    Murdock's Star Trek ranking.
    Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan
    Star Trek III: The Search for Spock
    Star Trek: The Motion Picture

    Often thought it got a 'bum wrap' as they say. And compared to TFF, it's pure class.
  • MurdockMurdock The minus world
    Posts: 16,360
    @fire_and_ice, Oh yes, It's one of Horner's finest and one of my favorites of his. :)

    @Lancaster007, While I do think TSFS is a much better movie than TFF, I still enjoy that film as well. It is badly flawed yes, but there are great moments in it to appreciate as well.
  • Posts: 7,653
    Star Trek II, Star Trek III & Star Trek IV are essentially a trilogy, the Genesis Trilogy even if it is not considered as such by most fans. It is one story that ends in the Voyage home with the return of the Star Trek crew home and saving the earth and the new Enterprise.
  • MurdockMurdock The minus world
    Posts: 16,360
    Oh I agree completely. It's a great trilogy. II, III and IV are some of my absolute favorites.
  • Creasy47Creasy47 In Cuba with Natalya.Moderator
    Posts: 41,011
    All this love for 'Star Trek' will get me to watch them one day. Outside of the three recent reboot movies, I've seen nothing of the series.
  • MurdockMurdock The minus world
    Posts: 16,360
    Birdleson wrote: »
    I'm right with your rankings so far. It's on the next one that I tend to disagree with everyone else.

    It's been a good few years since I last saw it so I'm excited to see how it goes in my next viewings. I enjoy Star Trek IV, but I don't think it's the best Star Trek movie.
  • MurdockMurdock The minus world
    Posts: 16,360
    Birdleson wrote: »
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    All this love for 'Star Trek' will get me to watch them one day. Outside of the three recent reboot movies, I've seen nothing of the series.

    All you need is to watch the three seasons of the one true STAR TREK, the films based on that series and FIRST CONTACT (the second NEXT GENERATION film). That will leave you clean and healthy.

    100% this.
  • ThunderfingerThunderfinger Das Boot Hill
    Posts: 45,489
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    All this love for 'Star Trek' will get me to watch them one day. Outside of the three recent reboot movies, I've seen nothing of the series.

    Prepare to be underwhelmed. If you believe the hype, Wrath of Khan is some sort of masterpiece. It is far from.
  • ShardlakeShardlake Leeds, West Yorkshire, England
    edited August 2016 Posts: 4,043
    Birdleson wrote: »
    Tuulia wrote: »
    The Remains Of The Day (1993)
    A drama directed by James Ivory, the leads are the excellent Emma Thompson and Anthony Hopkins. A re-watch after about 2 decades. Still good.

    One of my personal favorites. Very few movies made past 1980 seem to stick with and/or resonate with me, and even fewer impress me in terms of elevating, or even taking advantage of, the art form; this one does all of those things. It's probably been more than 20 years since I last watched Merchant/Ivory's THE REMAINS OF THE DAY, but I remember that with every viewing the tragedy and the parallels within became more clear and more meaningful. You've reminded me that it's long past due for at least one rematch.

    Thompson is utterly superb but I think this film contains Hopkins finest ever performance. The way the relationship is portrayed is so human and mundane. That last moment as they say goodbye at night as she goes away on the bus is heartbreaking.

    The supporting cast James Fox, Peter Vaughn and the late Christopher Reeve are excellent and Richard Robbins score complements it all so brilliantly.

    Utterly love this film, why watch how many series of the overrated Downton Abbey when this film says all it needs to about those times and with intelligence and no dumbing down for the masses to appreciate.

    I like Hopkins when he plays subtle this and his performance in Elephant Man are my favourites.

    Reminds me of another lovely little British gem 84 Charing Cross Road, another great performance from Sir Anthony and Anne Bancroft featuring Judie Dench.

    The recent Blu ray release of ROTD definitely improves on the DVD release.
  • MurdockMurdock The minus world
    edited August 2016 Posts: 16,360
    Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986)
    Still one of my favorites. I had my best viewing with it yet. I really love fish out of water time travel stories and the humor of the film is still good. I laughed at all the jokes and had a wonderful time. My only wish is they used the original series theme for the opening credits that was originally composed for the film. But all in all, solid film.


    Murdock's Star Trek ranking.
    Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan
    Star Trek III: The Search for Spock
    Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home
    Star Trek: The Motion Picture
  • Posts: 12,524
    Going ahead with my second watch of the classic On the Waterfront (1954).
  • Posts: 12,524
    Birdleson wrote: »
    Another one of the greats.

    Amazing. Liked it the first time, loved it the second.
  • Posts: 11,119
    Well, I have seen "Star Trek Beyond".

    I had my reservations about the film. It is IMO the best of the three Kelvin Timeline films. But it still isn't a groundbreaking Star Trek film. Anyway, here's my review in bullet point style, with pro's and con's:

    THE GOOD:

    ███-->
    It is indeed the best of the Kelvin timeline trilogy. So it saddens me a bit that until now "Beyond" is on course to become the least succesful Kelvin-film.

    ███-->
    It's a real teamplayer movie, in which every character gets a worthy role. The writers did a good thing by dropping the crew in duo's on the planet Altamid. By doing so there are more heftier, deeper conversations taking place between all of them. For instance, Kirk and Bones drinking some powerful brandy together works, talking about Kirk's father George. Furthermore, you can see some 'George Kirk' in James Tiberius once he makes sure he's the very last person to abandon the ship...or what's left of it.

    ███-->
    The theme of the film, basically Hillary Clinton's 'Stronger Together', is being used in here. Unity and cooperation eventually achieve more good, as opposed to Krall's vision of dividing crews and destroying unions.

    ███-->
    It was refreshing to see the Enterprise crew for the most part on a true alien planet. Altamid looked different from many of the alien planets and moons the previous 12 films focused on. Altamid has exotic forests, yet also dangerous rocky environments.

    ███-->
    Sofia Boutella as Jaylah was a real nice addition to the film. She was really spicy and shook up things a bit once the crew members came together with her help. In a way she reminded me of Lily from "Star Trek: First Contact".

    ███-->
    I am a big fan of actress Shohreh Aghdashloo. She currently plays a lovely Clinton-esque power-politician in "The Expanse" (worthwhile watching it). In here she plays Commodore Paris, the commander of Federation Station Yorktown, with her own lovely charisma and smokey vocals.

    ███-->
    The film had some nice, positive references to Prime Spock and his own senior crew he was part of.

    ███-->
    Nice to finally see Sulu being revealed as a gay husband with a kid (Demora Sulu??). It actually gave me a warm feeling, seeing two men with kids. It's what I dream off, and will probably never get or achieve. But, I found it a missed opportunity to do a bit more with gay characters, story-wise.

    ███-->
    From the viewpoint of technical continuity "Beyond" is a big party. The USS Franklin to me always looked like a slightly cleaner, leaner version of Captain Archer's NX-Class USS Enterprise. And now we understand why. The USS Franklin NX-326 (2161) was commissioned 10 years after the launch of the USS Enterprise NX-01 (2151).

    ███-->
    There are many little references to "Star Trek: Enterprise", of which season 3 and especially season 4 were really good. The uniforms of Captain Balthazar Edison's crew really looked like a streamlined combination of Captain Archer's crew and the Kelvin timeline Captain Kirk. Captain Edison also shortly mentioned The Xindi. Make no mistake, "Star Trek: Enterprise" now serves as a bridge between the Kelvin Timeline and the Prime Timeline. "Enterprise" in a way is part of both timelines.

    ███-->
    A comparison between the USS (M.A.C.O.-ship) Franklin and the first USS Enterprise:
    FRANKLIN_V_ENT.jpg

    ███-->
    And there are some nice comparisons already with the saucer section of the USS Franklin and the upcoming USS Discovery from the new series "Star Trek: Discovery". You see this fishbone-like array? It could very well be the predecessor of 24th century phaser arrays. But both the USS Franklin and the USS Discovery -both Prime Timeline ships- have it:
    vlcsnap-2016-07-22-20h20m31s27.png
    3104269-star-trek-uss-discovery-ship.jpg


    THE BAD:

    ███-->
    "Star Trek Beyond" still is what it is: A fairly OK Trek-blockbuster, but by no means a groundbreaking "Star Trek"-adventure. It touches a lot of moral and ethical dilemma's, but it only stays with 'touching'. It doesn't go into detail with such dilemma's. I find that a missed opportunity. And I do think the Trek-franchise needs a more groundbreaking Sci-Fi epic. Similar to what 'Skyfall' and 'Casino Royale' did to the Bond franchise.

    ███-->
    A lot of events that occured in "Beyond" deserved to be on the forefront if you ask me. There was the mention of 'New Vulcan'. You see some other Vulcans wandering on that wonderful space station Yorktown. But as we are facing our own immigrant crisis in Europe, then why did no writer stand up and asked themselves: "We need to tailor a story around those Vulcans who are now desparate immigrants themselves". Why couldn't there be at least a bit more conversation about this? It could have fitted perfectly in the theme of 'Stronger Together'.

    ███-->
    Same goes with the very essence of the United Federation of Planets. Commodore Paris had a small role, but why couldn't her role be made bigger? In which she more fiercefully supported the need of a United Federation of Planets?

    ███-->
    The more grotesque bits of humours to me felt a bit flat. The opening sequence, a diplomatic mission, was funny. But when can we see Captain Kirk more competent during diplomatic missions? God, I do miss Captain Picard.

    ███-->
    Krall/Captain Edison to me felt like the biggest flaw of the film. Perhaps the Kelvin films needed a less dominant villain this time. But at least Krall's reasoning to me was vague. He was just 'there' to make revenge. I would have loved to see a dinner table sequence in which Kirk and Krall had a fierce intellectual discussion about the need of the Federation. This is why Silva in 'Skyfall' is a good villain, and Krall a badly written villain.

    ███-->
    The story to me was too simple. Yes, I loved the buddy-esque storyline, but it lacked mystery and intrige. If only Christopher Nolan was there to write a more complex story for a future Trek-film. And, he actually made his own 'Trek-film' already: "Interstellar".

    ███-->
    The action of the film, especially those swarm ships, to me didn't really do it. It all looks great visually, but I'm actually a bit tired of too much destruction.

    ███-->
    And that brings me to the destruction of the USS Enterprise. It has been done before, in "Star Trek: Generations" and "Star Trek: The Search For Spock", and even in the episode "Timeless" from "Star Trek: Voyager".


    Still, "Star Trek Beyond" left a bigger smile on my face than the previous two Kelvin-films. Yet, I do hope "Star Trek: Discovery" becomes more groundbreaking as a TV Series when it comes to moral and ethical dilemma's and real exploration.


    So, here's my new ranking of the Star Trek movie franchise:
    01. "Star Trek IX: Insurrection" (1998)
    02. "Star Trek VIII: First Contact" (1996)
    03. "Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country" (1991)
    04. "Star Trek VII: Generations" (1994)
    05. "Star Trek I: The Motion Picture" (1979)
    06. "Star Trek XIII: Beyond" (2016)
    07. "Star Trek III: The Search For Spock" (1984)
    08. "Star Trek II: The Wrath Of Khan" (1982)
    09. "Star Trek XII: Into Darkness" (2013)
    10. "Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home" (1986)
    11. "Star Trek XI" (2009)
    12. "Star Trek X: Nemesis" (2002)
    13. "Star Trek V: The Final Frontier" (1989)


    And here are my overall ratings from the entire Kelvin-trilogy:
    7.0/10: "Star Trek XIII: Beyond" (2016)
    6.5/10: "Star Trek XII: Into Darkness" (2013)
    5.0/10: "Star Trek XI" (2009)
  • Posts: 3,334
    Tarantino has a fine taste in music, and "Little Green Bag" couldn't be helped but loved. It's not the main theme song for the film for no reason, now is it? ;) My personal favourite two from the film (not counting "Little Green Bag") are "Hooked On A Feeling" and "Stuck In The Middle With You". Those two just draw the atmosphere for me whenever I listen to them. That cynical dark comedy environment of the Tarantino films spirit springs to my mind for a rather good story to pen.
    He does, but let's give credit where credit is due, a lot of Tarantino's musical choices comes down to Mary Ramos who is a fixer as much as she's a music supervisor. Not all the music in his movies is selected by himself. Read up on Mary Ramos if you don't believe me.
  • ClarkDevlinClarkDevlin Martinis, Girls and Guns
    Posts: 15,423
    bondsum wrote: »
    Tarantino has a fine taste in music, and "Little Green Bag" couldn't be helped but loved. It's not the main theme song for the film for no reason, now is it? ;) My personal favourite two from the film (not counting "Little Green Bag") are "Hooked On A Feeling" and "Stuck In The Middle With You". Those two just draw the atmosphere for me whenever I listen to them. That cynical dark comedy environment of the Tarantino films spirit springs to my mind for a rather good story to pen.
    He does, but let's give credit where credit is due, a lot of Tarantino's musical choices comes down to Mary Ramos who is a fixer as much as she's a music supervisor. Not all the music in his movies is selected by himself. Read up on Mary Ramos if you don't believe me.
    I do. Why wouldn't I? Obviously he'd have underlings to help him around.
  • Posts: 3,336
    FoxRox wrote: »
    Going ahead with my second watch of the classic On the Waterfront (1954).

    Truly great film.
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    Posts: 24,264
    FoxRox wrote: »
    Going ahead with my second watch of the classic On the Waterfront (1954).

    Truly great film.

    My favourite Brando pre-Godfather.
  • Posts: 3,334
    No offence, @ClarkDevlin, but you didn't mention or acknowledge his musical supervisor at all, which was the reason why I brought it up. Most people here believe Tarantino chooses all the music himself for his movies. I'm just pointing out a colleague, not so much an underling, who has contributed greatly to his soundtracks and song choices, that's all.
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