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  • Fire_and_Ice_ReturnsFire_and_Ice_Returns I am trying to get away from this mountan!
    Posts: 25,409
    the-box.jpg
    The Box 2009 based on the short story Button, Button by the Richard Matheson (I am Legend), is my second Richard Kelly film of the day and a first time watch for me.

    The Box has one of the creepiest scores I have heard which makes this film incredibly atmospheric the score reminded me of Bernard Herrmann at times. As a fan of this particular genre I loved this film, great acting all round and the setting of 1976 is well realized with decor and how the film was shot. I will definitely watch this film again very soon.
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    Posts: 24,254
    the-box.jpg
    The Box 2009 based on the short story Button, Button by the Richard Matheson (I am Legend), is my second Richard Kelly film of the day and a first time watch for me.

    The Box has one of the creepiest scores I have heard which makes this film incredibly atmospheric the score reminded me of Bernard Herrmann at times. As a fan of this particular genre I loved this film, great acting all round and the setting of 1976 is well realized with decor and how the film was shot. I will definitely watch this film again very soon.

    I have seen this film multiple times already. I like The Box very much.
  • Fire_and_Ice_ReturnsFire_and_Ice_Returns I am trying to get away from this mountan!
    edited March 16 Posts: 25,409
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    the-box.jpg
    The Box 2009 based on the short story Button, Button by the Richard Matheson (I am Legend), is my second Richard Kelly film of the day and a first time watch for me.

    The Box has one of the creepiest scores I have heard which makes this film incredibly atmospheric the score reminded me of Bernard Herrmann at times. As a fan of this particular genre I loved this film, great acting all round and the setting of 1976 is well realized with decor and how the film was shot. I will definitely watch this film again very soon.

    I have seen this film multiple times already. I like The Box very much.

    I was aware of The Box on release though did not deep dive so knew very little about it. Looking at old reviews it appears many were expecting a horror movie, it illustrates how important marketing is.

    Edited: Just watched the original trailer I don't think it is misleading, I don't agree with the reviewers who were expecting something else.

    Interesting side note Richard Kelly's father worked for NASA and his mother has the disability that Diaz had in The Box,
  • Fire_and_Ice_ReturnsFire_and_Ice_Returns I am trying to get away from this mountan!
    edited March 16 Posts: 25,409
    img14.jpg
    Return of the Pink Panther top three in the series hilarious movie, I want a full restoration of this film, though the HD version does look good, Sellers and Lom are on fire.

    Inspector Clouseau as Guy Gadbois

    I have watched this scene hundreds of times and it still cracks me up, its genius.
  • edited March 19 Posts: 12,520
    @peter

    I finally watched Bad Lieutenant (1992), as recommended by you! Harvey Keitel delivered such a raw, epic performance, and I was very impressed by all the grittiness. It gave me a classic, 1970s film kind of vibe. Being a fan of baseball myself definitely didn't hurt the experience either, as it played a pivotal role in the story (even though without my team XP). I appreciate you telling me to check it out, as it was very much worth my time and I liked it a lot! Coincidentally, the film just got a release date for 4K Blu-Ray, should anyone be interested! Would be a great addition to any film lover's collection I'd think:

    https://www.blu-ray.com/news/?id=34207
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 9,511
    That’s awesome to hear @FoxRox !! Glad you enjoyed it!!! Yeah, Keitel was raw… almost difficult to watch him at times!
  • 23skidoo23skidoo Canada
    edited March 19 Posts: 6
    I few weeks back I picked up a cheap DVD at a thrift shop that had 2 of the more obscure Tarzan films of the 1930s (one featuring Buster Crabbe, another starring a guy named Glenn Morris) that were made during the Weissmuller era due to a similar sort of licensing oddity that allowed 1967's Casino Royale to be made. I watched the Morris one, Tarzan's Revenge and, well, there's not a lot of revenging going on. In fact all I remember is the same piece of stock music being played over and over and you could tell that it was made for kids and the script clearly had blank pages headed by the phrase "chimp does something funny" every couple of pages. I know Tarzan films are acquired tastes at the best of times and very much "of their era" but this one was so dull I can't even remember the plot. Just "chimp does something funny." LOL
  • edited March 19 Posts: 17,819
    Mathis1 wrote: »
    Did my annual viewing of Bullitt (1968) yesterday.

    I finally upgraded to the Blu-ray edition for the occasion. The picture quality could be better, like this review points out, but it's the best the film has looked so far. I would happily buy a release that corrects some of the issues with this transfer though.

    The film itself remains some of my personal favourites, and I look forward to watch it again soon.

    I agree, I upgraded to the bluray, and its not all that great! Still a cracking thriller! Love McQueen in this!

    It most certainly is! And obviously, McQueen is brilliant. So cool throughout.
    Feyador wrote: »
    Mathis1 wrote: »
    Did my annual viewing of Bullitt (1968) yesterday.

    I finally upgraded to the Blu-ray edition for the occasion. The picture quality could be better, like this review points out, but it's the best the film has looked so far. I would happily buy a release that corrects some of the issues with this transfer though.

    The film itself remains some of my personal favourites, and I look forward to watch it again soon.

    I agree, I upgraded to the bluray, and its not all that great! Still a cracking thriller! Love McQueen in this!
    Lots to love about it, especially the Lalo Schifrin music, the on-location shooting, McQueen's air of taciturn cool and the creepy conspiratorialism of Robert Vaughn.

    One of three films, including Dirty Harry & Zodiac, all (well, supposedly in the case of Bullitt & DH) based on the same real-life San Francisco cop, except that the Dave Toschi of Zodiac (one of my favourite contemporary films) couldn’t be any more different from the two other highly fictionalized (or maybe "inspirational") versions.

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dave_Toschi

    I really love the score too. I found a 2 CD release some years ago which includes both the 1968 soundtrack album version and the 2000 version of the soundtrack. Definitely prefer the 1968 one.

    That's an interesting fun fact, which I only became aware of just a few years back. In the case of Dirty Harry, the plot and "Scorpio" draws inspiration from the actual case of the Zodiac Killer.

    This reminds me that I really need to watch Zodiac again!
    CrabKey wrote: »
    Bullitt still holds up. Sure it has the look of the year it's made, but that's part of the charm. It looks rough and edgy. A remake would be too clean looking, too stylized, and filled with over-the-top CGI. Some films are better left alone. You don't out McQueen McQueen.

    Indeed, Bullitt is definitely best described as rough and edgy. The use of actual locations rather than studio sets only adds to the realistic feel of the film – as well as being a great time capsule of late 60's San Fransisco.

    I wouldn't be completely against a remake of the film, but I can't think of who would be able to equal McQueen in the role, let alone direct the movie!
    talos7 wrote: »
    Isn’t Spielberg remaking Bullitt?

    Edit. Missed this. I guess they could do a lot worse than Spielberg and Cooper. Still, I wonder how they can make something that's even close to the original. Will definitely watch it though.
  • Posts: 17,819
    LucknFate wrote: »
    Did my annual viewing of Bullitt (1968) yesterday.

    I finally upgraded to the Blu-ray edition for the occasion. The picture quality could be better, like this review points out, but it's the best the film has looked so far. I would happily buy a release that corrects some of the issues with this transfer though.

    The film itself remains some of my personal favourites, and I look forward to watch it again soon.

    I'm always shocked by the similarities it has to "HEAT" in the final act, the chase through the airport. I saw Heat first and was like "wait what" when I finally got to Bullitt.

    I must admit I've never actually seen Heat before. Shocking, I know. At least your comment give me a reason to finally give it a watch, @LucknFate!
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 9,511
    I am taking my wife through the John Wick universe (films only).

    They're far smarter and beautifully produced, with some very interesting universe building and art direction, than I think they're given credit for.

    At first reluctantl, my wife is now stalking around our house, her brush as a "gun" looking to pump bullets into unsuspecting heads...
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    Posts: 24,254
    peter wrote: »
    I am taking my wife through the John Wick universe (films only).

    They're far smarter and beautifully produced, with some very interesting universe building and art direction, than I think they're given credit for.

    At first reluctantl, my wife is now stalking around our house, her brush as a "gun" looking to pump bullets into unsuspecting heads...

    Excellent, @peter. I adore the JW films, and yes, I think they deserve more credit than they are sometimes given. They're more than just action films. Their technical merits cannot be overstated as far as I'm concerned.
  • Posts: 6,710
    peter wrote: »
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    I always like a "love or hate" film though, especially when I fall in the former camp, like with mother!.

    Sir, I too love Mother. Whatever the film is, they went all in!

    Put me in as another one who loved it.
  • mattjoesmattjoes Pay more attention to your chef
    Posts: 7,057
    Herostratus (1967), starring Michael Gothard.

    Herostratus-001.jpg

    Herostratus-017.jpg

    Herostratus-102.jpg

    Herostratus-294.jpg

    Herostratus-194.jpg

    Herostratus-209.jpg

    Herostratus-308.jpg

    Herostratus-236.jpg
  • Posts: 12,520
    The Gift (2015). A really good, unique horror/thriller film that exceeds at subtlety. I saw a couple things coming, but definitely not nearly everything!
  • Posts: 6,021
    Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris :

    A weird movie based on the review show based on the songs of Belgium's best known singer. On the plus side, it's Jacques Brel (who makes an appearance in this movie). On the other hand... Well, it's weird. Really weird. Very much a movie of its time, very psychedelic.
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 9,511
    Has anyone watched Roadhouse yet?

    I just read Scott Adkins critique about the obvious CGI in the film’s fight scenes, and his comment: Patrick Swayze didn’t need it.

    Just having recently traveled through the John Wick universe with my wife, Adkins stood out to me in Number Four. Adkins was ridiculously fun and physical— in more ways than one.

    His filmography shows he knows just a little about action, so I take his criticism with all seriousness. Not that Roadhouse is a film I’m rushing to see, I just feel I *should* see it, to assess how Amazon is getting along with financing these types of films.

    If you’ve seen it, do you agree with Mr. Adkins?
  • Creasy47Creasy47 In Cuba with Natalya.Moderator
    Posts: 41,011
    @peter, an unnecessary "de-make" (great term I saw someone else use to describe it) that, yes, actually has CGI punches and fists. It's incredibly jarring. I thought that kind of garbage was reserved for some superhero flicks but clearly not. But yes, beyond that, it was bad across the board and didn't seem like it had any identity of its own or knew what type of film it wanted to be in the first place.

    If anybody knows what they're talking about when it comes to action, it's Scott.
  • Fire_and_Ice_ReturnsFire_and_Ice_Returns I am trying to get away from this mountan!
    edited March 25 Posts: 25,409
    mattjoes wrote: »
    Herostratus (1967), starring Michael Gothard.

    Herostratus-001.jpg

    Herostratus-017.jpg

    Herostratus-102.jpg

    Herostratus-294.jpg

    Herostratus-194.jpg

    Herostratus-209.jpg

    Herostratus-308.jpg

    Herostratus-236.jpg

    That looks bizarre.
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 9,511
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    @peter, an unnecessary "de-make" (great term I saw someone else use to describe it) that, yes, actually has CGI punches and fists. It's incredibly jarring. I thought that kind of garbage was reserved for some superhero flicks but clearly not. But yes, beyond that, it was bad across the board and didn't seem like it had any identity of its own or knew what type of film it wanted to be in the first place.

    If anybody knows what they're talking about when it comes to action, it's Scott.

    Thanks @Creasy47 ! I’ll keep kicking my viewing down the road, then.

    I do like that “de-make” term, but something more that stood out is your observation that they seemingly didn’t know their identity, nor what type of film they wanted to make.

    I kinda got that from the trailers. It almost felt like I was watching a film made by AI: lots of crazy editing, and “nutty” characters, but with no heart behind it. Almost like the characters were cut and pasted and stuck onto a picture.

    And yeah this Scott Adkins has come up the industry ladder busting his b*lls in action fiestas. What he did in Wick 4 was really fun. I hope he gets a chance to lead his own mainstream films one day. Something with a wider audience. He seems like a character.
  • Creasy47Creasy47 In Cuba with Natalya.Moderator
    Posts: 41,011
    peter wrote: »
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    @peter, an unnecessary "de-make" (great term I saw someone else use to describe it) that, yes, actually has CGI punches and fists. It's incredibly jarring. I thought that kind of garbage was reserved for some superhero flicks but clearly not. But yes, beyond that, it was bad across the board and didn't seem like it had any identity of its own or knew what type of film it wanted to be in the first place.

    If anybody knows what they're talking about when it comes to action, it's Scott.

    Thanks @Creasy47 ! I’ll keep kicking my viewing down the road, then.

    I do like that “de-make” term, but something more that stood out is your observation that they seemingly didn’t know their identity, nor what type of film they wanted to make.

    I kinda got that from the trailers. It almost felt like I was watching a film made by AI: lots of crazy editing, and “nutty” characters, but with no heart behind it. Almost like the characters were cut and pasted and stuck onto a picture.

    And yeah this Scott Adkins has come up the industry ladder busting his b*lls in action fiestas. What he did in Wick 4 was really fun. I hope he gets a chance to lead his own mainstream films one day. Something with a wider audience. He seems like a character.

    Absolutely. It's weird because the film lacks the elements that I feel make the original such a cult classic, and even its inability to occasionally lean into certain tropes actually lessens the impact. At times, it wants to be super campy (the introduction of McGregor, who I hope never acts again), but at others, it takes itself too seriously. It attempts to inject in a needless romance that goes nowhere and takes away from the central story. Even its broken Chekov's Gun-type logic of introducing characters who never return, or injecting new and vital players too late, is maddening.
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 9,511
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    peter wrote: »
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    @peter, an unnecessary "de-make" (great term I saw someone else use to describe it) that, yes, actually has CGI punches and fists. It's incredibly jarring. I thought that kind of garbage was reserved for some superhero flicks but clearly not. But yes, beyond that, it was bad across the board and didn't seem like it had any identity of its own or knew what type of film it wanted to be in the first place.

    If anybody knows what they're talking about when it comes to action, it's Scott.

    Thanks @Creasy47 ! I’ll keep kicking my viewing down the road, then.

    I do like that “de-make” term, but something more that stood out is your observation that they seemingly didn’t know their identity, nor what type of film they wanted to make.

    I kinda got that from the trailers. It almost felt like I was watching a film made by AI: lots of crazy editing, and “nutty” characters, but with no heart behind it. Almost like the characters were cut and pasted and stuck onto a picture.

    And yeah this Scott Adkins has come up the industry ladder busting his b*lls in action fiestas. What he did in Wick 4 was really fun. I hope he gets a chance to lead his own mainstream films one day. Something with a wider audience. He seems like a character.

    Absolutely. It's weird because the film lacks the elements that I feel make the original such a cult classic, and even its inability to occasionally lean into certain tropes actually lessens the impact. At times, it wants to be super campy (the introduction of McGregor, who I hope never acts again), but at others, it takes itself too seriously. It attempts to inject in a needless romance that goes nowhere and takes away from the central story. Even its broken Chekov's Gun-type logic of introducing characters who never return, or injecting new and vital players too late, is maddening.

    Nicely summed up. You're clearly giving me more and more reasons to kick this down the road... a very, very, very long road.

    I don't know if there's anyone I'd rather see less than MacGregor... And his interviews around this film have been troublesome to say the least (I've never done a certain drug, but I've seen plenty of people around me on it, and, well, yeah...)...
  • Creasy47Creasy47 In Cuba with Natalya.Moderator
    Posts: 41,011
    @peter, I've seen the same interviews! He looks coked out of his mind in most of them. They could've went with a ton of character actors or even martial artists for the role instead; why they opted for one of the most problematic UFC fighters out there is entirely beyond my comprehension.
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 9,511
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    @peter, I've seen the same interviews! He looks coked out of his mind in most of them. They could've went with a ton of character actors or even martial artists for the role instead; why they opted for one of the most problematic UFC fighters out there is entirely beyond my comprehension.

    Agreed @Creasy47 . He’s ash-grey, sweaty and twitchy.

    And there’s so many deserving and talented actors (Adkins, for one, 😂!!!!), that could have played the big bad. This was simply stunt casting with the hopes that MMA fans that flood the stadiums worldwide would do the same for this film. I understand why they did it. But sometimes stunt casting can blow up in one’s face. I don’t know if it has worked for Roadhouse, or not, but so far, I’m hearing some putrid feedback (yours being the one that makes me want to run away from ever watching this, 😆)
  • Creasy47Creasy47 In Cuba with Natalya.Moderator
    Posts: 41,011
    peter wrote: »
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    @peter, I've seen the same interviews! He looks coked out of his mind in most of them. They could've went with a ton of character actors or even martial artists for the role instead; why they opted for one of the most problematic UFC fighters out there is entirely beyond my comprehension.

    Agreed @Creasy47 . He’s ash-grey, sweaty and twitchy.

    And there’s so many deserving and talented actors (Adkins, for one, 😂!!!!), that could have played the big bad. This was simply stunt casting with the hopes that MMA fans that flood the stadiums worldwide would do the same for this film. I understand why they did it. But sometimes stunt casting can blow up in one’s face. I don’t know if it has worked for Roadhouse, or not, but so far, I’m hearing some putrid feedback (yours being the one that makes me want to run away from ever watching this, 😆)

    And if that was their logic behind casting him (which makes sense), it's even more ironic considering it wound up shelved onto Amazon Prime and didn't even get a theatrical release. It's hilarious.
  • MajorDSmytheMajorDSmythe "I tolerate this century, but I don't enjoy it."Moderator
    Posts: 13,999
    If it were directed by Jessie V. Johnson or Isaac Florentine, then Roadhouse would have been a good opportunity to bring Scott Adkins to the mainstream. Oh well, maybe next time.

    My deep dive into the career of Paul Naschy continues with...

    Fury Of The Wolfman (1970)
    Wow.... that was.... a mess. An incoherent mess. I don't now what was worse; the film brining up the rule that says that Waldemar can only be killed by a silver bullet (fired from a gun by a woman that loves him), and then ignores this, or the shots of the obviously not Paul Naschy, in wolfman costume, walking around like he is on a night time stroll. When Waldemar turn into his wolf form, Naschy has a distinctly different way of moving. The double for those shots (filmed when Naschy wasn't around), doesn't even attempt to mimic his movement. And then there were the reused footage from Frankenstein's Bloody Terror (1968), that doesn't even match up with Fury Of The Wolfman. To hear that this film was an unpleasant experience for Paul Naschy, doesn't come as a surprise.

    1. Panic Beats (1983)
    2. Night Of The Werewolf (1981)
    3. Werewolf Shadow (1971)
    4. Human Beasts (1980)
    5. Horror Rises From The Tomb (1973)
    6. Crimson (1976)
    7. The Beast And The Magic Sword (1983)
    8. Dr. Jekyll vs. The Werewolf (1972)
    9. The Howl Of The Devil (1988)
    10. Frankenstein's Bloody Terror (1968)
    11. Blue Eyes Of The Broken Doll (1973)
    12. Exorcismo (1975)
    13. Vengeance Of The Zombies (1973)
    14. Count Dracula's Great Love (1973)
    15. Hunchback Of The Morgue (1972)
    16. 7 Murders for Scotland Yard (1972)
    ***17. Fury Of The Wolfman (1970)***


    Getting close to 20 films. It's taken me a long time to get this far. Availability of some of the films has been a big issue.
  • mattjoesmattjoes Pay more attention to your chef
    edited March 25 Posts: 7,057
    Open Range.

    MV5BMTYyNjA4NTY3N15BMl5BanBnXkFtZTYwNjc0MDM3._V1_.jpg


    If it were directed by Jessie V. Johnson or Isaac Florentine, then Roadhouse would have been a good opportunity to bring Scott Adkins to the mainstream. Oh well, maybe next time.

    My deep dive into the career of Paul Naschy continues with...

    Fury Of The Wolfman (1970)
    Wow.... that was.... a mess. An incoherent mess. I don't now what was worse; the film brining up the rule that says that Waldemar can only be killed by a silver bullet (fired from a gun by a woman that loves him), and then ignores this, or the shots of the obviously not Paul Naschy, in wolfman costume, walking around like he is on a night time stroll. When Waldemar turn into his wolf form, Naschy has a distinctly different way of moving. The double for those shots (filmed when Naschy wasn't around), doesn't even attempt to mimic his movement. And then there were the reused footage from Frankenstein's Bloody Terror (1968), that doesn't even match up with Fury Of The Wolfman. To hear that this film was an unpleasant experience for Paul Naschy, doesn't come as a surprise.

    1. Panic Beats (1983)
    2. Night Of The Werewolf (1981)
    3. Werewolf Shadow (1971)
    4. Human Beasts (1980)
    5. Horror Rises From The Tomb (1973)
    6. Crimson (1976)
    7. The Beast And The Magic Sword (1983)
    8. Dr. Jekyll vs. The Werewolf (1972)
    9. The Howl Of The Devil (1988)
    10. Frankenstein's Bloody Terror (1968)
    11. Blue Eyes Of The Broken Doll (1973)
    12. Exorcismo (1975)
    13. Vengeance Of The Zombies (1973)
    14. Count Dracula's Great Love (1973)
    15. Hunchback Of The Morgue (1972)
    16. 7 Murders for Scotland Yard (1972)
    ***17. Fury Of The Wolfman (1970)***


    Getting close to 20 films. It's taken me a long time to get this far. Availability of some of the films has been a big issue.
    Reminds me of the attempt to replace Robert Englund in Nightmare on Elm Street 2. A performance doesn't boil down to costumes or makeup.
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 9,511
    @mattjoes -- how was Open Range??
  • mattjoesmattjoes Pay more attention to your chef
    Posts: 7,057
    peter wrote: »
    @mattjoes -- how was Open Range??

    I really liked it. It was cast very well: everyone, from the big roles to the small ones, was spot on. The film had a simple but involving story. It had an elegiac feel to it. The blossoming romance between Kevin Costner and Annette Bening was just wonderful. I would only criticize that, at a couple of points in the story, I wasn't sure what the two male leads were waiting for to make their next move. Structurally, it felt like the film was making time, but frankly, it wasn't something that really bothered me because I was riveted spending time with the characters.

    I watched this in anticipation of Costner's Horizon. I also intend to watch Dances with Wolves shortly.
  • Creasy47Creasy47 In Cuba with Natalya.Moderator
    Posts: 41,011
    mattjoes wrote: »
    peter wrote: »
    @mattjoes -- how was Open Range??

    I really liked it. It was cast very well: everyone, from the big roles to the small ones, was spot on. The film had a simple but involving story. It had an elegiac feel to it. The blossoming romance between Kevin Costner and Annette Bening was just wonderful. I would only criticize that, at a couple of points in the story, I wasn't sure what the two male leads were waiting for to make their next move. Structurally, it felt like the film was making time, but frankly, it wasn't something that really bothered me because I was riveted spending time with the characters.

    I watched this in anticipation of Costner's Horizon. I also intend to watch Dances with Wolves shortly.

    I'm very much looking forward to Horizon. Dances With Wolves is brilliant so I'm really excited to see him get back behind the camera again for another Western - that first teaser really grabbed me.
  • GoldenGunGoldenGun Per ora e per il momento che verrà
    Posts: 7,207
    mattjoes wrote: »
    Herostratus (1967), starring Michael Gothard.

    Herostratus-001.jpg

    Herostratus-017.jpg

    Herostratus-102.jpg

    Herostratus-294.jpg

    Herostratus-194.jpg

    Herostratus-209.jpg

    Herostratus-308.jpg

    Herostratus-236.jpg

    That looks bizarre.

    I'm rather intrigued actually, did you like it @mattjoes ?
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