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Great suggestions. Personally I love Day of the Dead and the Night of the Living Dead remake too.
However, I would probably consider Lucio Fulci's Zombi as my favourite. Its emphasis on voodoo, its wacky Fabio Frizzi score, and Richard Johnson, I love it :p
Good call @Mathis1
I'm hoping i too get around to watching it again this weekend. One of my favourite British films.
That scene on the boat when Harold confronts Jeff is utterly gripping!
Agreed, and the violence that erupts was quite a shock, the first time I saw it! Casualty wasn't going to help Jeff there!! 😁
Definitely not :))
That scene was heavily cut when i first saw it on TV. It was only years later that i saw the full jugular glassing :D
It's one of those rare movies you really wish were a lot longer
The Lion In Winter first time watch in 4K. A microcosm of power, life and family. This film is extraordinary and I don't think I have seen many films on this level before, Peter O'Toole and Katharine Hepburn give two of the greatest ever screen acting performances
Katharine Hepburn says one of the coldest lines of dialogue in cinema.
This movie is way ahead of it's time for 1968, the script is exceptional.
Don't forget two pre-fame acting debuts: Sir Anthony Hopkins and Timothy Dalton! There's nothing to suggest that they would become the big names that they are.
Bee Movie (2007). Seen this one for the first time since it came out. It was unique. The comedy was high hits and low blows throughout the whole movie. Jerry Seinfeld is really a mixed bag, in terms of his comedy. Well cast, but it lacked sweetness (pun intended) or cuteness of other animated movies. Check out this video about the making of it!
Some of the best dialogue ever put to screen, imo.
... and it's a Christmas movie!
Well, what shall we hang... the holly, or each other? =))
As everyone was already noted, the script and the performances are great - as is the John Barry score. It's also a ton of FUN.
Dalton had a commanding presence in his screen debut acting against the powerhouse O'Toole, Dalton was definitely too young to play Bond back then IMO.
I have several pieces of music from The Lion In Winter soundtrack, I have loved JB's theme for decades though only just watched the film.
We chose one of my favourite movies of all times, the one that I (still) have seen the most times at a cinema (as a child), and umpteen times on all kinds of physical media: Disney's 1967 THE JUNGLE BOOK. For me, still a perfect kind of entertainment.
The next will be Hitchcock's NORTH BY NORTHWEST - at the request of my sister-in-law who is here for Easter, but it is also my favourite Hitchcock film. I intend to return to watching Bond movies on a regular basis after that.
Very nice, @j_w_pepper! I love JB too :)
My latest watch:
SALEM'S LOT (1979)
I wanted to check this one out for some time, though I was suprised it was a miniseries. A long sit at almost 3 hrs, but very atmospheric and with excellent turns by David Soul, James Mason, Julie Cobb, Ed Flanders and Kenneth McMillan to name a few. Enjoyed it.
Always thought this was overlooked in Clint Eastwoods canon of films. Essentially a buddy road movie where he plays a veteran bank robber ( nicknamed Thunderbolt) who teams up with free spirited youth named Lightfoot ( Jeff Bridges, marvellous!) to carry out a bank job on a seemingly impregnable vault with the aid of his old comrades! Things of course don't go to plan! Eastwood and Bridges play off each other wonderfully well, with some nice comedic scenes, and it has brief, but well executed action( some of it quite violent!)! Nice songs, too on the soundtrack by Paul Williams! Written and directed by Michael Cimino no less ( though it's rumoured, Clint handled a lot of it himself!) It also has one of the saddest endings to a movie ever! Well worth a look if you haven't seen it!
I was going to upgrade my dvd of this, but it's wide-screen vistas look great, and it's pretty sharp for a dvd, so I will stick with this copy!
I agree 100% this and Eastwood’s “ A Perfect World “ are two under appreciated gems.