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Thanks for posting that, @Dwayne. That was great, and a fascinating look at some of Bogie's lesser discussed early Warners' films.
Yes, The Hunted mixed with First Blood would be fantastic. I'm such a huge fan of the former, one of my favorites from Friedkin. It's so damn entertaining.
Very underrated and not well known film, the two leads are superb. Such a great multi layered confrontation between the two, Jones and Del Torro are excellent.
Totally agreed. It's something special to me, with great action to boot.
@RichardTheBruce, love that one, as well, surprised I forgot about it. Wilde battling a virus while shooting that film in the searing heat is incredibly impressive. He's great in it.
The Gunfighter (1950, Henry King)
Seven Footprints to Satan (1929, Benjamin Christensen)
The Wolf House (2018, Joaquin Cociña, Cristóbal León )
Moby Dick (1956, John Huston)
Invention for Destruction (1958, Karel Zeman)
The Family Game (1983, Yoshimitsu Morita)
The Gang’s All Here (1943, Busby Berkeley)
Häxan: Witchcraft Through the Ages (1922, Benjamin Christensen)
Memories of Murder (2003, Bong Joon-Ho)
Phantom of the Paradise (1974, Brian De Palma)
I saw Invention for Destruction a few days back, loved it so much but felt The Fabulous Baron Munchausen was a little bit better. He's one of the most visionary, unique directors I've ever experienced, I love his blending of animation and live action. It's flawless.
This film made a massive impression on me when I saw it on TV at the age of 7...
I never forgot that scene where the natives encase the guy in mud and cook him...!
Apparently Wilde was very ill while making the film and it sometimes shows!
I agree with you entirely. I was familiar with the The Fabulous World of Jules Verne, the American dub/edit of Invention for Destruction, but didn't view the original until last year, when it finally arrived on Blu-Ray. I had seen Munchausen several years earlier on a bootleg DVD. I plan to watch the rest of Zeman's films this year. No one will ever make movies with that type of magic ever again.
Imagine an animated film noir directed by Paul Verhoeven at his most Paul Verhoeven, and that will give you a fairly good idea of Film Noir.
Too right. It's something special. And, for example, the fact that Invention for Destruction was released in 1958 is even more mind-boggling to me. So impressive. I have got to pick up his recent trilogy that Criterion put out, I'm eager to get my hands on it now.
A James Coburn espionage thriller. Coburn has a group of informants, who he has
to dispose of. He brilliantly gets them to take each other out on one night, but as
always there are a few twists in the story.
I found it on a YouTube channel " Flick Vault " which has many free movies.
Have to say, I watched it recently, and still found it very enjoyable. Frankenheimar does long movies well, he draws you in with strong characters.
And besides, its worth the wait for that nail biter of a climax!
Remember vividly coming out of the cinema, dazed at Rob Bottins effects. Went back to see it again and appreciated John Carpenters taut direction and Bill Lancasters paranoid screenplay. Superb horror movie, really well made with Dean Cundeys excellent cinematography and a very Carpenteresque score from none other than Ennio Morricone. Great cast, and some chilling scenes among Bottins eye popping (literally!!) mechanical effects! The celebrated and very tense blood testing sequence still makes me jump!
An Alistair MacLean Western, all the usual MacLean elements.
Can't believe it took me 46yrs to finally see Gilliam's masterpiece, but better late than never.
Immediately ordered the Criterion blu-ray as this film has been haunting me since and I can't wait to watch all the fascinating extras that accompany it.
Better than I remembered it, and odd to see a film about a Virus. with Nightmare visions of hundreds of bodies stacked across city squares.
Get Shorty
Runaway Jury
Narrow Margin
Mississippi Burning
The Chamber
Twilight
Prime Cut
An enjoyable line-up of films. I think Get Shorty and Twilight are the ones I liked the most, while The Chamber and Prime Cut I liked the least.
My latest watch, Prime Cut (my 21st Hackman film) I found too sparse in its storytelling, though full of interesting, disturbing images, and its surreal tone is engrossing. Splendid music score by Schifrin. Lee Marvin is always great to watch, as is Hackman, though his screen time is too brief for my taste.
Love 'Prime Cut' , its meant to be a black comedy, but works better as an action movie. Marvin looks so cool, and his final assault on Hackmans farm is thrilling!
And, yes, love Lalo Schifrins whistling score!
Kristen Stewart was smoking in that one. ;-)
What an odd film. It's like the typical Liam Neeson action thriller, with a.... strange sense of humour. I don't know if I completely understood the humour, I might need to rewatch this.
1. Non-Stop (2014)
2. Unknown (2011)
3. Taken (2008)
4. Taken 2 (2012)
5. Cold Pursuit (2019)
6. Taken 3 (2014)
I still haven t seen this one, but the original was very entertaining.