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Comments
I like the way Cumberbatch sometimes overacts, and I´m usually not a friend of overacting. And Cumberbatch is very much capable of understated acting too.
He hasn´t been put to proper use much outside the Sherlock series, but I would blame the directors more than the actor.
With that said, as it stands now, I think he was a poor choice for Dr. Strange.
He does come across like a posh fart on occasion though. Just his screen presence probably. He seems like a pretty smart, educated guy and that comes across on screen.
I agree @boldfinger. I truly haven't seen enough of his films to form a proper opinion and it's more than likely he was typecast in the films I've seen. I really do want to see the Fifth Estate and 12 Years a Slave.
</b>What's your favourite lovemaking/sex scene in a mainstream film?</font>
* mainsteam i.e. not a porn flick
** I couldn't let the 069 opportunity slip, could I? ;-)
I love those with innuendos. I believe this wasn´t Hitch´s first one, but it´s pretty good:
Not sure if this counts:
Apart from that, most of the shagging scenes in the Bond films up until 1985.
Risky Business - 1983. Rebecca De Mornay & Tom Cruise
Incidentally, what about the one from the first Naked Gun?
</b>Are you a fan of 70s cinema and if so, what do you like about it?</font>
The Seventies was a time of unpredictability, of experimentation, and acceptable downer endings. Try making a movie like Parallax View, Vanishing Point, The Seven Ups, Beneath The Planet Of The Apes or Harold & Maude today. Not happening. At least, not on the studio level. Back then creativity trumped focus group box office prediction. Moderate budgets made crazy movies possible; today every film must make money big time for shareholders. Which, by definition means predictability.
No, I guess I´m not a 70s geek...
Some favorites: Alien, Assault on Precinct 13, The Bird with the Crystal Plumage, Dawn of the Dead, Jaws, Nosferatu, Solaris, Young Frankenstein.
Of course happy films were made at the time, many of which I love too. Star Wars, the Bonds, Close Encounters, ...
I consider the 70s brave in their naturalism, seeking outdoor locations that would previously have been deemed unfit for a film, using cheap film stock and rough editing, often the result of small budgets and independent projects. I love the demise of old certainties, like the family unit, faith and authorities. Family can no longer protect you; in fact the threat might come from within. Prey all you want but in the 70s, Satan ultimately wins. Authorities may come up with protocols, laws, ... but each must fight for himself in the end.
In a sense I find the stakes to be generally higher, the outcome more unpredictable and the feeling I'm left with more intense and usually more upset. I'm not saying I dislike the other decades in film but I just have this particular fondness of 70s cinema.