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the last film you watched thread

Everybody agrees that The Human Centipede is a piece of crap and not worth watching, yet watches it anyway. I'm like everybody. It's a piece of crap and I watched it nonetheless.

Such futility. :roll:

I did too! (*8*)

To be honest, I didn't think it was that shocking. I'm a big ol' horror geek. :cool:
 
I did too! (*8*)

To be honest, I didn't think it was that shocking. I'm a big ol' horror geek. :cool:

Yup, wayyyyyy to ridiculous to be shocking. Not even given the breadth of genuinely shocking movies.

SPOILER:






I admit to being amused for three seconds by this line:
"Yessssss! Feeeeeeeed her!"
 
I actually kind of liked the Human Centipede, and I despise torture porn. I don't even think it qualifies as such. The first third of it is nearly insufferable due to the annoying and poorly characterized females. However, once their mouths are... well, sewn shut, it's quite tolerable and creepily unpredictable.
The story is quite poor, but the mood and tension are, at times, very effective for a film I expected much less from.
 
I just invested in buying "Children of Men" on blu-ray tonight, and just finished watching it. (Probably for the 5th time or so, but the first time on Blu ray)

I really can't say enough about the wonders of this film. From the stunning performances from Clive Owen and Julianne Moore and Michael Caine as an aging hippy in the not too distant London future.

Then there is the jaw-dropping element of the seamless "tracking shots" that defy imagination and wonder. You don't just watch those scenes, you are inside of them, thanks to some ground breaking camera work and a little digital trickery.

I can't recommend this film highly enough.

For me, it's right up there with "Magnolia" and "Requiem For a Dream".

Astonishing, life-altering, a film that makes you feel like you've been transported into another frame of mind and reality by it's conclusion.
 
^^
I totally agree with you that Children of Men is a fantastically shot film. :)

I just finished the new Karate Kid. The 2010 version with Jackie Chan and Jayden Smith. It was kind of...eh. I get and dig the message they were trying to send. Life can be hard, but perseverance and hard work are worth it, but I felt the way it was handled and told was very sloppy.
 
Ya can't go wrong with the classics...

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Pather Panchali.

Some of Ray's films are so lovely....and this one was produced by the government of West Bengal. (It doesn't take $250 million to do good work? :rolleyes: )
 
The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet's Nest

Good ending, I preferred the first one (The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo) though.

But at least my cousin and I will now nitpick on the Anglo version of the movie coming out sometime this year. :badgrin:
 
I had an older friend turn me on to this movie and I've never forgotten it! I love the witty repartee that permeates throughout the dialogue! So classic!!

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Guess Who's Coming to Dinner. It was on Turner Classic Movies this morning.

Sidney Poitier, Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn. Spencer Tracy's final film. It's strange to see interaction between the races as it was back in 1967.
 
The Mummy - The modern version
 
Some of Ray's films are so lovely....and this one was produced by the government of West Bengal. (It doesn't take $250 million to do good work? :rolleyes: )

Quite right. I generally find it a bit difficult to get immersed in a film watching it on a television screen, but I was captivated by this film completely. Evidence that artistry often trumps a big budget, imo.
 
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