Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings

Big Magilla
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Post by Big Magilla »

Mister Tee wrote:
Big Magilla wrote: This time around it was the underwhelming sadness that permeates the entire film.
I'm guessing you meant either underlying or overwhelming.
Thank you. I meant underlying.
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Post by Mister Tee »

Big Magilla wrote: This time around it was the underwhelming sadness that permeates the entire film.
I'm guessing you meant either underlying or overwhelming.
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Post by anonymous1980 »

Daybreakers (Michael Spierig/Peter Spierig) - 6.5/10
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Post by anonymous1980 »

Me and Orson Welles (Richard Linklater) - 7/10
The Man Who Laughs (Paul Leni) - 8.5/10
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Post by Sabin »

Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans (Werner Herzog) - 7/10

Somewhere between inspired genre deconstructive and batshit lunacy. Either way, very funny. Cage it hilarious.
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Post by Precious Doll »

Up in the Air (2009) Jason Reitman 4/10

Despite being well acted and enjoyable/depressing to watch this film is nevertheless undermined by a ridiculous scenario which has been discussed bby members of the board in the Up in the Air thread.

Payment Deferred (1932) Lothar Mendes 4/10

Charles Laughton is the best thing about this 'Hitchcockian' drama about a bank clerk who takes drastic action to acquire some much needed funds. Ray Milland has a small role as Laughton's nephew. It's scary that at only 33 Laughton looked about 60.
"I want cement covering every blade of grass in this nation! Don't we taxpayers have a voice anymore?" Peggy Gravel (Mink Stole) in John Waters' Desperate Living (1977)
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Post by Big Magilla »

The Hurt Locker (2009) Kathryn Bigelow 9/10
50 Dead Men Walking (2009) Kari Skogland 8/10

The Hurt Locker holds up to repeated viewings. When I first saw this in the theatre it was not knowing what would happen next that kept me enthralled. This time around it was the underlying sadness that permeates the entire film. It really is the year's best film with three of the year's best performances by Jeremy Renner, Anthony Mackie and Brian Geraghty.

50 Dead Men Walking proves that Bigelow isn't the only female director who can helm a big action flick as well as any guy. Canadian Skogland takes on both the murderous IRA and the duplicitous British occupation force in 1980s Belfast.

Jim Sturgess gives a strong performance as the Irish Catholic youth who goes undercover as a British agent who infiltrates IRA and Ben Kingsley tones it way down to play his conscience stricken operator. Based on a true story that begins with the hero shot six times at close range in Canada by an IRA gunman 11 years after the events told in the film. He survived to tell the story.




Edited By Big Magilla on 1263669996
abcinyvr
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Post by abcinyvr »

24 hours, 4 films

Nine
6/10
Not the trainwreck that I was expecting. I had left it on my list for BP and now I think that it will survive through to Oscar morning.

District 9
7.5/10
Put this off for as long as possible. Impressive.

The Fantastic Mr. Fox
7.5/10

The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus
7/10
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Post by Sabin »

Adventureland (Mottola) - 6/10
"How's the despair?"
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Post by Big Magilla »

Trucker (2009) James Mottern 7/10

Catching up on first time directors. Michelle Monaghan won the Best Actress award of the San Diego Film Critics but has otherwise been missing in the continuing precursor trend to crown Queen Meryl. It's a good performance in a role not dissimilar to Tilda Swinton's in Julia but without the ferocity.

Jimmy Bennett, the kid who plays Kirk as a boy in Star Trek, gives a good account of himself as her estranged 11 year-old son and Benjamin Bratt has a nice unsentimental bit as the kid's dying father.

You know where it's going the minute the dying ex-husband's current squeeze (Joey Lauren Adams) drops the kid off at her doorstep although Monaghan's job as a long haul trucker gives it a nice twist.

Amreeka (2009, U.S.) Cherian Dabis 7/10

Another first time director - she's done TV and short films before, but this is her first feature.

It's a mild, but poignant study of Arab Christians in America with ingratiating performances by Nisreen Faour and Melkar Muallem as mother and son immigrants. The always impeccable Hiam Abbas is Faour's sister, who is slow to change her ways despite having been in the country for fifteen years. In the film's climactic scene she tastes a hamburger for the first time. It's that kind of movie. Nice, but hardly earth-shattering.




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Post by Reza »

Coco Before Chanel (Anne Fontaine, 2009) 2/10

Deathly boring story of the great designer's early life. Audrey Tautou is lifeless and looks bored throughout. The brief fashion show sequence at the end, showing off Chanel's signature designs, has spark missing from the whole film. It would be interesting to see a proper big screen film about her life covering the war years and after. Maybe Tautou could attempt it again in a sequel with a stronger director.
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Post by Sabin »

The White Ribbon - 5/10
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Post by Precious Doll »

Nothing But the Truth (2008) Rod Lurie 6/10

Routine but very watchable 'inspired by real events' drama. Well paced with good performances all round. It's the sort of film Hollywood used to do reasonably well when they were interested in telling stories of some social relevance.

A Perfect Getaway (2009) David Twohy 4/10

Whilst the set up is standard 'psycho killer on the loose' Twohy keeps things moving along nicely within just enough suspense to sustain the nonsense. It also has some sense of humanity that is generally missing from this type of fare.

The Headless Woman (2008) Lucrecia Martel 8/10

Without a doubt Lucrecia Martel is the most promising and most original of all the young female directors to emerge during the last decade. The film is a meticulously shot work in which the visuals and incidental dialogue drive the narrative forward. Her characters rarely the centre of attention, hovering around the outskirts of the frame or in the background. Also worth seeking out are Martel's earlier works The Holy Girl & La cienaga.
"I want cement covering every blade of grass in this nation! Don't we taxpayers have a voice anymore?" Peggy Gravel (Mink Stole) in John Waters' Desperate Living (1977)
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Post by rudeboy »

District 9 - 6/10
The Hurt Locker - 8/10

I liked both more than I expected to. District 9's first half gripped me more than the second, and while Sharlto Copley's performance was fine, his character was so relentlessly stupid that I had trouble rooting for him at times, but I had fun for the most part.

The Hurt Locker took me by surprise, to be honest. The three central performances were excellent (I'd love for Anthony Mackie or Brian Geraghty to show up on nomination morning) and while virtually plotless it looked terrific, the set-pieces were electrifying and Bigelow does a fantastic job. I'd have no problem if she won the Oscar.




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Post by Reza »

The Hurt Locker (Kathryn Bigelow, 2009) 6/10
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