Re: Movies you have watched thread.
652'American Fiction' - I've enjoyed it, but it felt like the family drama stuff dragged it down and kinda went nowhere, while the satirical stuff was always interesting ,even if predictable. I guess the point of the family drama was to prove Monk's point but we kind of know all about after first 10 minutes. Still, genuinely funny.
Re: Movies you have watched thread.
653Apparently in the book the family stuff dealt more with class and had some teeth - the mother was an asshole and treated the "servant" woman like crap, for example.emmanuelle cunt wrote: Mon Dec 02, 2024 2:32 am 'American Fiction' - I've enjoyed it, but it felt like the family drama stuff dragged it down and kinda went nowhere, while the satirical stuff was always interesting ,even if predictable. I guess the point of the family drama was to prove Monk's point but we kind of know all about after first 10 minutes. Still, genuinely funny.
I would have liked to have seen it included, but I guess that would've been less "heartwarming"...
Sterling K. Brown stole the show.
Re: Movies you have watched thread.
654Oh, I didn't even know it was based on a book, sort of makes sense, it did feel like there was more there, I thought scenes were cut, the biggest fault for me was the disconnect between the family drama and writing parts - other than his girlfriend reading his book those felt like two different films stitched together, and each time I felt like something interesting might be happening (brother's addiction and relationship, how verbally aggressive and condescending he was towards his girlfriend - is he having mental problems like his father?) it was a dead end.andyman wrote: Mon Dec 02, 2024 3:10 amApparently in the book the family stuff dealt more with class and had some teeth - the mother was an asshole and treated the "servant" woman like crap, for example.emmanuelle cunt wrote: Mon Dec 02, 2024 2:32 am 'American Fiction' - I've enjoyed it, but it felt like the family drama stuff dragged it down and kinda went nowhere, while the satirical stuff was always interesting ,even if predictable. I guess the point of the family drama was to prove Monk's point but we kind of know all about after first 10 minutes. Still, genuinely funny.
I would have liked to have seen it included, but I guess that would've been less "heartwarming"...
Sterling K. Brown stole the show.
Re: Movies you have watched thread.
655Watched The nights of Cabiria last night. It's pretty great.
Re: Movies you have watched thread.
656Love that movie.Kniferide wrote: Mon Dec 02, 2024 10:08 am Watched The nights of Cabiria last night. It's pretty great.
The musical version that Bob Fosse made in the 1960s, Sweet Charity, isn’t too bad either.
Re: Movies you have watched thread.
657Fellini is probably underappreciated today as a humanist and thinker, because all anybody remembers is the circus midgets and the sexy stuff. That's definitely a good one.
Re: Movies you have watched thread.
658We watched Anora over the weekend. I enjoyed it. I wasn't expecting the story to end like it did, but when I think back on Sean Baker's other movies, it fits.
We also watched Love Actually. I had never seen it. Was a decent flick that didn't overdo it on the schmaltz.
We also watched Love Actually. I had never seen it. Was a decent flick that didn't overdo it on the schmaltz.
"Whatever happened to that album?"
"I broke it, remember? I threw it against the wall and it like, shattered."
"I broke it, remember? I threw it against the wall and it like, shattered."
Re: Movies you have watched thread.
659saw The Accountant in an airplane, the only way I'd bother watching something like that, and it was surprisingly enjoyable, with a high WTF quotient
also saw Agnes Varda's Le Bonheur last night, gave me a bit to think about, merits a second go soon
also saw Agnes Varda's Le Bonheur last night, gave me a bit to think about, merits a second go soon
Re: Movies you have watched thread.
660The Dark Tower gets the gas face.
Justice for Sam Nordquist, Randall Adjessom, Javion Magee, Destinii Hope, Kelaia Turner, Dexter Wade and Nakari Campbell