As we have agreed for maybe 10-12 years now, Casablanca and African Queen are as good as it gets....
After that, I am just picking 3 I really like and don't care if anyone else likes them.
The Wizard of Oz. It makes me think of my Mom. It replayed at a local theater and she took me to see it when I was maybe 5 years old....the first movie I ever saw on the big screen. Mama and I had a "date" that day...a date that has lasted my whole life. She's been gone 22 years now, but when that movie is on, I watch and cry just like I did when I was 5 when Dorthy clicks her heels 3 times wanting to go home. I wish I could click my heels 3 times and go home one more time and watch that movie with my Mama....for that reason, that is my #1 movie ever.
The Cowboys, starring John Wayne....a great movie about driving cattle across the plains with a bunch of boys as the Cowboys....a great script...pretty forward for the day. A great movie.
E.T......sort of reminds me of the Wizard. Mom had never seen it and it was on TV one Thanksgiving several years before she passed. We popped up some corn and watched. She was mesmerized. A good day.
If everybody had like minds, we would never learn.
I should've included a Disney flick on there. I think I'd have to bounce out Casino Royale and put Mary Poppins in there instead.
Great movie. I'd put Poppins above Casino as well. Musicals aren't big these days, but there have been a bunch that have been great movies. The Sound of Music, or The Music Man are two that were great movies.
If everybody had like minds, we would never learn.
Quote: As far as a mini series, Lonesome Dove rules.
dont mean to hi-jacking but the "Hatfield & McCoy" mini-series(much shorter) this weekend looks good to me..I think it starts Monday to be exact on History
"Its too much of a coincidence to be a coincidence"
I figured I throw in some of my favorite foreign films.
1. Saving Grace - Good British comedy about a widow growing illegal plants to pay her bills. 2. Waking Ned Devine - Old man wins lottery and dies. Who gets the ticket? 3. Snatch - The 'come again Pikey?' feature on the DVD is pretty cool. Early Jason Stratham movie. 4. Lock, Stock, and 2 Smoking Barrels - Get your Cockney to English dictionary ready. Earlier Jason Stratham. 5. Monty Python's Life of Brian - We force all Middle East leaders into a room and play this movie non-stop until they realize how idiotic they are when dealing with religions.
1. Original Planet of the Apes. ( was a huge Planet of the Apes fan as a kid) 2. Lord of the Rings Trilogy. 3. Dr. Strangelove. 4. The End. ( Burt Reynolds, Dom Deluis)- 5. The Avengers. ( Probably the most fun I've ever had at a movie theater)
I do have a hard time remembering the last really good Iranian comedy I saw .......
Micah 6:8; He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God.
John 14:19 Jesus said: Because I live, you also will live.
no doubt, the dry humor plays best on the big screen. love the adaptations that combine American physical comedy with the British dry wit (Rat Race, Fish Called Wanda).
Good call on The Help! Makes you wonder who those white southerners thought were really doing the legwork in raising their kids while they tried to stifle the Civil Rights Movement....
That said, similar movie- but a classic- is how I start out my top five (like others; no particular order):
-Imitation of Life: Absolutely heart-wrenching story of a black maid who has a baby with a white Creole man and the daughter ends up totally white. The daughter is treated like any other white woman until people find out that her mother is black, and her treatment gets a total 180. The daughter was very self-deprecating about being bi-racial and took most of that out on her mother. I balled like an absolute baby near the end of this one.
-Tank Girl- The soundtrack alone makes me love this movie, but many of its themes are still relevant today (total 90s flick) and it takes comic-book action and humor to real life...
-V for Vendetta- Enough said. I think on some level, when we think of vigilantism and when it's justifiable to use it ourselves, V is our alter-go (or at least mine )
-The Children's Hour- It baffled me that I hadn't heard of this until this year, but Audrey Hepburn and Shirley MacLaine (sp?) play boarding school teachers accused of being lesbians by a petulant problem-child- and although initially untrue- turns out to be, despite not being under the circumstances brought about and well after-the-fact. It's amazing to me that- at least at that time in the 20th century- that it didn't impact their careers negatively. I mean they couldn't even have anyone say "they kissed" or the actual words "lesbian" or "gay" (as it was at one point forbidden from being said in the theater even in NY). I balled like crazy during this one, too, and was kind of pissed off about the ending. But, hey. If a movie brings out that sort of catharsis, it's done one hell of a job.
-Chitty Chitty Bang Bang- Had to throw in my favorite childhood movie! Though, for some reason, I am still jokingly harassed about how I was inexplicably afraid of the car early on. Of all children's movies, this one brings back the best sense of "If I could turn back time" nostalgia.
Politicians are puppets, y'all. Let's get Geppetto!
Quote: I figured I throw in some of my favorite foreign films.
1. Saving Grace - Good British comedy about a widow growing illegal plants to pay her bills. 2. Waking Ned Devine - Old man wins lottery and dies. Who gets the ticket? 3. Snatch - The 'come again Pikey?' feature on the DVD is pretty cool. Early Jason Stratham movie. 4. Lock, Stock, and 2 Smoking Barrels - Get your Cockney to English dictionary ready. Earlier Jason Stratham. 5. Monty Python's Life of Brian - We force all Middle East leaders into a room and play this movie non-stop until they realize how idiotic they are when dealing with religions.
I love Japan horror films. The movie Audition will send chills up your spine
I'm going to have to say in no particular order my faves are:
1) Pulp Fiction 2) Planes, Trains, and Automobiles 3) ALL the James Bond movies (more so bonds without Daniel Craig in them) 4) Dawn of the Dead 1978 5) A tie between Friday the 13th series and A Nightmare on Elm Street 1-3
Others that would break the list include: The Untouchables Jaws Christine Die Hard 1-4 Fight Club Black Christmas Rocky 1-4 The Shining
Nightmare On Elm Street 2 was one of the oddest/worst movies I've ever seen. It doesn't fit the canon at all, and the heavy homoerotic themes seem out of place in a Freddy movie.
I liked one and three ... I didn't even really mind what Renny Harlin did with 4. I mean, it was bad, and was more goofy than dark, and the acting is awful, but for some reason I don't hate it.
After that, it's all worthless except for New Nightmare, which I liked a lot.
I thought that "New Nightmare" was an interesting and original twist on the horror genre.
Micah 6:8; He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God.
John 14:19 Jesus said: Because I live, you also will live.
Quote: I thought that "New Nightmare" was an interesting and original twist on the horror genre.
Absolutely.
I had pretty much stopped watching Freddy films when New Nightmare came out, but Ebert has said he really liked it, so I gave it a shot and thought they'd done something really great there. Rare that you get a gem like that out of a series that had long gone sour.
I agree about New Nightmare made in the nineties. That was really unique how Craven made that film. I especially loved it that Robert Englund played himself in the movie. That was different but it worked very well. Actually come to think of it, I don't own that one, I should get it.
Quote: Just throwing this out there. Men in Black 3 was actually good to my surprise. It was MUCH better than the 2nd film.
Just saw it last night in IMAX 3-D (a first ever for me) and would have to agree 100% with that. The humor in it wasn't ridiculous or trying too hard- perfect example of that would be the second Boondock Saints movie; I mean they tried way to hard to bring about comedic relief in that- and the action and special effects blew me away. I thought I was about to get poked in the eye with the top of the Empire State Building! The ending was actually pretty poignant, too. End of the day, I'd say it was even worth the $15.00 ticket price for the overall experience.
Politicians are puppets, y'all. Let's get Geppetto!
Quote: I'm probably the only one in America who watched the entire "Police Acadamy" collection. It was fun, though.
everyone else has at one point or another too. we just don't like to admit it.
(actually, I have no idea if I have or not. I've probably seen 3 or 4 of them. they are campy and funny, but sort of like the American Pie series where they just made too many of them and got played out)
Personally I'm waiting for the American Pie Nursing Home sequel ................
Micah 6:8; He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God.
John 14:19 Jesus said: Because I live, you also will live.
Quote: Personally I'm waiting for the American Pie Nursing Home sequel ................
I saw American Reunion with my girlfriend a few weeks ago, it was actually pretty funny. I'm a toilet humor kinda guy. I went in there thinking it wasn't going to be good and they'd be recycling old jokes, but I'd say only about a quarter of the movie was old stuff rehashed.