Hot Fuzz. Again, last night. Not clever, but very very funny. "Yarp"
Hot Fuzz. Again, last night. Not clever, but very very funny. "Yarp"
House at the End of the Street. In spite of many bad reviews, I really loved the movie, it was so exciting for me to watch it, I enjoyed every second of it.
Apartment 1303 (American version). Here I agree with the reviews, not a very good movie, though I certainly have seen worse. Now thinking of watching the original Japanese movie, they say this one is much better than the remake.
Iron Man 3. I did not expect that I would like it so much, but I really did. The movie is awesome, it was so exciting I did not even noticed when two hours passed![]()
The Avengers. Decided to re-watch it after Iron Man, unfortunately I understood that I loved it more when I saw it for the first time.
I found a dvd in the discount bin that was a double feature of Village Of The Damned and Children Of The Damned.I had never seen them but I remember Village of the Damned described in "Hearts In Atlantis" when Ted took the boy (the name escapes me at the moment) to see it. I loved "Village Of The Damned." "Village..." is one of the great 50s-60s era sci-fi / horror flicks. The follow up "Children.Of The Damned" is not too shabby either. I'm not sure I'd call it a sequel because there is no mention of Village at all but it's more like the film makers took the same premise and reworked it into a totally different story. Not as good as Village but still worth seeing.
The kid that played David in "Village Of The Damned" gave one of the creepiest performances I've ever seen by a child.
Last edited by fljoe0; 1 Week Ago at 09:40 AM. Reason: added wisdom
I saw Django Unchained last weekend. It was pretty good but went overboard with the near the end. I don't mind violence in movies or TV, but it was a bit of overkill, no pun intended.
Yes, love Django! Sure:
What rang my bell were the incredible performances (really the only time I ever liked Leo Dicaprio!) and the excellent Quentin dialogue. Top notch, four stars, demands multiple viewings.
As for me, last movie I watched was King Creole (1958). Pre-Army Elvis doin his thang, prettier'n most women, thankeeverymuch. Based (loosely) on Harold Robbin's A Stone For Danny Fisher. I guess.
(and before ye gimme flack for the "prettier'n most women" crack, that was a nod to Quentin's script of True Romance. Just bringin' this post full circle, thankee verah much).
Broken City - Old school film noir (Girl Friday and Detective) blended, in a new way, with action/thriller genre. Worth the time, just to see a modern twist. Allen Hughes directed and he's good.
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