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Night of the Living Dead (1968)



A classic B-movie and one of the most well-renowned horror films of all time, Night of the Living Dead is exactly what its title says. The film starts off slow, but things finally get interesting when a group of townsfolk find themselves trapped inside of a small house in order to avoid the zombies. The characters play off of each other well, and at this point the movie starts to feel like an extended, gory episode of The Twilight Zone. Here the tension mounts until each encounter with the titular Living Dead, but it's diluted by somewhat cheesy (albeit influential) special effects. Nevertheless, Night of the Living Dead manages a few scary moments, chief among them are the scenes of cannibalism.

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"Puns are the highest form of literature." -Alfred Hitchcock



Trick 'r Treat, the Pulp Fiction of horror anthologies. Has a fun old school feel, great FX, perfect cast, genuine chills and thrills, and some clever twists to keep it from being a mere gorefest. Highly recommended.

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#31 on SC's Top 100 Mofos list!!



that's what she said...
i liked it too.

last movie for me was X-MEN origins of wolverine
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Nicolas Cage
^to be in 14 movies in the next two years^



Sit Ubu Sit.... Good Dog


Sleep Dealer (2008)

Directed by Alex Rivera
Written by Alex Rivera and David Riker

Memo (Luis Fernando Pena) has always dreamed of leaving his small farming village, he accidently tunes into the wrong signal on his radio which turns out to be some kind of Top Secret government signal. The government finds out and kills Memo’s father accidentally. Memo runs to Tijuana to hide, he uses his time there to make money and send it back to what is left of his family. He gets a job as a plugged in worker, plugged in workers use a virtual headset to control machinery from south of the border with only a few side effects mainly blindness. Memo is contacted by a guilt ridden man who turns out to be the controller of the weapon that killed his father, the man is seeking redemption so they start planning the next move together.



This is one of those Sci-Fi movies that I can really see happening not to far off in the future. The use of machines being controlled from far away by people desperate for money seems like a very realistic future.




I went to the local arthouse theater tonight and caught back to back films.

Midnight in Paris Woody Allen (2011)



A movie full of humor, nostalgia, love, and beauty - Woody Allen's Midnight in Paris is my favorite film of the year thus far. I was laughing constantly and couldn't help but feel nostalgic for something I haven't even necessarily experienced before. It's this feeling that Allen was able to implant in myself as an audience that really made this one special. LOVED this film!



Le nom des gens Michel Leclerc (2011)



This one was strangely charming, often times funny and had nice direction. The relationship between the polar opposite leads was the most interesting part of the film with a standout performance from Jacques Gamblin. I really enjoyed this one!

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If I had a dollar for every existential crisis I've ever had, does money really even matter?



Sister Act (1992)



In this comedy, Whoopi Goldberg is a singer in her boyfriend's casino (a mobster played by Harvey Keitel) who witnesses him killing someone. Forced to testify against him, the police hide her in a convent. The movie is worthwhile just for seeing the Whoop dressed as a nun, but it also has enough other laughs to be a very enjoyable comedy.




Zodiac (2007)



Based on real case files about a serial killer in the late 60s and 70s, Zodiac stars Jake Gyllenhaal and Robert Downey Jr. as two reporters, as well as Mark Ruffalo as a police officer, who investigate the Zodiac murder case. The film seems to capture the time period extremely well, and the extreme detail of the plot shows that David Fincher may have been just as obsessed with this mystery as Gyllenhaal's character was. Superbly acted and shot, Zodiac is, essentially, a perfect thriller.




Sit Ubu Sit.... Good Dog


Stay (2005)


Directed by Marc Forster
Written by David Benioff

This movie did terrible at the box office and a lot of people still have not seen this film. The marketing and advertising for this film were almost non existent, what advertising there was does not do the film justice. The trailer that was released made this movie look like some kind of supernatural thriller, this film is not a supernatural thriller so the people that did go to the theaters to see the film were very disappointed.

Stay is a movie with really three main characters, Dr. Sam Foster (Ewan McGregor), Henry Letham (Ryan Gosling), and Lila Culpepper(Naomi Watts). The movie starts with Henry going to see Dr. Sam, Henry tells him that he is going to kill himself in 3 days. Pretty much from this point on you have to try and figure out for yourself what’s real and what’s not. About halfway through the movie scenes start melting together in a almost dreamlike way, this can get confusing and annoying.
I thought this was a great movie, I would not buy this but it is deffenitly worth renting and watching a couple times.



I know some people on this site do not like Ewan McGregor but even they should give this movie a shot.



i'm SUPER GOOD at Jewel karaoke
Bye Bye Birdie
George Sidney, 1963





mirror
So after watching a certain season 3 episode of Mad Men the other night, I got a strong hankering to finally see what the fuss with this musical was all about. The episode in question shows the copywriting team of Sterling Cooper sitting around a table watching the opening scene with Anne Margaret, who "looks 25 and acts 14" dancing about with her shrill voice and apple-cheeked face. I was kind of star struck after watching that scene. Her voice was shrill and it went right through you. I really liked it.

I'm a little iffy on musicals to begin with. There's usually no middle ground for me. I usually sit to one side of the extreme, which is to either be smitted with them or despise everything they stand for. I was smitten with Anne Margaret in the opening scene of Bye Bye Birdie. Her dancing and her voice and her face and her dress and the wonderfully blue technicolor background, it was one of the best opening songs in a movie I've ever seen.

The rest of the movie didn't have the same affect on me, I'm afraid. Don't get me wrong, I enjoyed it, and i LOL'ed a few times (mainly at the Paul Lynde one-liners/facial expressions). I also enjoyed a couple of the musical numbers quite enough that I'll probably download the soundtrack at some point in the near future. However, the rest of the movie didn't "speak" to me at all. I didn't care about any of the characters - ugh, Conrad Birdie was so, so, so awful. Actually, both of the young male leads were pretty bad.

Overall, though, it was fun and pretty-looking and never boring, therefore...






Duplicity -

True Grit (2010) -

The Fighter -
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The Odessa File (1974)


Directed by Ronald Neame
Written by Frederick Forsyth (novel), Kenneth Ross (screenplay)


1963, President Kennedy has just been assassinated, Egypt has missiles posed to annihilate Israel. Egypt is missing one part, the guidance system for the missiles. They turn to the Germans for the part they need.

Peter Miller played by a very young Jon Voight (does he ever look young), is a freelance German journalist. Peter gets a journal that the police took after a man is killed. The man who was killed turns out to be a Jew that survived the Nazi concentration camps, his journal is filled with horrific about what happened to Jews in these camps, also in the journal are the names of Nazi officers that were behind all this violence.

As Peter keeps digging deeper into the man who died and the names in the journal he uncovers a secret Nazi group still in existence called The Odessa. Peter must go under cover and try to gain access to this secret group so he can stop them and prevent the guidance systems from getting into the Egyptians hands.



This movie was really good, I have been avoiding watching this for a long time and I don’t know why but I wish I had of watched this years ago. I was worried that this would be a slow moving film, and maybe it was a bit but not enough to bother me in the slightest because I was really caught up in the story. I deffinatly suggest that anyone who hasn’t seen this movie should give it a shot and give your own opinion.




HowlHowl' Moving Castle (Miyazaki, 2004)
(Based on the novel by Diana Wynne Jones)

Sophie, an 18-year-old girl, is turned into an old woman who cannot talk about the spell cast by the Witch of the Waste. She tries to figure out how to restore herself. She leaves home and happens to find the moving castle of Howl, a powerful wizard. She gets inside and meets Calcifer, a trapped fire demon who powers the castle. Calcifer agrees to help her break the spell if she'll help him get free of Howl. She works as a cleaner, and she falls in love with Howl.

This is the first Miyazaki film I've seen, and it was beyond my expectation. This is not your average cartoon drama. The animation is a breathtaking artwork in Japanese style. It is completely unlike any of Disney's or even Pixar's animated features. This one is just plain magical. The plot is a unique and mysterious blend of fantasy and reality, with a strong anti-war message. Although there is a bit lack of human emotion, the characters are very likable, and you will definitely care for them. I am normally not a fan of this genre, but I really enjoyed this particular one. Hope to see more of Miyazaki.




Chappie doesn't like the real world
Winter's Bone (2010 Debra Granik)



Winter's Bone is a really good movie with a solid break-through performance by Jennifer Lawrence. My only criticism would be that we see the story through the eyes of Ree and only see what she sees and only know what she knows. It puts limits on how much we get to know about other key characters and I felt the movie could have been elevated to a great movie had we been able to have more access to them.

Captain America: The First Avenger (2011 Joe Johnston)



A paint by numbers super hero movie. Meh.

Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011 Rupert Wyatt)



This is a far from perfect movie but one that I thoroughly enjoyed. I just forgave everything wrong with it because I was so invested in Caesar's story. Power to the apes!!

Sympathy for Delicious (2010 Mark Ruffalo)

I was lured into watching this by a somewhat interesting premise and Juliette Lewis. I always liked her. She's gutsy and a weirdo. I wanted to turn it off after 10 minutes and I should have. Almost everything sucks about this movie from the writing to acting to the ridiculous stereo types. A definite must not see.

Movies I've recently rewatched because they're darned good.

The Apostle
The Nightmare Before Christmas
Wild Strawberries



Good whiskey make jackrabbit slap de bear.
Pan's Labyrinth (2006) +

A near perfect tale of harsh reality vs. imaginative fantasy, superbly told with excellent makeup and art direction, wonderful development of characters and themes, and Sergi Lopez's Vidal. Lopez's performance is appropriately chilling, but also complex and fascinating. Much like the rest of the film. Definitely one of the top contenders for the best of 2006.

A History Of Violence (2005)

Watched it again, still great. Viggo Mortensen is superb, the cinematography is excellent and the writing is fantastic.
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"George, this is a little too much for me. Escaped convicts, fugitive sex... I've got a cockfight to focus on."



Sit Ubu Sit.... Good Dog



The Thin Red Line (1998)


Directed by Terrence Malick
Written by James Jones (novel), Terrence Malick (screenplay)


I went and saw this movie in theaters when I was 18 and I hated this movie. I watched this again about a month ago and have a whole new take on the movie. When I was 18 I think I was expecting a super action packed movie instead of beautiful cinematography, a great story, and amazing acting from the insanely huge and great cast. Nick Nolte, James Caviezel, Sean Penn, Ben Chaplin, John Cusack, Adrien Brody, John C. Reilly, Woody Harrelson, Jared Leto, John Travolta, George Clooney, Elias Koteas, and many more.







This is the battle for Guadalcanal Island, Nick Nolte plays a intense career officer not seeming to care about how many of his men die but just caring about getting the mission complete on his superiors time table. Nolte's anger is so convincing that you are sitting there waiting for him to stroke out in one of his yelling rants. The cinematography is amazing, every shot is a masterpiece. The scenes that stuck out the most to me were the shots of the sloping fields with the tall grass, those shots made me really not want to look away from the screen.





A system of cells interlinked
Con Air (1998)
Serenity (2005)

Now I haven't watched Firefly yet. My friend bought a copy of this around and insisted we watch it. I wasn't really interested in it, but I was surprised by how much I enjoyed it. Humourous, exciting and at moments scary, Serenity was a pleasant surprise. What I loved the most about it was Nathan Fillion, he provided a likeable, complex hero in Malcolm Reynolds.
Well...bummer. Now you've gone and ruined the show for yourself! All those spoilers! Tsk tsk...

I would watch it anyway, though...totally worth it.

I also watched Serenity this weekend, btw.

Serenity (2005, Whedon)




A friend that was staying with us over the weekend had seen the show, but had never had a chance to catch the final film to tie everything up. This is such a fun, well-paced flick with excellent writing and a few really impressive sequences. I especially love the multi-reality opening that leads into a 5 minute steady-cam shot that introduces the crew. Brilliant.

Stop Making Sense (Demme, 1986)

A dark stage...a single figure emerges. He sets a old boom box on the ground and presses play while a lone spotlight begins to glow. The first notes ring out from his acoustic guitar, and the man doesn't stop gyrating and moving about the stage until film's end. The energy builds and builds as the other members of the band set their gear up slowly and join the fray.

This film perfectly captures a Talking Heads show while they were at the height of their popularity. The show is funky, energetic and Byrne is absolutely brilliant. Demme uses intimate shots and harsh shadows and this thing just oozes style while still maintaining a stark, intimate symbiosis with the band. Really well done.

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“It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance.” ― Thomas Sowell



Bright light. Bright light. Uh oh.
Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives (Apichatpong Weerasethakul, 2010) -
; Art House Rating:


Uncle Boonmee is just as fascinating as it is frustrating, but even if you find it slow-moving and difficult to grasp, it's episodic enough to come to a scene you will totally get in to, and it certainly expresses universal human emotions even while filtering them through a Thai cultural and historical perspective. Director Apichatpong Weerasethakul has degrees in architecture and film so his keen eye is apparent at all times. He's also something of a pop culture junkie who is well aware of most all of Thailand's TV and film history and intermingles that with his love of movies as diverse as Star Wars and La Jetee. However, he's a long way from Quentin Tarantino, even if he plays tricks with time and has the guts to basically make a G-rated film where a princess gets it on with a catfish.

The film begins rather slowly in the jungle following a buffalo getting stuck in the mud. It resembles a leisurely documentary or the equivalent of someone taking a hike in the forest to try to get away from it all. The movie does take you to a different world and culture so it will undoubtedly split audiences between those who find it a breathtaking work of art and those who think it's a fractured film looking for a story and wanting a faster pace. I'm probably in the middle somewhere. The next major scene reminded me of my vacations in New Zealand and Alaska where we rented a car and my daughter Sarah videotaped most of our trip from the backseat. This section in the car introduces Auntie Jen (Jenjira Pongpas) who is coming to visit her brother Boonmee (Thanapat Saisaymar) at his tamarind farm before he dies from kidney disease. The director does include many autobigraphical details since his own father died from kidney failure.


The film picks up with the introduction of Boonmee's dead wife's ghost appearing, followed shortly by his long-lost son turning up but he's been transformed into a "monkey ghost" who looks like a cross between a Jawa and a naked black Wookiee, both characters from Star Wars. I believe that Apichatpong knowingly made this character that way to reinforce the audience's perceptions on how seriously to take his fantasy. Although most of the movie seems deadly earnest, the monkey ghost and catfish scenes do show the director to have a playful side. The son's story about why and how he disappeared and changed is the film's highlight, at least until we come to the Princess/Waterfall scene. That scene, shot with a filter at a lush, beautiful waterfall which John Boorman would die for, moves the film into an even farther-out fantasy level and introduces a character which seems to have nothing to do with the rest of the film, unless you consider it one of Boonmee's past lives. There are some good old school F/X here too involving mirrors passing as reflections seen by the Princess in the lake. Needless to say, the Princess's hook-up with the catfish must be seen to be believed.

There are other beautiful and bizarre scenes but I don't want to take away the mysteries revealed and created as the film progresses to its inconclusive conclusion at a karaoke bar. But I will say that the scene inside the cave is really quite spectacular and reminded me of my trip to Carlsbad Caverns, but here the interior of the cave also sometimes resembles a starry night sky although it's the sparkly reflection of the cave's ceiling. Just when the film seems to come back to the "real world" with Uncle Boonmee's funeral, things get almost Lynchian in their weirdness. Auntie Jen acts like she barely knew Boonmee although we saw her share quality time with him throughout the entire film. Then Boonmee's medical assistant turns out to be a totally different character than we ever knew. To top it all off, some of the characters are able to see themselves doing other activities as if there are two of them "living" at the same time. This bright world away from the mysterious jungle turns out to be as bizarre as the world full of dead wives and monkey ghost sons. It certainly makes the Thai culture seem vibrantly alive; either that, or they're massively deluded, but who am I to say such a thing since it's normal for them.


As usual, some will have a problem with my rating. I watched it three times and will probably seek out some other films from this director. I'm sure that some here will love it while others will think it's boring and pretentious. I enjoy it the most by thinking of it as a cultural compendium of Thai history, family life and pop culture, being conducted by an expert with an artist's eye. What it lacks in cohesion and comprehension, it makes up for originality and strangeness. Besides, it's a nice way to take an exotic vacation without the hassle of planes and cars. To give you a taste, here's the trailer.

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Wow. When I was talking with HollyG about what to recommend to you (since you've seen almost everything and she wanted to have actually seen the film herself) I was certain that you'd hate Uncle Boonmee, or at least not like it. Shows what I know...and you watched it three times! Great review.
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"Don't be so gloomy. After all it's not that awful. Like the fella says, in Italy for 30 years under the Borgias they had warfare, terror, murder, and bloodshed, but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, and the Renaissance. In Switzerland they had brotherly love - they had 500 years of democracy and peace, and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock."



i'm SUPER GOOD at Jewel karaoke
Wow. When I was talking with HollyG about what to recommend to you (since you've seen almost everything and she wanted to have actually seen the film herself) I was certain that you'd hate Uncle Boonmee, or at least not like it. Shows what I know...and you watched it three times! Great review.
OH SO THE TRUTH COMES OUT!!!

so really it was mark f and Lime. mmm-hmm. i can never trust another thing Holly says now. you've tainted her in my eyes. how do i know it hasn't been flavored with Lime? huh? huh? HUH!???!!