Spot on really IMO. Was made a little better by the natural charisma of Bradley Cooper too.
Is there anyone more likeable than Bradley Cooper ATM?
Van Gaal, IMO.
While you have mentioned him, has anyone noticed that he is twin brother to Soldado?
Spot on really IMO. Was made a little better by the natural charisma of Bradley Cooper too.
Is there anyone more likeable than Bradley Cooper ATM?
Van Gaal, IMO.
While you have mentioned him, has anyone noticed that he is twin brother to Soldado?
What has Bradley Cooper ever done to anyone apart from be charming and good looking?![]()
Doesn't deserve all the acclaim he gets and phones in most performances with the same character. Its boring.What has Bradley Cooper ever done to anyone apart from be charming and good looking?![]()
Rouge nation? Is that the one where the evil baddie plots to take over the world's make-up supplies?Mission Impossible Rouge Nation
I've seen three mission impossible films:
Mission: Impossible - 7/10
Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol - 8/10
Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation - 9/10
As you see from the ratings I think they keep getting better and better. Loved this film. Thought the set pieces were great. Lots brilliant performances (Cruise, Ferguson, Renner, Pegg, Baldwin e.t.c.) as well and doesn't take itself too seriously whilst also managing to be very entertaining, funny and engaging.
9/10
EDIT: Much much much better than Spectre.
The Martian: 8/10
Well I finished it and it was quite fun to watch. Plus I like Matt Damon so bonus point for that.
Or a running gag about a door needing to be nailed shut that plays out fully, in real time, every time.
it, it becomes little more than fan service self parody, which while admittedly a clear 10/10 on @Wibble's Star Wars rating scale, leaves you pretty numb.
Mission Impossible Rouge Nation
I've seen three mission impossible films:
Mission: Impossible - 7/10
Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol - 8/10
Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation - 9/10
As you see from the ratings I think they keep getting better and better. Loved this film. Thought the set pieces were great. Lots brilliant performances (Cruise, Ferguson, Renner, Pegg, Baldwin e.t.c.) as well and doesn't take itself too seriously whilst also managing to be very entertaining, funny and engaging.
9/10
EDIT: Much much much better than Spectre.
The Hateful Eight - 7/10...ish. Tarantino has now basically come full circle, no longer paying homage to his favourite bits of old films, but rather his favourite bits of his own films. There's a lot of fun stuff in this, but it's basically just a giant parody of Tarantino cliches, ticking off all the expected boxes with dutiful precision until it all feels a bit empty in the end.
Someone should remind him that the "bad motherfecker" standoff at the end of Pulp Fiction was no less tense and exciting because no one got shot at the end of it, and that the splatter core climax that everyone mistakenly believes is required of a Tarantino film, has only actually ever worked in Reservoir Dogs (when we were naive enough to not expect it) and is far more effective in mid-film moments, like the cafe scene in Inglorious Basterds (when we were still naive enough to not expect it) because once we expect it, it becomes little more than fan service self parody, which while admittedly a clear 10/10 on @Wibble's Star Wars rating scale, leaves you pretty numb.
Even the best scene in the film, an hilarious monologue about revenge oral sex, seems less like a part of the film itself, than a sketch he wrote years ago that's been crowbarred in. One of the players in it patently only exists to be on the receiving end of this monologue, which becomes achingly obvious later on when Tarantino has to awkwardly hand wave his reason for being there.
All of these problems could be forgiven however, if the film wasn't inexcusably long. And I'm not talking "could probably lose a line here or there" long, I mean "could easily lose half the lines from every scene, and a good 75% of it's establishing shots" long..There are times when it's almost comically indulgent. Such as a travel montage comprised of a full 6 or 7 different shots of a stagecoach moving from one side of the screen to the other over virtually identical landscapes. Or a scene where a character stares out of the window for a good 30 seconds just so he play an entire verse of an ill fitting White Stripes song for no apparent reason. Or a running gag about a door needing to be nailed shut that plays out fully, in real time, every time. Or an oddly soundtracked scene of two characters erecting tent pegs in the snow to allow them to find their way to the barn, which agonisingly details each and every single peg plant, to crazily tense horror film music, despite the fact that none of the characters ever goes back to the barn again. And that's without even getting to the dialogue excesses, or the bits where people speak in slow motion for no reason.
It's not bad by any stretch. The good is good, and the performances are pretty uniformly excellent, especially by Jackson, Goggins, Roth and Leigh, but it's not really very good either. Unless your idea of a perfect Tarantino film is a hollow parody of a Tarantino film that takes an hour to start, an hour to end, with an hour of decent fun in the middle.
I also saw it in his preferred 70mm Retrovision, which as far as I could tell, made absolutely no difference to anything, apart from the need to film 20 different shots of stagecoaches moving from one side of the screen to the other over virtually identical backgrounds to justify it.
Oh yeah don't get me wrong, I think he massively underused Morricone. Just loved that ditty.
Beautiful to look at though, right? And that soundtrack...Vertigo
Kind of unsure of what I feel about it. There's a lot of Hitchcock stuff from Psycho that I really liked...the build up of suspense, the slow reveals etc, but it started off incredibly slowly and parts of it felt...dated. I'm not sure if I was completely convinced by the whole love plot at all other than it's role as being necessary for the plot.
I liked where they were going with the ending, and thought it would be a rather fitting, ironic way for the film to finish, but the entry of the nun out of nowhere felt a bit abrupt and absurd.
Beautiful to look at though, right? And that soundtrack...
I love Vertigo so much, I reckon you'll enjoy it more on future rewatches. There's so much to invest in and enjoy there.
I assumed the ditty you were referring was a Morricone-ditty. As far as I know, everything ditty-like is Morricone. What ditty did you mean?
(that's fun to say out loud)
Definitely. It's lovely visually, and the tension is spot on, which kept me fairly hooked. I expect it's one which will probably be more rewarding on future rewatches. The fact I was watching it on putlocker probably didn't help either.![]()
At least download a DVD rip!
As seriously well made as Vertigo is, it's still just a long voyeuristic advert for San Francisco with a deeply misogynistic story at its heart. He's done more interesting films.
I felt certain characters didn't live up to the marketing.Just watched 47 Ronin, was really excited by it before it came out but the hype to see it kind of died away on release in 2013.
3 years on, looking at other reviews its apparently rubbish and a box office bomb, which was a shock to me because i thought it was a fecking good action flick. 8/10 would recommend.
Emily Blunt.Man From U.N.C.L.E. - I dont know/10 What I do know is that I actually enjoyed this more than Spectre.
Bridge of Spies - 6/10 Decent film. I never felt any sort of tension and therefore wasn't invested as much as maybe they intended.
Sicario - 8/10 Score may be a bit generous but I enjoyed this film a lot. Well acted and it reminded me of Traffic a bit. I enjoy movies that delve into the the war on drugs. I thought whats her name held her own in that role although the character was a bit annoying at times.
Yeah nothing to do with them being in a world-renowned franchise and acting in one of the most expected film in decades.