Joined: 23 Nov 2006 Age: 34 Gender: Male Posts: 72,068 Location: Portland, Oregon
18 Sep 2024, 4:36 pm
DuckHairback wrote:
Kraichgauer wrote:
Civil War.
Photojournalists at the end of a civil war in near future America race to Washington DC to get the last words of a Trump like President. Not as bad as I was told it would be.
I thought that movie was really good.
So did I. Alex Garland is a talented writer/director.
_________________ Silly NTs, I have Aspergers, and having Aspergers is gr-r-reat!
Joined: 11 Apr 2013 Gender: Male Posts: 2,069 Location: My House, US
18 Sep 2024, 5:24 pm
The Lady Vanishes (1938) on Rifftrax A great movie riffed by Matthew J. Elliot and Ian Potter, British comics. It's always strange to see a good movie being riffed, and sometimes wanting to tell the wise guys talking over the movie to "shhhh" because I cannot hear the dialog. Elliot and Ian were very funny.
In a world where people are born just not good enough for the socially accepted aesthetics, a procedure has been created to remake make the way people look into the beauty they have been raised to believe is perfection when they come of age. But unknown to them, there is a cost. However, this high tech society is at threat by a group of free thinking outsiders who believe in social cooperation and inner growth, and beauty.
I enjoyed the story. At first I thought its audience was the was as those for The Hunger Games, but that's a bit unfair. That was premature. For people with a similar mindset, the story is a bit simple, but that does not mean it is bad. I enjoyed it.
For me, the irony is all one needs to do is look at the pictures of the actors in this movie on IMDB, male or female, to see these same actors projecting a form of beauty the movie presents as superficial. However, they do this because it is expected of them by some in society.
When looking for a trailer for this movie, I noticed lots of YouTube reviews, and their clip titles were not positive. I have not watched them. I would not say this is a movie that presents deep probing questions, but it is not stupid. I cannot address the reviews until I watch them, but I'm not going to. It's their opinion. That's fine. Not everyone has the same subjective opinion for their experiences.
Arsenic and Old Lace [1944] <=>"She Passed Out On Cary ! <=+=>No Wonder . . . <=+=+=>She's just discovered his favorite aunts have poisoned their 13th gentleman friend !"
Fun comedy!<=>\o/R E C O M M E N D E D\o/
_________________ When diagnosed I bought champagne! I finally knew why people were strange.
Joined: 12 Apr 2010 Gender: Male Posts: 48,435 Location: Spokane area, Washington state.
20 Sep 2024, 2:49 pm
Double Retired wrote:
Last night we watched:
Arsenic and Old Lace [1944] <=>"She Passed Out On Cary ! <=+=>No Wonder . . . <=+=+=>She's just discovered his favorite aunts have poisoned their 13th gentleman friend !"
Fun comedy!<=>\o/R E C O M M E N D E D\o/
I watched the play live on stage a number of years ago, which was also hilarious.
_________________ -Bill, otherwise known as Kraichgauer
Joined: 12 Apr 2010 Gender: Male Posts: 48,435 Location: Spokane area, Washington state.
21 Sep 2024, 3:30 am
I Saw The TV Glow.
The movie follows Owen (who I suspect is autistic), an awkward, racially mixed individual, starting from when he was in the 7th grade, and begins a friendship with a 9th grade girl named Maddy, who both become obsessed with a late night teen oriented horror show called Pink Opaque. After his friend vanishes, he goes through life like a sleepwalker as he gets older, but always thinking about the show. Then Maddy reappears, she is convinced the show had been real, while their everyday lives was the fiction. As insane as it seemed, he found himself drawn into the same delusion. Probably not for everyone, but I found the movie engaging.
_________________ -Bill, otherwise known as Kraichgauer
Joined: 11 Apr 2013 Gender: Male Posts: 2,069 Location: My House, US
21 Sep 2024, 10:49 am
Kraichgauer wrote:
I Saw The TV Glow.
The movie follows Owen (who I suspect is autistic), an awkward, racially mixed individual, starting from when he was in the 7th grade, and begins a friendship with a 9th grade girl named Maddy, who both become obsessed with a late night teen oriented horror show called Pink Opaque. After his friend vanishes, he goes through life like a sleepwalker as he gets older, but always thinking about the show. Then Maddy reappears, she is convinced the show had been real, while their everyday lives was the fiction. As insane as it seemed, he found himself drawn into the same delusion. Probably not for everyone, but I found the movie engaging.
This sounds brilliant. And I see it is on Max. Perfect. Adding it to my watch list.
There was a time when Boris Karloff played part of Jonathan Brewster in the original Broadway play. He was played by Raymond Massey in the film.
Apparently they tried very hard to get Karloff for the movie but there was some contractual obligation preventing it. And now for something completely different BEEP And now for something completely different BEEP And now for something completely different BEEP P.S. pcgoblin, I'm glad you changed your avatar back to a self-portrait!
I've mentioned several times on WP that prior to my 64th birthday I knew virtually nothing about Autism besides having seen commercials for Rain Man. Since then I've learned more but last night we did something to fill another gap in my education.
Last night we watched:
Rain Man [1988] <=>"Charlie and Raymond. They are strangers. They are brothers. They have just met."
We both thought it was a good movie.
But, if I had seen the full movie longer ago I would've felt more strongly that I was not Autistic.
I think the movie barely reflects Autism at my spot ontheAutismSpectrum.
My bride and I both saw traces of traits that Raymond Babbitt (the Autistic character) and I have in common but those traits were much, much stronger in him than they are in me. From the commercials for the movie I felt "I am nothing like him" and now, having seen the movie, I feel "I am almost nothing like him."
Now that I know more about Autism I can see that I am Autistic. The movie would not've done that for me, though.
But since I see traces of traits that I have in common with Raymond Babbitt I have to wonder what would've happened to me I had been institutionalized when I was very young? It looks as if I would not have had a bedroom of my own where I could retreat to. It looks as if the lights would always be too bright and too ever-present. And so forth.
I wonder if the treatment I would've received for my Autism would've made me more profoundly Autistic! Would being in that institution have shaped me into a Raymond Babbitt, a less-functional Autistic created by the Autism treatment!
Oh, the movie won the 1989 Oscar for Best Picture and it got Dustin Hoffman a very much deserved Oscar for Best Actor in a Leading Role. (It also got Oscars for Best Director and for Best Writing, Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen.)
And Tom Cruise, who also did an excellent job of acting, seemed so young!
_________________ When diagnosed I bought champagne! I finally knew why people were strange.
Joined: 13 Sep 2024 Gender: Male Posts: 13 Location: Gotham city
21 Sep 2024, 7:09 pm
Batman89 Batman Returns Batman Forever The Flash
Happy Batman Day!
_________________ In Hollywood, they think drawn animation doesn't work anymore, computers are the way. They forget that the reason computers are the way is that Pixar makes good movies. So everybody tries to copy Pixar. They're relying too much on the technology and not enough on the artists.