View Full Version : Rate the last film you saw
DannyInvincible
13/01/2013, 5:08 PM
Tarantino doesn't disappoint in 'Django Unchained' either. Watched it the other eve and thought it was excellent. Very bloody and darkly humourous, naturally.
Spudulika
14/01/2013, 7:29 AM
Am a little disappointed to admit to switching off a movie after about half an hour, especially since it seems to have gotten great reviews. Was watching 7 psychopaths and smiled at some of it despite the initial bloody murders and Tarantinoesque attempts at humour (I find the man unfunny but with a great mind for music). When the old psyho cam and started telling the story about him rescuing a black girl and the subsequent murder spree, I just switched it off. I know that the new gaming culture has inured most to on screen violence and gore, but I just couldn't go on with it. Walken and Farrell looked to be good in it, but can't rate it.
passinginterest
14/01/2013, 8:21 AM
Went to see Gangster Squad last night. Really enjoyed it, good story line, nothing ground breakingly original but really well acted all around. I'd give it a highly recommended 8/10.
DannyInvincible
14/01/2013, 9:58 AM
Tarantinoesque attempts at humour (I find the man unfunny but with a great mind for music).
Tarantino? I think he comes across as a megalomaniac brat in interviews. He's better behind the camera than in front of it.
BonnieShels
14/01/2013, 12:26 PM
Tarantino doesn't disappoint in 'Django Unchained' either. Watched it the other eve and thought it was excellent. Very bloody and darkly humourous, naturally.
I always look forward to his movies. Saw the trailer before Pulp Fiction on Saturday. Made me even more excited to see it.
Spent all weekend mulling over Pulp Fiction and thinking about it. It really is the greatest.
As scripts go it's pretty bang on. And bar the one continuity error which annoys me in the restaurant it's flawless.
nigel-harps1954
14/01/2013, 3:22 PM
Watched Silver Linings Playbook the other night. Very good show. Bradley Cooper excellent in it as was Rob De Niro. Well worth a watch for anyone that hasn't seen it. 8/10
bennocelt
14/01/2013, 8:28 PM
I always look forward to his movies. Saw the trailer before Pulp Fiction on Saturday. Made me even more excited to see it.
Spent all weekend mulling over Pulp Fiction and thinking about it. It really is the greatest.
As scripts go it's pretty bang on. And bar the one continuity error which annoys me in the restaurant it's flawless.
Really? Much prefer your music picks better Bonnie:)
Think Tarantino is hugely over rated, violence and gore - yeah but that's all getting old at this stage surely? When will the man grow up a little and make a movie with some real substance?
BonnieShels
15/01/2013, 9:05 AM
Really? Much prefer your music picks better Bonnie:)
Think Tarantino is hugely over rated, violence and gore - yeah but that's all getting old at this stage surely? When will the man grow up a little and make a movie with some real substance?
You can't win em all over dude.
Seriously. Since I first saw it as a 10 yo (minus "that" scene) I've been in love with it.
I do kinda agree with your sentiment re gore, but for every Death Proof or Kill Bill there's a Jackie Brown or Inglorious.
Spudulika
16/01/2013, 8:00 PM
Only saw parts of a Tarantino movie, once, and only put it on because I thought it was going to be about boxing. When I was fast forwarding and landed on an attempt to humorise rape, I kind of realised this wasn't my kind of movie. Though I really do like the music from his movies, especially when they turn up in sports compilations or adverts for stuff later on. I wonder, though, did QT spend a long weekend hungover in Eddie Rockets flicking through jukeboxes for his inspiration.
Spudulika
20/01/2013, 9:26 PM
Zero Dark Thirty - Thursday night I decided to watch it online instead of cooking dinner, so ordered a pizza and started to watch. I got 10 minutes in and turned it off. How on earth a movie can be mainstream AND oscar nominated when it portrays illegal detention, torture and the ultimate unsanctioned and illegal state assassination, I just don't know. It'd be great to make a movie of the plotting and realisation of any number of heinous crimes, but this just disturbed me. That Bin Laden was trained and funded by the CIA, then his group used at different times, before finally he winds up in a safe house next to a US ops centre and a Pakistani military base and is murdered and dumped at sea. To when now the USA and their allies (KSA, Qatar, France UK) openly fund, arm and support al Qaeda in Syria, while opposing al Qaeda "rebels" in Mali. I just don't get it all.
BonnieShels
21/01/2013, 1:16 AM
Saw Django on Friday night.
The last 20min could have been left out to no detriment of the movie.
However... Christoph Waltz is beyond wonderful. As good as anything I've seen in years. Day-Lewis in TWBB springs to mind. He's (in)glorious.
Grafter
21/01/2013, 2:56 AM
Saw Django, well shot and entertaining even if the cartoon violence begins to lose effect after a while...
Went to see it last night. Stunning movie. With Tarantino, you know what to expect and he doesn't disappoint here. Violence, humour and slick dialogue combined with an epic soundtrack and some superb performances especially Christoph Waltz, Sam L., and DiCaprio. Just loved it though the other half found the violence and slavery stuff a bit too much for her tastes.
9/10...
nigel-harps1954
22/01/2013, 11:56 PM
Les Misérables.
What. A. Show.
Possibly one of my favourite films ever. Outstanding piece of work. Hugh Jackman was absolutely immense.
Never been so happy to put 10/10.
BonnieShels
23/01/2013, 9:17 AM
Were you watching it drinking one of your famed lattes? :P
passinginterest
23/01/2013, 11:35 AM
Were you watching it drinking one of your famed lattes? :P
To be that gushing I'd imagine there had to an iced bun involved too.
BonnieShels
23/01/2013, 11:37 AM
To be that gushing I'd imagine there had to an iced bun involved too.
Agreed. Lattes are merely a 7/10 beverage.
nigel-harps1954
23/01/2013, 3:27 PM
How dare you all. How dare you.
I had a bottle of water. None of that awful popcorn and coca-cola for me. They don't let me bring in lattes to the cinema.
BonnieShels
23/01/2013, 3:45 PM
How dare you all. How dare you.
I had a bottle of water. None of that awful popcorn and coca-cola for me. They don't let me bring in lattes to the cinema.
They do in the Lighthouse in Smithfield. Right up your alley. Incidentally it's beside an alley.
BonnieShels
28/01/2013, 12:29 PM
Right, so I saw Lincoln on Saturday night.
Wow.
DDL is incredible. To the point where you forget you're watching a movie.
Tommy Lee Jones, is well, Tommy Lee Jones and is brilliant also. Pretty much not much to complain about any of the performances.
However, the storyline involving Robert Lincoln (Joseph Gordon Levitt) is pretty week and superflous to an extent. I think a no-name actor would have been better suited to the role given that JGL is always himself in movies. Added nothing.
In true Spielberg fashion he managed to tinker and "Spielberged" the ending which annoyed the hell out of me. Just like Tarantino did with Django.
All in all a must see and there's no doubting where the best actor Oscar is going.
8/10.
Also, Django was a 7/10 for me.
theworm2345
28/01/2013, 3:28 PM
American Reunion - 7.5/10. If you liked the previous three American Pie films you'll like this one, I'd say this is maybe the second best after the first one.
Spudulika
12/02/2013, 9:46 AM
Promised Land - Matt Damon and Frances McDormand were very good in this. Gus VanSant exec produced it and Damon was co-writer. Really enjoyable, gentle movie. There is one plot addition that comes screaming off the screen and is so blindingly obvious that when the twist reveals itself, you feel a bit cheated - you feel like the makers are treating you that you're a gobdaw, yet when you realise that rather subtle twists don't go down well in the USA you understand it. Apart from that the movie is a moral tale about big business and fracking, the manipulation of corporations and how the sheep (people) can be led to the abatoir. It's something that should have played well with the academy, though since most movies get funded through energy corporations and big business, it won't get the backing. I'd recommend it for a late night viewing, just to enjoy it, just to let it wash over you. Damon is parallel to Ben Affleck in terms of development and he makes it happen. Still can't help but think of his portrayal in Team America at certain points. 7/10
Spudulika
13/02/2013, 12:06 PM
Meant to add yesterday:
The Master - Sweet holy moley. Scary, disturbing, absorbing, depressing, impressive, deflating. It's obvious what it's about, though since Phoenix was born into a cult, and a desperately destructive one, it was brave. It's not as good as Argo (imo) though it is very enthralling to just let it wash over you. Some great turns, the yummy Laura Dern rocks up, Philip Seymour Hoffman is his usual solid sleazy self and Amy Adams (who I'd not really thought of as sexy) is Nicole Kidman for a new generation. 6/10
Spudulika
14/02/2013, 6:40 PM
Say Anything - Wanted to watch it for years as I'm a big John Cusack fan. Great movie, really good acting, nice story line, very cool ending and some really surprising faces turn up (including Frasier's Dad). Soundtrack is still good, the dialogue is strong and the movie moves at a nice pace. Definitely a date movie, so long as your date watches it and doesn't announce after 10 minutes "This is a really good movie, but I'm tired. Happy Valentines Day, I'm going to bed." 7/10 (being alone on VDay evening took 1 mark off it)
tetsujin1979
14/02/2013, 11:36 PM
was at Broken earlier as part of the Dublin Film Festival, introduced by Tim Roth and Cillian Murphy
it's intense, haven't had a film affect me this much since I saw Secrets and Lies
bennocelt
15/02/2013, 4:36 AM
was at Broken earlier as part of the Dublin Film Festival, introduced by Tim Roth and Cillian Murphy
it's intense, haven't had a film affect me this much since I saw Secrets and Lies
Whats it about Tets? (two actors I really like)
tetsujin1979
15/02/2013, 10:12 AM
it's about a group of three neighbours in a cul de sac, one of the daughters tells a lie that spirals desperately out of control and leads to the breakdown of pretty much everything in the lives of those affected
DannyInvincible
26/03/2013, 12:14 PM
Watched 'Project Nim' on the BBC iPlayer yesterday and thought it fascinating. It's a documentary about a scientific experiment undertaken in the 1970s between a chimpanzee, amusingly-named Nim Chimpsky, and his various behavioural psychologist carers as the carers attempt to teach Nim human language (in the form of American Sign Language) so they can better communicate thoughts and ideas to and between one another. Nim appears to be making significant progress but the experiment is ultimately frustrated by his natural limitations. His grasp of language extends really only as far as making pragmatic signs aimed at satisfying his own immediate needs, such as "Nim wants banana". Communicating grander, more complex ideas of an abstract or metaphyiscal nature, or even just the formation of coherent grammatical sentences, seemed beyond him. Still, very interesting overall and I'd recommend giving it a look.
Eminence Grise
26/03/2013, 1:26 PM
I saw it the other day. Very interesting indeed. A little bittersweet in places as well.
I suspect the linguistic experiment has continued to the present, using basic - some might say simplistic - language construction to indicate certain rudimentary needs of the subject under scrutiny. You know, 'Trap wants Whelan', '442 good', 'punch McCarthy' etc, but more advanced cognition has largely failed to be articulated.
BonnieShels
26/03/2013, 11:48 PM
Eh...
just finished watching Drive. Am I missing something? It's been held up as some masterpiece and all I saw was a vague story of boy meets girl; boy gets involved with mobsters; boy gets girl.
And the mood making shots. Total bullplop. Sure throw in a star wipe while you're at it. Crap.
3/10
Grafter
27/03/2013, 12:37 AM
Eh...
just finished watching Drive. Am I missing something? It's been held up as some masterpiece and all I saw was a vague story of boy meets girl; boy gets involved with mobsters; boy gets girl.
And the mood making shots. Total bullplop. Sure throw in a star wipe while you're at it. Crap.
3/10
Take your point on Drive, however, got to admit the opening cinematography of LA at night was pretty cool plus the soundtrack throughout was top notch and v. atmospheric....;)
Spudulika
28/03/2013, 6:24 AM
I'm glad Broken was mentioned, one of the better movies I've seen in the last couple of years. Very emotional at times, really nice storyline running through it and women certainly don't come out of it in a good light. All said, Tim Roth is very good, the little girl who plays the lead role is excellent. Found myself clapping at the end. 8/10
Saw "Olympus has Fallen" in the cinema - holy god, what absolute rubbish, I really believe that Hollywood is intent on churning out movies for morons and the americanisation of the world is complete. The theatre was about half-full to start with, by the end there were (I counted - almost like at an LOI match) 6 people left. I figured out the following:
1. US Secret Service and police are pure useless, they need Mel Gibson to train them (a la The Patriot) or to forget the redcoat march forward and stop the bullets mentality.
2. Completely unbelievable and not in an interesting way (like the way in which Andy McDowell gets hot for Gerard the Russian).
3. Why is there such a need to show gore and murder in high def? Are people so brainless that they need to see a dying, twitching body (or knife in the brain) to know someone has expired?
4. While it was nice to see an honest black man in power in America, he also broke the code of negotiating with terrorists.
I can't go on as it's insane, completely insane. Dylan McDermott proved to be an idiot, Gerard Butler is a tryhard (and shoots girls) and Aaron Eckhardt is best remembered for spooning with Frasier.
Can't recommend this lowly enough. 2/10 (2 for the music - which is standard hollywood for any such movie, but it's nice).
tetsujin1979
29/03/2013, 5:46 PM
I'm glad Broken was mentioned, one of the better movies I've seen in the last couple of years. Very emotional at times, really nice storyline running through it and women certainly don't come out of it in a good light. All said, Tim Roth is very good, the little girl who plays the lead role is excellent. Found myself clapping at the end. 8/10
saw it at the Dublin Film Festival. The director, Tim Roth and Cillian Murphy came out to introduce it. Excellent film, how one lie snowballs to destroy three families in a cul de sac. Very hard to watch in places, but well worth it
Spudulika
29/03/2013, 8:17 PM
Agreed Tets, there are some parts where I wanted to look away, but there was something beautifully compelling about it. Cillian Murphy has become one of my favourite actors, Tim Roth I like more and more (saw him recently in Arbitrage and he was very convincing.
tetsujin1979
29/03/2013, 8:47 PM
Watched The Perks Of Being A Wallflower last night. Very good film, set in the school year after something happened to the main character over the summer.
Emma Watson does a passable American accent, among some very strong performances from the three main leads. If you liked Saved! or Charlie Bartlett, you should give this a look.
SkStu
29/03/2013, 10:55 PM
Watched The Perks Of Being A Wallflower last night. Very good film, set in the school year after something happened to the main character over the summer.
Emma Watson does a passable American accent, among some very strong performances from the three main leads. If you liked Saved! or Charlie Bartlett, you should give this a look.
The book is superb so the film let me down a bit.
Spudulika
05/04/2013, 7:46 PM
The Incredible Burt Wonderstone - I guess it can be called an assemble cast with a really sexy female support (the delicious Olivia Wilde). Not really a funny movie, but some giggles and smiles. I don't know what to make of Steve Carrell, I don't get him, he might be a good comedian but as an actor he is too wooden for my liking. Steve Buscemi is funny, the scene with him in Burma or somewhere was really good - if you see when he gives a kid a rabbit it's great. Alan Arkin is good in it, James Gandolfini is interesting and I think back to his best after the tosh that was that mafia show (only watched half an episode fully and clips of others). Jim Carrey is the scene stealer and completely mad in it. He goes back to his goofy best right at the end, but until then is superbly creepy and cool. Olivia Wilde, well, she's just a dishy Irish chick, good actress and funny. Nice cameo from Jay Mohr, but it's just a nice watch without being useful. I wouldn't see it in the cinema though.
Story - young boy finds magic helps him get friends and positive notice. He and his nerdy childhood friend become stars in Vegas. Zany rival comes on the scene, steals their thunder and then the friends fall out and lose their gig. Then they realise they're better together, the go head to head with the new rival and on you go.
tetsujin1979
06/04/2013, 12:14 PM
The Incredible Burt Wonderstone - I guess it can be called an assemble cast with a really sexy female support (the delicious Olivia Wilde). Not really a funny movie, but some giggles and smiles. I don't know what to make of Steve Carrell, I don't get him, he might be a good comedian but as an actor he is too wooden for my liking. Steve Buscemi is funny, the scene with him in Burma or somewhere was really good - if you see when he gives a kid a rabbit it's great. Alan Arkin is good in it, James Gandolfini is interesting and I think back to his best after the tosh that was that mafia show (only watched half an episode fully and clips of others). Jim Carrey is the scene stealer and completely mad in it. He goes back to his goofy best right at the end, but until then is superbly creepy and cool. Olivia Wilde, well, she's just a dishy Irish chick, good actress and funny. Nice cameo from Jay Mohr, but it's just a nice watch without being useful. I wouldn't see it in the cinema though.
Story - young boy finds magic helps him get friends and positive notice. He and his nerdy childhood friend become stars in Vegas. Zany rival comes on the scene, steals their thunder and then the friends fall out and lose their gig. Then they realise they're better together, the go head to head with the new rival and on you go.
Shirley you can't be serious?
This is 40
The sort of sequel to Knocked Up. I have a tendency to love Judd Apatows output and this was no different. Paul Rudd and Leslie Mann were excellent together. I laughed a lot. I think anyone who is married and over 30 will find this funny.
Oh and Megan Fox is immense.
Spudulika
12/06/2013, 8:57 PM
I don't know if anyone else had the misfortune to see Hangover 3, well, it's worth a look if you're drunk and have no other choice. I know it's gotten bad reviews and that it's generally poor, but there are some funny moments, except Alan is actually quite scary in it. He seems to have gone totally around the bend and just isn't as funny as the first one. Glad to have seen it end as the pretence of the movie series is good. 2/10
Also caught the movie "Phantom" online, a story about a Soviet submarine with a decent cast that seems to meander through all sorts of static moments. David Duchovny is supposed to be a KGB fanatic, Ed Harris a brain damaged submariner and SP Flannery just a body in there. Lance Henriksen is a good guy for a change, but it's just too unbelievable and would have been better with an unknown crew. From what I heard it's based on a Russian movie of the same name, though I haven't found the original. 3/10
Spudulika
16/06/2013, 7:59 AM
The Internship - Knew nothing about the movie though should have guessed from the poster I'd seen what it really was. A 2 hour infomercial w@nkfest for google. I like Owen Wilson and I like Vince Vaughan, together they're funny and I expected something light, funny and "heartwarming", by jesus was I wrong. It was $58million of google, non-stop and to the point where I looked at herself and said, "Should we leave?" That was 15minutes in. I stuck it out because while it was going to be more of the self-pleasuring mess that big corporations love, there were a couple of funny moments (in a nightclub) and I begrudged having to spend to watch an advert. Maybe I'm just not tech minded enough, but people were laughing at references to instagram and other stuff, but it was just an advert. I like my product placement subtle, interesting and not sitting on my chest hanging a golly over my open mouth. I'm being very generous in giving 0.5/10
bennocelt
07/07/2013, 9:14 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=67cMet52mL4
Still scratching my head with this one, still dont know what to think with the ending. Great movie, and proof that fact is always stranger than fiction
Spudulika
07/07/2013, 10:55 AM
World War Z - my 1st zombie movie and have to say it was okay. Moved fast, not a whole lot of gore and there were some funny parts. Set for the sequel, but hope they don't make it. Reminded me of visiting a certain town in the south of Ireland, on a midweek drinking night (Osarusan was there I believe) and the night crowd. 5/10
Still scratching my head with this one, still dont know what to think with the ending. Great movie, and proof that fact is always stranger than fiction
Saw this a few months back great show and a strange situation
DannyInvincible
10/07/2013, 1:46 PM
Watched The Hunger Games (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hunger_Games_(film)) the other evening. I thought the concept would be interesting, but found it all a bit silly once I began watching.
DannyInvincible
11/07/2013, 7:40 AM
Mesrine: Killer Instinct (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mesrine_(2008_film)) was much better. Not that the two are in any way related. It's the first of two parts about the notorious French gangster, Jacques Mesrine, who is played by the ever-excellent Vincent Cassell. Gérard Depardieu also features but Cassell really does steal the show. I think I'll watch the second part, Mesrine: Public Enemy Number One, after work tonight or else over the weekend.
shakermaker1982
15/07/2013, 5:23 PM
Danny - Have you watched the prophet or the beat that my heart skipped?
If you like French movies then both of these are a must watch.
nigel-harps1954
15/07/2013, 11:08 PM
Watched a movie last night starring Joaquin Phoenix and Phillip Seymour Hoffman last night called The Master. From 2012, written and directed by Paul Thomas Anderson, who done There Will Be Blood.
It's partly inspired by L. Ron Hubbard of Scientology fame.
The movie is based around Phoenixs character, basically being a drunk fool stumbling from place to place after coming home from the war. Hoffmans character takes him in, and transforms him, all for 'the cause'. It's where the whole scientology part comes in.
There's not a whole lot more I can say about it.
A really fantastic film, and completely worth watching. Hoffman and Phoenix are both superb in it. 100% one of the best movies of 2012. Only wish I'd watched it sooner. 10/10
Finally got around to watching Seven Psychopaths as well. Not exactly what I expected of it at all. Some great stories though, and some fabulous twists. Really well done by Martin McDonagh though. Some fantastic one-liners too. Not a glorious film by any means, but it's a good laugh all the same. 7/10.
DannyInvincible
16/07/2013, 1:43 PM
Danny - Have you watched the prophet or the beat that my heart skipped?
If you like French movies then both of these are a must watch.
Have seen A Prophet and thought it was great. Must check out the other.
Have you seen Rust and Bone (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rust_and_Bone), by the way? It's another one directed by Jacques Audiard. Saw it in the cinema a few months ago and thought very highly of it.
shakermaker1982
16/07/2013, 5:34 PM
Funnily enough I bought Rust & Bone the other day. Not got round to watching it yet but am sure it's another Audiard classic.
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