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(, Sun 1 Apr 2001, 1:00)
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It was rather good.
My vote might have to be 1985 - purely for back to the future. Or the year before for breakfast club. My all-time favourite film ever is rear Window, but I don't know what year that came out, and I can't be arsed to check.
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 8:58, 2 replies, latest was 15 years ago)
/geek
Good call, by the way. My second-favourite Hitchcock after Vertigo
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:00, Reply)
though surprisingly, I may be the only person in the world ever who hasn't seen It's A Wonderful Life.
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:03, Reply)
seeing classic films is so mainstream. ;)
Harvey was good. I concur.
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:06, Reply)
but I haven't seen Godfather or Rambo either. I have had to sit through a couple of Rocky films, which are tedious in the extreme.
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:11, Reply)
but as you can see from Darth's reaction, people think you are a freak if you haven't seen them.
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:14, Reply)
Even the third one, it's not as bad as people make out. I'm actually surprised you've managed to avoid Rocky; the first two are excellent, the third is decent and the fourth is fun (but a bit shit). Five is shocking and the most recent one is good, but only in a nostalgic way.
The Rambo films are crap aftr First Blood, if I'm honest
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:17, Reply)
I only saw the Usual Suspects in 2004 or thereabouts.
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:19, Reply)
I now can't watch that, fight club, se7en or the crying game. Or watch the mousetrap.
Too many surprise twists given away.
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:21, Reply)
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:22, Reply)
so shut your fucking face
edit: I can't remember what film ^this is from
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:25, Reply)
Are you actually saying Se7en and Fight Club aren't decent films? Cos that would make you an absolute fucktard
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:31, Reply)
Se7en is an absolute masterpiece, even if you know how it ends
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:22, Reply)
especially when I know how it ends.
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:29, Reply)
the enjoyment for me is from watching the story unfold, not from seeing how it ends.
same with books, which is why I can reread stuff over and over.
I enjoy the use of language or direction or whatever, not just the end result of the story.
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:32, Reply)
as usual I am in absolute accord with him here. Se7en is a director's masterclass, all the more amazing considering it was Fincher's second film, and Alien3 hardly counts as he wasn't given editorial control and washed his hands of the whole affair later.
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:34, Reply)
I still maintain it is a great film, but just doesn't quite hold up against the first two
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:35, Reply)
and it's hard to imagine that anything could have reached the ridiculously high standards set previously. I think the revisionist opinion of it is that this is where the downward spiral towards easy-money sequels began
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:44, Reply)
and it *does* have MoreThan Freeman in it. I may have to look into this.
I can't go to the cinema though, as crippling arthritis means that I have to get up and stretch my legs after about half an hour, and some people don't like that.
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:39, Reply)
and having suffered through a million lit classes at university, I have realised that looking at the mechanics of a story completely spoils it for me. It's like knowing how the rabbit gets in the hat. Takes the shine off.
Now when I watch films, I generally check my brain at the door.
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:36, Reply)
partly because I have a strong belief that an awful lot of stuff is written with very little underlying meaning and that it is ascribed later by wankers who are trying to be intellectual.
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:38, Reply)
(this may be bollocks, I developed a lasting distaste for Shakespeare after being repeatedly told about the multiple subtexts of Henry IV part I during GCSE English)
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:42, Reply)
As is The Philadelphia Story, and The Naked Spur.
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:09, Reply)
but The Philadelphia Story is wonderful. As is High Society, which is fun and fluffy.
I also only saw True Grit the other week, and I quite enjoyed that.
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:15, Reply)
Due to a very low tolerance for John Wayne in anything other than The Searchers. I fucking love High Society, I know it's not as good a film as The Philadelphia Story but, as you can imagine, I'm a sucker for Sinatra
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:20, Reply)
Bing all the way!
This is why I always maintain that Katherine Hepburn was a better actress than Grace Kelly. Hepburn had to pretend that Cary Grant was better than jimmy Stewart (hard) but Kelly had to turn down Sinatra for Crosby (easy).
I have odd taste in men. See mr b3th for details.
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:27, Reply)
Excellent criteria. I don't think it's necessarily that tricky to maintain that Katherine Hepburn was a better actress than virtually anyone, though - and for those who dissent, I would refer them to Bringing Up Baby
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:29, Reply)
Particularly the westerns. I will always watch Shenandoah when it is on. He was a real man too, having flown in bombers during the war.
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:20, Reply)
In other news, I have my laptop on the desk in front of my monitor (can't use the PC while it's doing some kind of update nonsense) and I keep trying to use the mouse and wondering why it isn't working.
I should add 'spaz' to the above list.
(, Thu 24 Feb 2011, 9:14, Reply)
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