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Movies, recently seen (Read 57205 times)
Brian Ross
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Re: Movies, recently seen
Reply #510 - Nov 26th, 2023 at 12:21pm
 
Tunes of Glory is a 1960 British drama film directed by Ronald Neame, starring Alec Guinness and John Mills, featuring Dennis Price, Kay Walsh, John Fraser, Duncan MacRae, Gordon Jackson and Susannah York.[2] It is based on the 1956 novel and screenplay by James Kennaway. The film is a psychological drama focusing on events in a wintry Scottish Highland regimental barracks in the period immediately following the Second World War.[3] Writer Kennaway served with the Gordon Highlanders, and the title refers to the bagpiping that accompanies every important action of the battalion.

Guinness and Mills apparently tossed a coin to see who would play which major role.  Made after Bridge on the River Kwai, Guinness ended up playing the role of Major Jock Sinclair, DSO, MM and Mills ended up playing the role of Lieutenant Colonel Basil Barrow.  Sinclair is completely different to Nicholson from Kwai.  He is the Battalion commander who rose to the rank after El Alamein and leads the battalion "from Normandy to Berlin" and Barrow is a university graduate who after brief service at the Battalion has been assigned to various staff duties for most of his career.  Nicholson resents being passed over for command and Barrow, the grandson of the regiment's founder was a prisoner of the Japanese during sustained himself with idea that he would return one day to command his grandfather's regiment.

Conflict grows between the two but they get along until Jock upon discovering his daughter Morag with her boyfriend a Piper in the Regiment.  Jock incensed at this strikes the Corporal piper publicly and knocks him unconscious.  The Pipe-Major reports it to Barrow who commits Jock to a Court-Martial  Resentment grows amongst the officers and Jock is accorded loyality.  Barrow offers an olive branch and Jock accepts it and lords it over him in the Mess.  This drives Barrow to commit suicide.  Jock on seeing the body declares that it "is not the body that frightens him but the ghost!" And flees.  Several days later Jock holds a Orders Group with all the officers, outlining the funeral arrangements and suffers a breakdown and is driven away.   A good movie to watch, it acquaints one with the hierarchy of a Scots regiment and how it works.  Guinness and Mills excel in their roles.  9 out 10. Cool
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Re: Movies, recently seen
Reply #511 - Nov 26th, 2023 at 1:06pm
 

The Outfit
(2022)


I watched this last night, on Netflix (I think?).

...

Leonard (Mark Rylance), a master English tailor who's ended up in Chicago, operates a corner tailor shop with his assistant (Zoey Deutch) where he makes beautiful clothes for the only people around who can afford them: a family of vicious gangsters. One night, two killers (Dylan O'Brien, Johnny Flynn) knock on his door in need of a favor - And Leonard is thrust onto the board in a deadly game of deception and murder.

It's basically a one-set play, and it was actually filmed inside a theatre.

Not a bad little movie, if you like the old classics.

I enjoyed it a lot.    9/10
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Reply #512 - Nov 27th, 2023 at 7:20pm
 
...

American Homeric.
The telling is all. If it was about just the action it would have been the the standard 85 mins.
But it isn't just about the action. Di Caprio is Brando's successor.
This is theatre on an epic scale. Shakespearean American cinema.
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Reply #513 - Nov 30th, 2023 at 4:55pm
 


Robocop

Story about a police officer who gets shot (and presumably killed) in the line of duty. Officer Alex Murphy has his resurrection moment as a cyborg. He is put back on duty as a police officer with seemingly unstoppable part man/part machine.

Omni Consumer Products (OCP) is a corporation on the verge of taking over a decaying Detroit. With a crime lord, Clarence Boddicker, tearing up the city, Detroit's Metro Police are losing the war against gangs. Senior President Dick Jones is looking at deploying his ED209 urban pacification droids across the city (and later nationwide). However, a glitch causes a malfunction in his prototype that leads to a fatality.

Taking (unsympathetic) advantage of the tragedy, junior executive Bob Morton offers to put forward a cyborg project, called "Robocop", to be the alternative. Upon officer Murphy's death, the opportunity comes to fruition. Officer Murphy is a family man with strong religious convictions and a strong desire to do justice to Detroit. When he is resurrected as a cyborg, he commits to his job. However, Robocop/Murphy has not lost sight of his humanity and seeks to recall what his life was like before he originally 'died'.

Quite an excellent movie for 1987. The sci-fi/drama element mixed well with the action. The musical score is very ominous and sometimes haunting. A recommended movie for people who like cyborg movies.
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Reply #514 - Dec 2nd, 2023 at 8:29pm
 
Inkheart is a 2008 fantasy adventure film  starring Brendan Fraser, Paul Bettany, Helen Mirren, Jim Broadbent, Andy Serkis, and Eliza Bennett. It is based on Cornelia Funke's 2003 novel of the same name.

It centres around Brendan Fraser's character as a "Silvertongue" a person who can read situations and characters out of books into real life.  He is searching for a book, Inkheart and along the way encounters various characters from the book.  In addition there is Helen Mirren's character, an Aunt to his daughter and his wife who is missing, apparently read into the book.  However, it turns out that she was only there temporarily, being read back out again by a Silvertongue with a stutter that means she no longer has a voice of her own. Capricorn, the villain doesn't know who she is and has her working as a servant in his castle.  Capricorn  wants a fluent Silvertongue to read "The Shadow" a vast monster who serves him in the book, out of the book to control the world.  Fraser refuses and Capricorn conscripts Maggie, Fraser's daughter who also has the gift, having discovered the identity of Maggie's mother.  As in all such movies there is a final battle which Fraser and family win.  A good family movie, well worth watching.  Helen Mirren shines along with  Jim Broadbent, both playing quirky characters. 8 out of 10. Smiley

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Re: Movies, recently seen
Reply #515 - Dec 3rd, 2023 at 9:53pm
 
In the Land of Saints and Sinners


"Oh no!!" I hear you say ... yet another Liam Neeson tough guy action movie?!!

But wait! This movie is way better than most of his latest efforts.

Set in an Irish village in County Donegal in 1974, a newly-retired assassin finds himself drawn into a lethal game of cat and mouse with a trio of vengeful terrorists.

Some great acting in this, and as a bonus: the Irish coastline and beautiful rugged countryside is well shot.

Jack Gleeson who played Joffrey Baratheon in Game of Thrones puts in a good performance here too.

Well worth a look.



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Re: Movies, recently seen
Reply #516 - Dec 4th, 2023 at 5:30pm
 


i am sam

I watched this movie on television, last night. Available to watch on dvd for the past 20 years, I never bothered to view the movie until last night. But, it was a hell of a tear-jerker movie. The basic premise of the movie was about an intellectually impaired man having to be a sole parent to a daughter, in the years after the mother abandons them both after the birth.

Sean Penn plays the role of "Sam". Dakota Fanning plays the 6/7-year-old daughter, Lucy. Lucy grows up to be about as intellectually intelligent as her father. Sam, has the intelligence of a 7-year-old. It becomes apparent to Lucy's teacher that Lucy is holding herself back in her learning, so that she does not feel that she has become smarter than her father.

Child protection authorities are called to take Lucy out of Sam's care. Sam is then forced to find a lawyer (although a lawyer would be provided if he could not find a lawyer). Somehow, an erratic, jaded lawyer, Rita Harrison (played by Michelle Pfeiffer) decides to take Sam's case pro-bono. Rita having marriage trouble and problems trying to reconnect with her son, seems to want to prove something to her associates by taking this case.

You feel the tension of Sam trying to make a case for why he should be able to take care of Lucy, instead of allowing Lucy to be adopted into a loving family. However, the movie shows that there is no villain of the story. Everyone involved in the case is looking for the best outcome for Lucy.
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Reply #517 - Dec 5th, 2023 at 4:04pm
 
Fairy Tale: A True Story - a 1997 fantasy drama film directed by Charles Sturridge and produced by Bruce Davey and Wendy Finerman. It is loosely based on the story of the Cottingley Fairies, and follows two children in 1917 England who take a photograph soon believed to be the first scientific evidence of the existence of fairies. It stars Florence Hoath, Elizabeth Earl, Paul McGann, Phoebe Nicholls, Peter O'Toole, Harvey Keitel, Bill Nighy, Bob Peck, Tim McInnerny and a brief appearance by Mel Gibson.

Early 20th-century Europe was a time and a place rife with conflicting forces, from the battlefields of World War I to the peaceful countryside of rural England. Scientific advances such as electric light and photography appeared magical to some; spiritualism was championed by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle while his friend Harry Houdini decried false mediums who prey upon grieving families. J.M. Barrie's Peter Pan charmed theatergoers of all ages. Young Frances Griffiths, whose father is missing in action, arrives by train to stay with her cousin Elsie Wright in rural Bradford, West Yorkshire.  There she and her cousin take some photos of fairies which cause a sensation in English society.

Peter O'Tool appears as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Harvey Keitel as Harry Houdini, Paul McGan as the girls' father and Bill Nighy as Edward Gardner,  Mel Gibson appears in a cameo appearance as the father of cousin Frances Griffiths, Sergeant Major Griffiths home from the front.   Overall a good family movie which was recommended to me by my daughter well worth watching for the fine ensemble cast.  9 our 10. Smiley
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Re: Movies, recently seen
Reply #518 - Dec 5th, 2023 at 4:36pm
 
BlueBack - An Aussie movie.

I really liked it.
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Reply #519 - Dec 9th, 2023 at 2:45pm
 
The Way Ahead - is a British Second World War drama film directed by Carol Reed. The screenplay was written by Eric Ambler and Peter Ustinov. The film stars David Niven, Stanley Holloway and William Hartnell along with an ensemble cast of other British actors, including Ustinov in one of his earliest roles. The Way Ahead follows a group of civilians who are conscripted into the British Army and, after training, are shipped to North Africa where they are involved in a battle against the Afrika Korps.

It traces their enlistment from conscription through training until they fight a battle against the Afrika Korps.  Niven was already a qualified officer having been commissioned in 1930 before going to Hollywood.  Here he plays a newly commissioned officer commanding his first platoon with a regular NCO at his side with a platoon of new recruits.  Fletcher, the Sergeant meets the men first on a train platform in a station tea room where one, drunk spills his tea on him.  Based on a previous film that was made for the Army, called "The New Lot" it uses some of the same actors and scenes including notably John Laurie of Dad's Army fame.  Fletcher doesn't hold it against them, despite their imaginings.  Anyway, Fletcher actually likes them and recommends one, Lloyd for promotion to corporal.  Before that can happen though, Lloyd shames himself during an exercise when he exposes himself in order to be "killed" and get out of more work.   Perry realises what has happened and points out that they have inherited a history on their cap badges with the unit's battle honours on it.  They realise their mistake and work harder.

The first they hear about going overseas to battle is when they board ship.  On their journey they are torpedoed and their ship sunk, with Fletcher being trapped below decks by shifting cargo.  They rescue him and go ashore in French North Africa where they encounter Rispoli, a local cafe owner who is initially hostile to their presence.  They draw him out by introducing him to darts which he excels at.  The Germans then attack.  They repel the initial attack but are force to withdraw to the village to take shelter.  Rispoli despite his protests that he is a pacifist helps by putting alcohol in a Vickers gun that has run dry.   Here we see them properly using a Vickers gun, a 6 Pdr, and all their weapons.  They finally repulse the Germans, advancing into some smoke with the comment that this the beginning, rather than the end.  The final scene is remade at the end of each episode of Dad's Army when the Home Guard advance.  A good movie, well worth watching, 10 out 10. Smiley
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Reply #520 - Dec 11th, 2023 at 3:53pm
 
Sunset is a 1988 American crime mystery western film written and directed by Blake Edwards and starring Bruce Willis as Western actor Tom Mix, who teams up with lawman Wyatt Earp, portrayed for the second time in a theatrical film by James Garner. Based on an unpublished novel by Rod Amateau, the plot has Earp and Mix solve a murder in Hollywood in 1929.

The film rollicks along in typical Blake Edwards style with Bruce Willis proving he can actually act and James Garner shows he is a master at this game.  They trade barbs based on their characters' reputations, nar "a lie or two".  Neither takes their reputation terribly seriously and each plays up to it when they feel like.  It also has Patricia Hodge, the "Portia of our chambers," from Rumpole of the Bailey as an English actress who is married to a Chaplinesque character who is the villain of the film.  Alfie Alperin  runs his own studio and is a sadist.  He has murdered his first wife and is now married to Hodge. His sister is a Lesbian sadist as well who murders the woman who witnessed his foul deed.  The woman's daughter, Cheryl King who is 26 years of age, teams with Garner’s character and Willis.  Together they run across the crooked police and the local gangsters.  There is plenty of fistfights and why you should never cross a man with a gun during a fight.  When Garner threatens to kill you know it isn’t a threat but a promise.  Willis is semi-convincing as Mix and proves he can ride a horse.  A moderately good movie, 8 out of 10, well worth watching to pass an hour or two.
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Reply #521 - Dec 11th, 2023 at 4:22pm
 

Leave the World Behind is a 2023 American apocalyptic psychological thriller film produced, written and directed by Sam Esmail. It is based on the 2020 novel of the same name by Rumaan Alam. The film stars Julia Roberts, Mahershala Ali, Ethan Hawke, Myha'la, and Kevin Bacon as they attempt to make sense of the gradual breakdown in phones, television and technology which points to a potential cataclysm.

Leave the World Behind had its world premiere at the AFI Fest on October 25, 2023. It was released in select theaters on November 22, 2023, before its streaming release by Netflix on December 8, 2023.


I watched it last night, and thoroughly enjoyed it.

8.5/10

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Re: Movies, recently seen
Reply #522 - Dec 11th, 2023 at 7:23pm
 
greggerypeccary wrote on Dec 11th, 2023 at 4:22pm:
Leave the World Behind is a 2023 American apocalyptic psychological thriller film produced, written and directed by Sam Esmail. It is based on the 2020 novel of the same name by Rumaan Alam. The film stars Julia Roberts, Mahershala Ali, Ethan Hawke, Myha'la, and Kevin Bacon as they attempt to make sense of the gradual breakdown in phones, television and technology which points to a potential cataclysm.

Leave the World Behind had its world premiere at the AFI Fest on October 25, 2023. It was released in select theaters on November 22, 2023, before its streaming release by Netflix on December 8, 2023.


I watched it last night, and thoroughly enjoyed it.

8.5/10


I agree, a good movie and worth the watch!
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Re: Movies, recently seen
Reply #523 - Dec 11th, 2023 at 8:07pm
 
Napoleon.

5/10

I am surprised that Ridley Scott has put his name to it. Yes, the material is rich beyond the scope of cinema but then that gives an artist a depth of material from which to make his own canvas. I have no idea what Ridley Scott wanted to show with this movie.
Joachim Phoenix is a significant actor but he is no Bonaparte.
Vanessa Kirby (splendid as Princess Margaret in The Crown) is no Josephine.

Characterisation- negligible
Historical accuracy - negligible
Dramatic drive - negligible.

Costumes, sets, music - great.
Cinematography, special effects - splendid.




Read War and Peace instead.
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Reply #524 - Dec 13th, 2023 at 12:20pm
 
Speaking of Ridley Scott, I watched Gladiator again the other day.

Very good movie (despite that gas bottle on the chariot blunder).  Smiley
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