THUS FAR... Your Favorite Film(s) Released in 2006!

10 United 93
9 V for Vendetta
8 The Departed
7 A Scanner Darkly
6 Cars
5 Miami Vice
4 Superman Returns
3 Kingdom of Heaven: Director's Cut
2 Silent Hill
1 The Prestige
 
1. The Departed
2. MI3
3. The Prestige
4. V For Vendetta
5. Superman Returns

That's about all for me. Each of these films was great though.
 
No particular order:

The Departed
Superman Returns
V for Vendetta
MI3
Silent Hill
Clerks 2
Fearless
The Hill Have Eyes

Crank was a fun movie too.

I think I may be forgetting some movies, but it's late, so I can't think straight in the first place.

I'm going to try to see The Prestige this weekend, so maybe I'll be adding that to the list.
 
Just got back from The Prestige. It's one of my favorite films of 06.
 
2006 has been a crap year so I don't have many....

1. Fearless
2. The Departed
So I finally got around to seeing The Departed last night. I had heard all the great things about the movie and that it had various plot twists and turns. I avoided all discussion threads about it and all spoilers for the last couple of weeks so I could go in fresh. I was really into the movie and loving it (great performances all-around by everyone involved) but throughout so many scenes seemed familiar to me and I couldn't put my finger on it. Then about 2/3 through the damn movie it hit me like a sack of hammers and I kicked myself for not noticing before that it was basically a remake of a great HK movie Infernal Affairs. That pretty much ruined it for me because I knew everything that was about to go down in the end and all the twists and turns that I heard about were pretty much spoiled (a couple of things were different though). I just couldn't believe it took me that long to notice.

And while I think Scorcese did a great job with the Americanized version seeing IA remade so soon by Hollywood kind of ticked me off a bit. At least they did it right though.
 
hitmanyr2k said:
2006 has been a crap year so I don't have many....

1. Fearless
2. The Departed
So I finally got around to seeing The Departed last night. I had heard all the great things about the movie and that it had various plot twists and turns. I avoided all discussion threads about it and all spoilers for the last couple of weeks so I could go in fresh. I was really into the movie and loving it (great performances all-around by everyone involved) but throughout so many scenes seemed familiar to me and I couldn't put my finger on it. Then about 2/3 through the damn movie it hit me like a sack of hammers and I kicked myself for not noticing before that it was basically a remake of a great HK movie Infernal Affairs. That pretty much ruined it for me because I knew everything that was about to go down in the end and all the twists and turns that I heard about were pretty much spoiled (a couple of things were different though). I just couldn't believe it took me that long to notice.

And while I think Scorcese did a great job with the Americanized version seeing IA remade so soon by Hollywood kind of ticked me off a bit. At least they did it right though.
You mean you didn't know it was a remake going into it? I thought that was common knowledge for months.
 
ToddIsDead said:
You mean you didn't know it was a remake going into it? I thought that was common knowledge for months.

Nope, I was a virgin going into The Departed. All I knew was this movie had gotten great reviews and was getting great word-of-mouth at my job. It was tough avoiding all of the discussion threads for 2 weeks to avoid spoilers but I did it.
 
Seen lots this year.

Underworld Evolotion
POTC 2
Snakes on a Plane
Click
X-men 3
V for Vendetta
Silent Hill
United 93
 
Clerks II, Inside Man, Snakes on a Plane, and Superman Returns are the only movies I've seen this year that have actually entertained me. :csad:

V For Vendetta was okay, but a major letdown. I still enjoyed it, though.

Da Vinci Code, Pirates of the Caribbean 2, and X-Men 3 all disappointed. :down
 
I'd like to add another movie to my list and it's my #3 at the moment:

"The belief in a supernatural source of evil is not necessary; men alone are quite capable of every wickedness. "

- Joseph Conrad (author of "Heart of Darkness")

"The Last King of Scotland" is a compelling look at one of the most brutal dictators in recent history through the eyes of a young Scottish Doctor Nicholas Garrigan (James McAvoy). When we first meet Garrigan, he has just graduated from medical school and is now a doctor, just like his father. Garrigan decides to go work for a mission "hospital" in Uganda to escape and experience life outside Scotland. At the same time he arrives, the president of Uganda is ousted by the military, led by Idi Amin. Garrigan is entranced by Amin and at first glance, who cannot? He's certainly a charming individual who seems very "of the people". Garrigan then becomes Amin's personal physician by mere coincidence when Amin requires medical attention. Garrigan's impetuousness and the fact that he's Scottish catch the eye of Idi Amin. The young doctor soon enjoys his life as the personal physician because of all the luxury provided by Amin. Only after time, do we, the audience, as well as Garrigan realize how monstrous Idi Amin. When Garrigan learns from Amin that he cannot leave Uganda. he races to find a way out of the dictator's grip before he himself is killed and fed to the crocodiles.
James McAvoy, fresh from his days as a faun in "The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe", portrays Nicholas Garrigan as a naive individual who lets his trusting nature get the best of him. McAvoy does a wonderful job at portraying this individual, but Forest Whitaker is the real star of the show. It's his best performance I've seen so far and certainly deserves an Academy Award. Whitaker has outdone himself with the portrayal of Amin as a paranoid, psychotic monster who believes traitors surround him (which explains why members of his own cabinet start disappearing). I myself have never been really terrified of any character of any movie as much as I have of Idi Amin. What's more terrifying is that he existed and that more people like him still exist. So props to director Kevin MacDonald for bringing us a film that showcases one of humanity's worst. It's an effective movie that'll stay with you, even after the end credits.
 
1. The Prestige
2. Superman Returns
3. United 93
4. V for Vendetta

Haven't seen The Departed yet.
 
1.The Prestige
2.Inside Man
3.V For Vendetta
4.Pirates of the Carribean: Dead Man's Chest
5.Clerks II
6.Superman Returns
7.X-Men: The Last Stand
8.Talledega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby
9.Mission: Impossible III


I have not seen The Departed yet, but I probably will see it on DVD/Pay-Per-View/etc. so it'll be ok.

Those 9 are the only ones I can think of currently.


CAH
 
here are the movies i'd probably watch again. good or better.
  1. The Prestige
  2. The Departed
  3. The Proposition
  4. A Scanner Darkly
  5. The Black Dahlia
  6. The Devil and Daniel Johnston
  7. Art School Confidential
  8. Brick
  9. B.I.K.E.
  10. The Illusionist
  11. Lady in the Water
  12. A Prairie Home Companion
  13. The Hills Have Eyes
  14. Three Burials for Melquiades Estrada
  15. Running Scared
  16. The Last Kiss
  17. The Da Vinci Code
  18. Intellectual Property
  19. Down in the Valley
I can't guarantee that they're all 2006 tho.
 
I really wanted to see Three Burials... I think it's at Wal-Mart for $10 now. :o
 
So far in no particular order :
The Prestige
The Departed
Superman Returns
Over the Hedge
The Illusionist
United 93
 
1. The Departed
2. Munich
3. Little Miss Sunshine
4. Talladega Nights: The Ballad Of Ricky Bobby

Still waiting on a few to come out in Aus.
 
No particular order:
United 93
The Departed
The Prestige
Superman Returns (just the sentimental side of me)
Brick (or was that an '05 movie?)
The Last Kiss
Inside Man
V For Vendetta
Silent Hill

I think Hollywoodland, Pan's Labyrinth, The Fountain and possibly Jesus Camp would make that list though.
 
ToddIsDead said:
No particular order:

The Departed
Superman Returns
V for Vendetta
MI3
Silent Hill
Clerks 2
Fearless
The Hill Have Eyes

Crank was a fun movie too.

I think I may be forgetting some movies, but it's late, so I can't think straight in the first place.

I'm going to try to see The Prestige this weekend, so maybe I'll be adding that to the list.
The Prestige has definitely been added to my list. That movie was awesome.

And I forgot to mention Silent Hill. I enjoyed that too.
 
I didn't have the fortune of seeing good ol' Clerks II unfortunately so I don't have that one on my list yet (though I know one day it will be), so the only stand outs thus far are:

1. Little Miss Sunshine
2. Thank You For Smoking
3. The Prestige
4. V For Vendetta
5. Hollywoodland
6. The Departed (why so low? Because while good, I felt the ending was poorly done and Jack hammed it up too much but since it is Scorcesse the flaws were allowed to slide)
7. A Prarie Home Companion
8. Flags of Our Fathers

The worst movies I've seen this year are X3, The Hills Have Eyes, Silent Hill, Date Movie (ugh!), The Black Dahila and Man of the Year. Most of the summer mush was okay but not great but not terrible either (POTC2, Superman Returns, Lady in the Water, etc).

P.S. Munich and The Matador were 2005 movies by the way.
 
Best Films: V, Superman, Little Miss Sunshine, Jackass 2, Prestige (#1)

Worst Films: Silent Hill
 

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