What was the last movie you watched? Part 2

Time Cut (2024)
Molly and Lawless John (1972)
J'ai perdu Albert / I Lost Albert (2018)
Gli fumavano le Colt... lo chiamavano Camposanto / They Call Him Cemetery (1971)
Le jour de gloire / The Day of Glory (1976)
Sei bounty killers per una strage / Six Bounty Killers for a Massacre (1973)
Armageddon Time (2022)
Shotgun (1955)
Kimitachi wa dô ikiru ka / The Boy and the Heron (2023)
The Great Jesse James Raid (1953)
Freelance (2023)
The Killer's Game (2024)
Daan san nam nui / Don't Go Breaking My Heart (2011)
Yau lung hei fung / Look for a Star (2009)
The Last Stop in Yuma County (2023)
The Wrong Todd (2018)
The Wrath of Becky (2023)
 
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(2024) Nobody Dumps My Daughter
9/10

A 2024 memorable great True Crime Lifetime movie that is similar to The Fugitive, Marked For Death, Detroit Rock City, Iron Will, Remember The Titans, (1996) Fear, POTC Curse Of The Black Pearl, Anacondas The Hunt For The Blood Orchid, The Boondock Saints, Casino, The Untouchables, Any Given Sunday, The Replacements, and other movies that use sensible literal titles that leave less to the imagination.

Jimmy breaks up with Theresa except the overbearing mother Mary won't accept the relationship is over.
The movie focuses on dark themes mainly a mother who goes overboard with her actions to attempt to get Jimmy back with Theresa which is very similar to David crossing lines to rekindle the relationship with Nicole in (1996) Fear.
I did enjoy this True Crime Drama movie has Theresa criticizing the inane destructive belief that a female's virginity can be restored by murdering the guy that took her virginity since that's something that can't get undone much like the first car a person drives after getting his or her driver's license.

While it's never stated Mary is most likely motivated by anger because she knows that Theresa losing her virginity to Jimmy isn't negative because it was consensual sex instead of the nonsensical belief that Jimmy did something predatory or dishonorable for removing Mary's virginity.

The movie provides a believable reason why Jimmy breaks up with Mary, and because of great writing, it is a smooth breakup.
Great messages in a movie that deals with dark topics, good dialogue, memorable lines, and fleshed-out characters that consistently act realistic in this True Crime drama movie, a strong conflict that can't be easily resolved, a variety of locations, a suspenseful climax with high stakes, and a satisfying open ending.

This is a True Crime Drama Lifetime movie terrifying Hit Man killing a character with a handgun which is a strength that it doesn't hold back similar to (1987) Robocop, The Running Man, Marked For Death, (1989) The Punisher, Die Hard, etc.
Anything that should be explained does get explained, and it's entirely believable why 1 main character betrays another main character because refusal would result in an undesirable long-term drawback.

Jimmy and Theresa are both shown to be realistic likable characters, and Mary is a fleshed-out terrifying character so while it will be predictable that Mary will be crossing lines of no return, although that doesn't change it's still very entertaining.
 
The Secret of Seagull Island (1982)

Despite sounding like an Enid Blyton adventure, this Italian/UK co-production is actually a murder/mystery. Originally made as a TV series called simply Seagull Island, it was later released as a feature film, with the whole five episodes trimmed to a 1hr 42 mins runtime. Barbara - an English woman - receives a letter from her sister, Marianne, asking her to travel to Italy and meet her in Rome. When Barbara arrives she finds Marianne has booked out of her hotel unexpectedly, leaving no message. She enlists British Consul Martin to help search, and discovers Marianne may have travelled to Naples with English ex-pat millionaire David Malcom. However, Marianne is blind - and recent unsolved murders of other blind women lead Barbara and Martin to fear for her safety.

The three leads are British - Jeremy Brett (David Malcolm), Prunella Ransome (Barbara), and Nicky Henson (Martin). The rest of the cast are almost all Italian, with several faces/names familiar from genre/exploitation films of the 70s and 80s. The basic story's not bad, and the leads are good. However, it suffers badly from having so much material cut, leaving some continuity not making sense (e.g. characters suddenly changing location), as well as dialogue obviously having been removed within scenes. Still, Brett manages to be as riveting as ever (four years later he would become immortalised as arguably the definitive Sherlock Holmes). There's very little gore (although we do get a pretty convincing shot of an eyeless corpse weighed down underwater by a concrete block), and almost no nudity. However, the stunning underwater photography deserves a mention, as does the score (by well-known UK TV theme composer, Tony Hatch). 4.5/10
 
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Husband, Father, Killer: The Alyssa Pladl Story
8/10

The literal title of this movie leaves no doubt that the husband and father Steven played greatly by Matthew MacCaull is a fleshed-out character that the audience is supposed to hate, and the focus is on Alyssa Pladl.

The movie explains anything that should be explained including giving her a realistic convincing explanation for why exactly Steven and Alyssa give up their daughter Katie, who as a result got raised by parents that aren't her biological parents.

This is a Ripped From The Headlines Lifetime Crime Drama movie that doesn't hold back from showing that Steven is an irredeemable cunning nefarious awful character much like Max Caddy from the great remake of Cape Fear or Freddy Krueger from (1984) A Nightmare on Elm Street.
The movie does give critical information that prevents him from being a terrible written ridiculous irredeemable nefarious character which is needed because this is a Ripped From The Headlines True Crime movie so Steven and the other main characters need to be believable realistic characters.

Even though it's known what is going to happen in the climax that doesn't change this is a well-written True Crime Drama movie that has an entertaining suspenseful climax.

I did enjoy that when the youngest daughter asks why is it against the law as in incest, the older daughter gives a flimsy answer "Because it is" since the youngest daughter calls out this very flimsy answer by saying "That's not a really good answer."
That is why it is not shoehorned in that the mother Alyssa explains to her inquisitive youngest daughter that a parent decides to get together with the child to have a serious relationship which isn't right since it's the parent that is making that decision which makes it the parent's fault.
Alyssa was explaining to her 2 daughters why the move was happening since Steven getting together with his biological daughter Katie is entirely wrong and against the law which is why she reported that information to the local police.
As a result, the youngest daughter got a strong answer involving substance instead of something equally as weak because "I said so" for the reason instead of a person being able to explain his or her answer.

The 2 daughters are distinguishable characters, also the actor playing the youngest daughter succeeds with good acting because she didn't have to carry the movie, and solid screenwriting since the screenwriter didn't make her an unlikable kid character.

This is a crime drama movie that deals with the dark topics of first-degree murder, suicide, incest, an abusive father, and a cunning father who knows how to take advantage of an impressionable teenager that is Katie to get exactly what he wants from her.

It isn't rose-colored glasses or ridiculous that Alyssa does find happiness with the right guy after leaving Steven since she sees the red flags that he is a dangerous man similar to other abusive husbands from Sleeping With The Enemy, Enough, etc.

The casting is great because it's very believable that Katie is Alyssa's daughter since she has the same wavy hair, also her hair is black which is the same hair color as her mother's.

Katie remains a likable character who has to deal with the aftermath after her eyes are opened that her serious relationship with Steven is disreputable, wrong, illegal, and condemnable.
Also, the movie shows her to be angry and sad since she understands that her father took advantage of her using cunning mostly and because she participated in the condemnable incest relationship.
Since she and the father were both arrested which is the believable reason for why her eyes opened is that her father took advantage of her resulting in an incest relationship which is the reason she is made aware of why she and Steve were arrested.

The movie doesn't preach to the audience to dislike Katie after the incest relationship happens, or continue to like her since the screenwriter respects the audience to come to their conclusions even though most likely she'll remain in the likable protagonist category because of being fooled and taken advantage of similar to a Swinder that tricks people to obtain a vast amount of cash illegally with cunning deceit.




Her dad who isn't the biological parent isn't in the movie much, however, he does prove to be a likable character by supporting her during her recovery time since she understands that her biological father took advantage of her.

The stakes are very high, suspense, drama, unique realistic characters that consistently act realistic, good dialogue, memorable lines, high stakes for the main conflict that can't be easily resolved, a suspenseful climax, fast pace, and the open ending is satisfying.
 
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I don't see a thread for it, but this year's "A Real Pain" was fantastic.

Far better than I thought it would be. Jesse Eisenberg and Kieran Culkin, a pair of Jewish cousins, travel to Poland to pay homage to their grandmother, who lived a full life after managing to survive the Holocaust. The trailers paint this as a comedy, and it's very funny, yes. Culkin and Eisenberg have a great dynamic, with Culkin as the extrovert who lights up a room and gets everyone to smile, while Eisenberg is more reserved. But as the film progresses, it goes from being a simple road trip to a movie that discusses how we deal with pain.
 
Duet ming gam / Life Without Principle (2011)
Doc Holliday's Revenge (2014)
Hellboy: The Crooked Man (2024)
Disobedience (2017)
1992 (2022)
Canary Black (2024)
Wolfs (2024)
Jumping the Broom (2011)
Woman of the Hour (2023)
The Mildew from Planet Xonader (2015)
 
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(2024) Mormon Mom Gone Wrong: The Ruby Franke Story
9/10

Mormon Mom Gone Wrong True Crime Drama Lifetime movie stands out because Emilie Ullerup is playing an unlikable evil character Ruby Franke after a believable change because she is a likable good character before going on the very destructive path.
Ruby respects and views Jodi Hildebrandt (Heather Locklear) as a mentor because she is Ruby's spiritual guide. Jodi is a charismatic influential character much like the infamous Cult Leader Jim Jones, as a result, Ruby goes down a very dark path while fooled that she is in the right much like Anakin Skywalker.

This True Crime Drama succeeds in dealing with the dark topics of child abuse, and the house of horrors that Ruby's 12-year-old son escaped from.

Heather Locklear succeeds in portraying a realistic believable Spiritual Guide that the audience can understand while still hating Jodi since the audience can recognize that Jodi is in the wrong including her very destructive philosophy.

What is priceless is the underreaction by Jodi when she gets informed by the Local Police why they can search her House without a search warrant.
Jodi is similar to Colonel Jessup In A Few Good Men because she never states dialogue that she regrets any of her destructive dishonerable evil actions even after she is arrested for being responsible for child abuse and wrongful imprisonment of a child.

The movie succeeds showing that Ruby can return to being a likable character since she gives a long speech expressing remorse since she understands she was responsible for child abuse and wrongful imprisonment of a son that trusted her to protect him not harm him, and she is shown crying while stating remorseful words about her predatory evil actions indicating she recognizes that she regrets her evil harmful actions greatly.
I cried tears of sadness during this depressing scene.
Ruby and Jodi's view of disciplining children falls into the category of abuse not strict parenting. The movie respects the audience to understand this without preaching to the audience along with anything else that is unmistakable by visually showing it.

Ruby's husband is shown to be a likable character that is a loving husband, and it's entirely believable that a change in the marriage would happen after the dark truth get's exposed about the predatory crimes Ruby and Jodi are responsible for. Even though it's completely predictable what change is going to happen, how he decides to state that permanent change which begins with a D is honorable, commendable, and worthy of emulation.
Ruby does understand why he is doing it while still being very depressed because they had a smooth marriage before Jodi moved into the house.


The movie indicates that Ruby fears she is in the wrong when she cries after arguing with a character most likely because she understands that blunt criticism is the ugly truth, not slander, a lie, or something else that she could truthfully deny or refute.

Emilie Ullerup has repeatedly played smooth likable good characters in Nature of Love, Winter Castle, Hearts of Christmas, and other Christmas movies so she is going outside that box by playing a protagonist that becomes very unlikable and evil since Ruby is responsible for child abuse.
 

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