What's The Last Movie You Watched? - - - Part 37

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Neighbors, ****ing hysterical movie. And then after that watched a favorite of mine, Clue.
 
The Phantom of the Opera (1943). Of all the Universal Horror flicks this is probably the worst of them. It's very tame and bland compared to many of the others they put out.
 
Finally saw Mad Max Fury Road. Twas excellent.
 
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The Lazarus Effect
I bet whoever directed this had only this in mind when making it: "Hey let's get a talented cast and get them do a cheap straight to video type horror bulls***." It was literately it, there's maybe a couple unintentional funny scenes, but there's not much to this that we've already seen before.
4/10



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Unfinished Business

The only thing that was funny was Dave Franco's character, he kept making me laugh throughout. Otherwise it's a very paint by number Vince Vaughn comedy.
5/10
 
Beverly Hills Cop II (1987)

Love it. Definitely my fav out of the trilogy. Faltermeyer's score is so damn good, perhaps even better than the first. I have to admit, I still fancy Brigitte Nielsen in it too, she was an unique beauty.
 
Big Trouble in Little China last weekend, kind of funny how I watched this so recently only to discover they're remaking it.
 
The Trip (2010)
Mortdecai (2015)
Blood Diner (1987)
 
Goodfellas, one of the best black comedies ever and it really did a lot of good for movies by de-romanticizing the Mafia. I just read that Al Pacino turned it down because he didn't want to get type cast as a gangster and then did Dick Tracy instead :loco:
 
Reservoir Dogs (1992)

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I have been going through and watching the entirety of Quentin Tarantino's filmography as of late, what with it being all on Netflix. Before this, the only films of his I saw were Pulp Fiction and Django Unchained, both of which I loved, and after seeing this one, I can safely say that Tarantino is in my Top 5 film directors, possibly even #1. This film is the perfect length, has an extremely taught screenplay, and makes the absolute most out of its minimalist setting, which is extremely impressive for a director's debut. I love it when directors can do a lot with so little, and QT is one of the best examples of that out there today.
 
Reservoir Dogs (1992)

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I have been going through and watching the entirety of Quentin Tarantino's filmography as of late, what with it being all on Netflix. Before this, the only films of his I saw were Pulp Fiction and Django Unchained, both of which I loved, and after seeing this one, I can safely say that Tarantino is in my Top 5 film directors, possibly even #1. This film is the perfect length, has an extremely taught screenplay, and makes the absolute most out of its minimalist setting, which is extremely impressive for a director's debut. I love it when directors can do a lot with so little, and QT is one of the best examples of that out there today.

As the years have gone by, I really do believe that Reservoir Dogs is Tarantino's most popular film (for good reason too, it's excellent). Almost everyone I talk to states that this is their favorite (moreso than even Pulp Fiction, which is actually my #1 favorite).

I highly recommend that you watch Jackie Brown. It's Tarantino's most underrated film, but I love every second of it.

As far as I'm concerned, though, you can't go wrong with a Tarantino flick. I've never seen a bad one from him (I even love Death Proof, which seems to be his most unpopular movie). :)
 
San Andreas (2015)

The Black Cauldron (1985)
 
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