What's The Last Movie You Watched? VIII - Part 2

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Harry Potter 7 ( 1st part) - Okay cant wait for next and very last movie
Unstoppable - Okay too
R.evil afterlife - Kinda disappointed with it
 
March or Die starring Gene Hackman, Terrence Hill, and Catherine Deneuve.
 
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The PIXAR Story
10/10


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Session 9
7/10
 
^doesn't mean you had to post it 3 times. lol
 
Jurassic Park
The Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring
 
Johnny Got His Gun-
one of the most disturbing movies I've seen.
 

I'm really curious to see that...especially after I read about a new book by Stephen King where someone travels trough time and tries to save JFK from the assassination attempt in Dallas.
 
I'm really curious to see that...especially after I read about a new book by Stephen King where someone travels trough time and tries to save JFK from the assassination attempt in Dallas.

It cites event like the rise of the Berlin Wall, Cuban Missile Crisis, and negotiations in Laos as its evidence.

You may also like this movie:
Timequest
 
Scott Pilgrim vs. the World
Star Trek
 
Collateral

Vincent is one of cinemas greatest villains. This is Tom Cruise's absolute best performance. He's not fantastical in any way, he's just a man who has disconnected himself from society. To quote the movie Alien he's a survivor unclouded by conscience, remorse, or delusions of morality. Well, maybe he has different kinds of delusions of morality. I guess. You think you have him figured out as this enlightened Tyler Durden type during the film, yet at the end, he surprises you with a statement that recalls one earlier in the film. Deep down inside he's just as human as Max, with his own insecurities making him a tragic contradiction.

Max's character arc is superb. You don't get something that well developed very often. He has evolved from where he was at the start of the film. You don't normally get that in a hard boiled noir film. Usually the protagonist starts off as a strong, cynical character and doesn't change. Max is a weak but hopeful man and despite the horrors he witnesses, he doesn't ever lose his optimism as a human being. Even when he realises Vincent was right and that his life had been a waste of time, his very next action is born out of a sense of hope. The subtleties Mann uses to show Vincent was the catalyst of Max's evolution, are just as impressive as the beautiful exchanges between the two in the cab. In the scene with Felix, he consciously says phrases that Vincent had used earlier in the film, to save his own ass from being killed, at the end, when he decides to be a hero and try to save Annie, he incapacitates a cop, using a judo move similar to what Vincent was doing in the nightclub and then completely subconsciously quotes Vincent. Though in hindsight it's quite disturbing that it's the Vincent's of the world that lead by example. So go out and take a risk. You never know where you might end up.

5/5
 
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^ One of the most underrated movies ever. The dialogue scene between Max and Vincent after the club scene is so ****ing good. The characters are just so...real.

Jackie Brown - 8/10

Solid and entertaining, but it all feels so...ordinary compared to Tarantino's other works. It's probably because he adapted the story instead of writing an original story. Robert De Niro's character is really wasted.
 
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