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Feuer Frei!
04-10-10, 07:48 AM
I thought it might be nice to create a movies thread where we/you can discuss movies that you've seen or want to see, worst movie of all time, best movie of all time, favourite actor(s), good/bad directors.....meh, you get the picture (pun intended). :O:

Seriously though, i was inspired to start this as like all of us, have seen some wonderful movies in my time, more recently, such as: Descent 2, The Road (awesome) and over the last year or so: No Country For Old Men (Tommy Lee Jones is awesome !), Pan's Labyrinth (holy crap was this cool!), Rose Red (mini series based on a Stephen King adaption), Insomnia (with Al Pacino, my all-time favourite actor along with Clint Eastwood), Gran Torino, Flags of our Fathers, Letters from Iwo Jima (dam, Clint is a great director!), Bury my Heart at Wounded Knee, The Assassination of Richard Nixon (normally not a fan of Sean Penn but this movie was pure brilliance!) and The Assassination of Jesse James (another awesome movie, with Brad Pitt!).

I've seen my fair share of bad movies of course, haven't we all, luckily i frequent IMDB ( http://www.imdb.com/ )
to scour movie reviews, to attempt to filter out the bad ones before i have to see one. In my opinion this is one of the best if not the best sites out there if you are a movie fan, or want to get the low-down or history of your favourite actor, etc.

Finally got around to seeing Avatar and i must say, apart from the special effects i didn't really like it that much, the main character's role portraying the "smart-a**" who has the not funny one-liners irritated me.
A bit like the Star Trek movie, which on the whole i enjoyed, being a bit of a closet Trekky fan, however the main character was cast to play a "yep, i'm cool, awesome, funny, and dam hot dood" character, with the usual bad (imho) one-liners, wise a** jokes and sexist comments to boot. This slightly "spoiled" an otherwise great movie.

Of course when/if we mention "classics", i would pick The Thing, Das Boot, Pulp Fiction, any Dirty Harry and The Lord of the Rings, (which i loved, love the fantasy and monsters theme). Another reason why i can't wait for World of Warcraft to be premiered!!!
So, what have you seen lately? Are you a movie buff? You have a big collection? Know who said what, line for line in your fave movie? Do you hate going to the cinemas and rather watch movies at home? (like me).

Post away Kaleun(s)!

Dowly
04-10-10, 08:06 AM
Heads up for those who liked Boondock Saints; BS2 is not nearly as good... sadly. Few good things in it, but it is basically a copy of the first movie, just with worse supporting actors.

As for Avatar, I was positively surprised about it. Less showing off the CGI and more to the story would have made actually a good movie.

Saw Gran Torino the other day, awesome movie and great performance by Eastwood. :yeah:

Feuer Frei!
04-10-10, 08:15 AM
Avatar, huuuge budget, James Cameron directing which brings obviously massive expectations, but i thought it was kind of like Pocahontas in Space, very generic story line, shame, with some more polish and character-development, less emphasis on effects it would have been good.
But, i must say the movie "2012 was cast in a similar vain,
saw that and tbh rather disappointed, sure, effetcs were great but character development, story and overall plot very "shallow".
That's 2010 generation movies though i think, similar to perhaps PC Games, all about the effects (graphics) but not much content.
Shame.

Skybird
04-10-10, 08:41 AM
Big VHS collector, some 240 cassettes, most of them carrying 2 films, self-recorded), in parts replaced with DVD.

I see a trend to technics- and eye-candy-heavy movie.making, due to the 3D hype. Avatar was visually different, but simply a lame story, and Battle of Titans 3D I do not even look at. I fear it will become worse in the next years, and this trend towards infantile anime-3D-movies is alienating me even more.

Waiting for Ridley Scott releasing "Robin Hood", and hoping he will finally, finally, start with shooting The Forever War. Last great film I saw was Gran Torino, I think.

Storytelling and character descpriton gets hijacked by all this technical childplay. But most often you do not get a good movie if you have no good story to tell, with believable characters in it. It's easier to forgive a simplistic technical realisation, than to forgive a simplistic story scheme, or shallow characters. Some of the best movies I know were realised with almost primitive technical means.

Dowly
04-10-10, 08:54 AM
Hahaha, don't even get me started with 2012. Has to be THE worst movie ever made. :har::har:

Waiting for Ridley Scott releasing "Robin Hood"

This. :yep:

stabiz
04-10-10, 11:28 AM
2012 was bad, almost Batman & Robin-bad.

Those who liked Gran Torino better see Harry Brown as well. I saw Avatar a few days ago (probably the last person on earth to see it) and it was okay. I expected to hate it but it was entertaining, and some of the combat scenes were epic. The romance/rivalry thingy was auto lame, but overall a better movie than expected.

Movies suck in general these days, me thinks.

HunterICX
04-10-10, 11:35 AM
The movies I watch nowadays are pretty much nostalgic, since if you put me in front of a row of DVD's what they released last year I pretty much would go
Crap...crap..crap..crap...crap...decent...crap...c rap...crap...ok...crap...crap.
and perhaps I would find a few good ones.

mostly the good movies are overshadowed by big budgets visual effect flashing crapmovies. 2012 to mark the highlight of last year's worst movie...

If I miss something, it would be those old Fantasy movies.
where things where mostly handcrafted set, scenery, suits, masks, animatronics the whole lot.
stuff like Neverending story...its pleasure for the eyes for me...too bad its become a lost art in todays movies.

this year so far doesn't look much promising if you see the trailer of Battle of the Titans 3D...if it where a Video game trailer...then I could accept it..but a Movie? my god talk about a visual effect puke-a-ton:nope:

HunterICX

STEED
04-10-10, 11:38 AM
I watched the other day on YouTube the worst cheap film of 2009, SFX was cheap and nasty, storyline line was a joke, acting was rubbish...I think you get the point I hated it, and the name of the film?

Mega Shark Vs Giant Octopus. :doh:

Here is the best and yet silly clip....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I16_8l0yS-g&feature=related

Jimbuna
04-10-10, 11:48 AM
The Hunt for Red October and..................................Das Boot of course :DL

Dowly
05-26-10, 09:14 AM
Watched 28 weeks later last night, love it, have seen it before but didn't remember much of it so watched it again.

Tonight 28 days later. :up:

Weiss Pinguin
05-26-10, 09:24 AM
I haven't seen 28 Weeks Later, but I saw 28 days on the Sy-fy(lis) channel a while back. It was different than I thought it'd be, but I still loved it.


Last night we watched Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs, I wasn't really sure what to expect but it was pretty funny. Also, Neil Patrick Harris played a monkey alongside Bruce Campbell. :o

Dowly
05-26-10, 09:28 AM
Dont remember much about 28 days, but I can't imagine it being better than 28 weeks. Simply because weeks got a great opening scene and Robert Carlyle. :yeah:

EDIT: Ow and 2 good looking gals, yaay.

Weiss Pinguin
05-26-10, 09:54 AM
Dont remember much about 28 days, but I can't imagine it being better than 28 weeks. Simply because weeks got a great opening scene and Robert Carlyle. :yeah:
And a killer soundtrack. John Murphy is a genius :)

Sailor Steve
05-26-10, 10:00 AM
I just picked up a cheap copy of Destination Tokyo, and watched it for the first time in probably fifty years.

Much to my surprise, it was a pretty good sub movie! Had some of the olde cliches, including the true story of an on-board appendix removal, and a 'man-goes-crazy-under-depthcharging' scene that predates Das Boot by almost forty years.

The plot is total BS, but the acting is good, the sub interiors are real and the modelwork and special effects are superb!

I highly recommend it.:sunny:

frau kaleun
05-26-10, 10:09 AM
Hmm... wondering how I missed this thread for a month.

For those of you who like classic movies, this summer marks the 50th anniversary of the release of To Kill A Mockingbird, which if you haven't seen it, all I can say is WHY NOT?

I may have to reread the book as well as watch it again... I'm guessing TCM will have some kind of tribute (and if not I will be seriously disappointed) but for those who are big fans of Gregory Peck I highly recommend the recent (2005) DVD re-release which includes the 1999 documentary "A Conversation With Gregory Peck."

Weiss Pinguin
05-26-10, 10:35 AM
I just picked up a cheap copy of Destination Tokyo, and watched it for the first time in probably fifty years.

Much to my surprise, it was a pretty good sub movie! Had some of the olde cliches, including the true story of an on-board appendix removal, and a 'man-goes-crazy-under-depthcharging' scene that predates Das Boot by almost forty years.

The plot is total BS, but the acting is good, the sub interiors are real and the modelwork and special effects are superb!

I highly recommend it.:sunny:
I remember watching that on TCM a while back, nothing like a good classic movie before heading to bed. Definitely recommend this one too :yeah:

Jimbuna
05-26-10, 10:39 AM
I just picked up a cheap copy of Destination Tokyo, and watched it for the first time in probably fifty years.

Much to my surprise, it was a pretty good sub movie! Had some of the olde cliches, including the true story of an on-board appendix removal, and a 'man-goes-crazy-under-depthcharging' scene that predates Das Boot by almost forty years.

The plot is total BS, but the acting is good, the sub interiors are real and the modelwork and special effects are superb!

I highly recommend it.:sunny:

I remember my dad relling me about that film http://img395.imageshack.us/img395/9501/liarrv1ed9.gif

My lasting memory was the anger I felt when a sailor got stabbed off a Japanese pilot (I think) when he rescued him.

ajrimmer42
05-26-10, 10:55 AM
hmm, my favourite film has to be Withnail & I. I'don't really know why I like it so much but i can watch it over and over again and not get bored of it :D
"We want the finest wines available to humanity, we want them here and we want them now!"

Sailor Steve
05-26-10, 11:10 AM
My lasting memory was the anger I felt when a sailor got stabbed off a Japanese pilot (I think) when he rescued him.
What impressed me was Cary Grant's line about that incident. He talks about Americans giving their kids roller skates for their fifth birthday, and a Japanese kid gets a knife, and grows up knowing how to use it. The reason we're fighting this war isn't just to protect our own kids, but to guarantee that the next generation of Japanese kids are given roller skates too.

And this was made in 1943.

Jimbuna
05-26-10, 11:18 AM
What impressed me was Cary Grant's line about that incedent. He talks about Americans giving their kids roller skates for their fifth birthday, and a Japanese kid gets a knife, and grows up knowing how to use it. The reason we're fighting this war isn't just to protect our own kids, but to guarantee that the next generation of Japanese kids are given roller skates too.

And this was made in 1943.

Sorry Steve, it was so long ago that I watched it I can only remember the stabbing :oops:

Sailor Steve
05-26-10, 11:20 AM
Sorry Steve, it was so long ago that I watched it I can only remember the stabbing :oops:
As I said, I watched it just a few days ago. Before that all I remembered was that they went to Tokyo.:rotfl2:

Anyway, the movies I put in and watch more than any others are The Thee Musketeers and The Four Musketeers, directed by Richard Lester and starring Michael York as D'Artagnan, Oliver Reed as Athos, Richard Chamberlain as Aramis and Frank Finlay as Porthos, with Christoper Lee as Rochefort, Raquel Welch as Constance, Faye Dunaway as Milady de Winter, Simon Ward as the Duke of Buckingham, Jean-Pierre Cassel as Louis XII, Geraldine Chaplain as Anne of Austria and Charleton Heston Richelieu.

Bad: Porthos is described in the book as a giant, and Finlay is the shortes actor in the movie. But he struts around like a giant, which is very funny.

The humor is British rather than French, which draws complaints from purists, of which I am one.

Good: While I have a few minor nitpicks, these two movies together are more faithful to the best-selling novel of all time than any other I have seen. And I've seen a lot.

They are thoroughly enjoyable. I usually put in the first one just to watch the first fifteen minutes, up to the fight in the convent. That is so close to the book that it's almost word-for-word. The problem is that by that point I'm hooked, and three hours is gone from my day. That said, my biggest complaint is that they aren't longer.

Jimbuna
05-26-10, 04:03 PM
You left out Roy Kinnear and Spike Milligan....not major parts I know, but good supporting character roles.

I must confess to enjoying the later release (Charlie Sheen, Kiefer Sutherland, Tim Curry et al) almost as much.

TarJak
05-26-10, 07:46 PM
Speaking of classics particularly Gregory Peck classics, I don;t think you can go past GP as Horatio Hornblower.

Some great model making and SFX for the time it was made.

Sailor Steve
05-26-10, 08:05 PM
I must confess to enjoying the later release (Charlie Sheen, Kiefer Sutherland, Tim Curry et al) almost as much.
Ewww! I hate that movie, partly because they threw out the whole book and wrote their own story, and partly because Curry mugged his way through the role of one of the most frighteningly intimidating characters in liturature. Heston really captures the spirit, especially in his 'spy' scene with Christopher Lee. The only one who compares is Vincent Price in the Gene Kelly version.

Sorry, I just can't stomach that one at all.:nope:

Sailor Steve
05-26-10, 08:07 PM
Speaking of classics particularly Gregory Peck classics, I don;t think you can go past GP as Horatio Hornblower.
Even though they combined three novels into one fairly short movie, I agree. They did a masterful job.

Speaking of Peck, Frau K already mentioned To Kill A Mockingbird, but don't forget Moby Dick.:rock:

Some amazing model work there, too.

frau kaleun
05-26-10, 09:33 PM
Even though they combined three novels into one fairly short movie, I agree. They did a masterful job.

Speaking of Peck, Frau K already mentioned To Kill A Mockingbird, but don't forget Moby Dick.:rock:

Some amazing model work there, too.

HH and MB - both awesome.

Actually Peck gave so many great performances that it's hard to remember them all.

Gentleman's Agreement, The Big Country (one of only a handful of westerns I've voluntarily sat through more than once), Roman Holiday, The Guns of Navarone, Captain Newman, M.D., Cape Fear...

One of my guilty pleasures is watching him in The Boys From Brazil. Especially since he's one performer I've always admired as an actor AND a human being... not that he hadn't played morally ambivalent or even downright unlikeable characters before, but Mengele? The very idea was mind-boggling.

Sailor Steve
05-26-10, 10:06 PM
:yep: The movie was pretty mediocre, but Peck and Olivier gave their usual outstanding performances and made it worth watching. Once.

And it didn't hurt to have James Mason, Denholm Elliott, and Rosemary Harris, and...Anne Meara? A young Bruno Ganz? Good thing I looked at IMDB. I may have to watch it again just for the cast.


Ewww! Somebody's talking about a remake. Talk only so far.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0841010/

TarJak
05-27-10, 02:21 AM
It's funny I never really worked out why James Mason was always cast as a nazi baddie either. He was very good at it but if you knew his background it was the antithises of a nazi being a conchie during WWII and brought up in 'Uddersfield.

I thought Mason was great as Rommel in The Desert Fox.

kiwi_2005
05-27-10, 02:48 AM
Didn't know about this thread.

Recent movies ive watched:

Valhalla Rising - Good, slow at times but worth a look.

Kick-ass. Why was this R18? Apart from the swearing ive seen R16 movies worse than this. Kick ass was okay if your looking for some laughs.

Cargo - German made movie: about humans now living on massive space stations where earth is just a memory, there is rumors of Rhea a earth like planet. Laura Portmann wants to get to Rhea but money is needed so she takes on a job in a cargo ship a 4 yr journey. The crew members spend the most time of the fully automated flight in deep sleep while, in 8 months shifts, always one person stays awake to monitor the space ship. :o

I enjoyed this movie apart from the last 15min it kinda dies. Still okay for space freaks.

IP Man 2 - If your seen the first one your like the 2nd as well. IP man is a Chinese movie about the treatment from the Japanese during world war 2, IP man has to fight Japanese Karate champs to stay alive type of thing. IP2 carries on after the war.

ajrimmer42
05-27-10, 10:46 AM
Speaking of classics particularly Gregory Peck classics, I don;t think you can go past GP as Horatio Hornblower.

Some great model making and SFX for the time it was made.

Still not seen that. I'm a massive fan of the Ioan Gruffud ones though, he plays a good Hornblower.

Sailor Steve
05-27-10, 10:53 AM
Still not seen that. I'm a massive fan of the Ioan Gruffud ones though, he plays a good Hornblower.
:rock: Gruffud is great! I just wish the stories had stuck closer to the books. Still, they did a great job, and I have them all in my collection.

The Peck movie, likewise, is great, but it leaves a lot out (has to, since it sums up three different books).

Weiss Pinguin
05-27-10, 11:01 AM
Reading Kiwi's list made me think of another movie I saw recently, Moon (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1182345/). Basically a guy is waiting out the last few weeks of a 3-year assignment to the moon, harvesting Helium-3. A fairly quiet movie, no action scenes or anything like that, but it's not a mind-screw either. Also Clint Mansell scored it, so the theme is pretty good.


Also, District 9 is up for instant play on Netflix (for everyone who has that), so I watched that again last night.

http://i36.tinypic.com/mubip5.jpg

Sailor Steve
05-27-10, 11:03 AM
Cool! I wanted to see that one in the local art theater, but the timing was bad, so I saw 500 Days Of Summer instead. For a romantic comedy/drama that was quite good. I'll see Moon one of these days.

Dowly
06-01-10, 08:03 AM
Anyone seen The Rampage? Uwe Boll's new movies which is surprisingly getting good reviews. :doh:

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1337057/

Weiss Pinguin
06-01-10, 09:28 AM
Anyone seen The Rampage? Uwe Boll's new movies which is surprisingly getting good reviews. :doh:
I don't believe it :o

Dowly
06-01-10, 01:48 PM
Gonna see it tonight and let you know how it was. :salute:

Dowly
06-02-10, 08:01 AM
Well what'd ya know, it actually was a decent movie. :up:

The main actor is great, easily someone you can relate to (well, before he starts to kill people atleast), the action (read:massacre) scenes are well done with variety of different angles to keep it interesting (tho, some might find the ever changing camera too much, but I liked it, gave chaos-ish feel to it).

The plot had few too many twists to it, I won't spoil it, but the end was disappointing to me, but hey, someone might like it.

Why this movie will probably never get the credit it deserves (for an Uwe Boll movie) is the gore and the few disturbing scenes that happens while he's on the killing spree. But there also are few moments when you actually juuust a little bit cheer for him killing someone (coffee shop scene).

All in all, you either love it or hate it. There's those who hate it and can't see beyond the gore and then there's those who start to think about it and say "Damn, that actually could happen the way our society is today".

Aaanywho, go see some reviews and make up your own mind whether to see it or not. :up:

Weiss Pinguin
06-02-10, 08:33 AM
Saw it on Netflix last night, maybe Friday night I'll take a look. :hmmm:

Oberon
06-02-10, 11:47 AM
Anyone seen The Rampage? Uwe Boll's new movies which is surprisingly getting good reviews. :doh:

Well what'd ya know, it actually was a decent movie. :up:

:stare::o:doh:

http://www.xaraxone.com/FeaturedArt/aug04/assets/images/exploding_planet.jpg

Raptor1
06-02-10, 11:50 AM
That might be the very first semi-positive comment I've ever heard about an Uwe Boll movie.

I bet they paid him to say it too...

Oberon
06-02-10, 05:29 PM
Robin Hood or

Saving Private Robin

SPOILERS AHOY!

Well, all in all, at a broad stroke of the brush and with little historical background, it was an enjoyable film. My other half who has little historical knowledge ('sides what she's picked up from me droning on about it) thoroughly enjoyed it...and if you leave all history and military knowledge at the door then you'll enjoy it too.

However, bring that shield of reality in with you...and you'll soon find it assaulted with indestructible swords, a Marian who struggles one minute to lift chainmail and then rides into battle covered in it the next, medieval cement, laser guided arrows, kevlar shields, French LCAs, a claw-sledge-hammer, and accents that do more traveling than the cast.

To be fair, the film is rather enjoyable at the start, the assault on the French castle is quite nice, the banter between the 'Merry Men' quite enjoyable, and even the initial scenes back in jolly old England are nicely done, their London was quite enjoyable...although I fear that it is grossly inaccurate for the time, but as my knowledge in that respect is lacking I shall move on. The life at rural Nottingham is nicely done, Friar Tuck is well introduced and well played, however the Sheriff of Nottingham has been demoted to a few walk on parts, being replaced by the nefarious Lord Bla-erm...Godfrey, who sets about a scheme to bring a second French invasion. From then on, it goes down hill, with the fake Magna Carta, and then to the climatic battle scene on the beach...

Oh dear...oh dear god...

I will and can only quote from another review I found on the interwebs which I think describes this:

The landing on the beach, and subsequent battle, at the end took whatever bit of my brain governs historical pedantry out of my skull, ran it through a blender, then added a large dollop of faeces to it, turned on the blender again, then poured it directly into an anus-shaped mold, waited for it to set, then had it f*cked to pieces by specially trained giraffes, at which point said pieces were set fire to. And then pissed on the ashes. Wait, just wait, until you see the French (and I ****ing kid you not) landing craft - literally wooden LCAs with oars on the sides, complete with ****ing drop-down ramps. Did the British Ministry of War send them the blueprints back through an effing time machine??? A retreat is called, and they turned on a sixpence like jet-skis. Sweet ****ing Jesus!!! I didn't know whether to laugh or cry. The only way there could have been more wrong with this scene is if Crowe had called in a flight of Harriers for air support.

Yes folks, the French have landing craft right out of the Longest Day and Saving Private Ryan (hence the second title), sure they lack machine guns and there are oars in the side but goddamn it...they are LCAs! I even cried out "AUF MICH ZUUU DIRECKT!" and was promptly hit by my other half. :cry:
Then, in the only good tactical decision of the battle, they put the archers up on the cliff to rain down fire on the French below, complete with slow motion bleeding sinking soldiers underwater, just like Saving Private Ryan but with arrows. So with a large cliff on one side, no French archers below and only one way up the cliff edge, what would you do?
Sure, let the archers pick them off until they become too demoralised and disorganised to perform and either let them retreat or send in the cavalry to mop them up. But no! Two volleys and in goes the cavalry. Big fight scene on the beach, and in goes the archers as well...yes...archers in hand to hand combat, did I mention that Private Robin, as a trained archer is a fantastic long swordsman as well? I didn't, ah well, there you go, he obviously rolled some lucky dice whilst levelling up.
So, whilst the archers and cavalry are mixing it up, along comes Joan of Loxley, suddenly able to wear armour, heft a sword and/or draw a heavy bow. Pretty good for a woman who isn't an Amazon warrioress!
There's the inevitable sword fights, the inevitable 'You think he/she's dead but he/she isn't' and then Godfrey is killed by a laser guided arrow fired from a good two-three hundred meters away.

THEN, the Sheriff is actually given a scene, as Robin is finally declared an outlaw, and the proper, normal, standard Robin Hood fare of living in the forest and robbing from the rich, etc, etc, can begin!

And then the film ends....

So, like I said, for an enjoyable romp it is....enjoyable, even though the story flits all over the shop, but leave all sense of history and military knowledge at the door...and try not to hurt your head when you facepalm at the French LCAs.


I think I still prefer the Kevin Costner version though, sure it takes some stretches but at least it doesn't try to tell a bigger story than it can hold, and the characters are much more memorable. :yep:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RSUGp9Yz1sk

One good thing to come out of it is a hankering to play Medieval Total War again. A shame I don't have II at the moment...still, Kataphraktoi ahoy! :yeah:

Raptor1
06-02-10, 05:35 PM
And...


...









...


I told you so...

sort of

Dowly
06-02-10, 05:38 PM
Haha, though the landing crafts looked familiar when I saw the trailer. :haha: Ah well, gonna watch it anywho... :hmmm:

Oberon
06-02-10, 05:39 PM
And...


...









...


I told you so...

sort of

Well, you covered the broad inaccuracies, I filled in the detail :03:

Still, good marks for the setting, and I did love the ferry ship across the Channel (Master and Commander: Far Side of the Channel?) and the music, and the art style in the credits was nice.... :yep: Although the bit with the beheading of the Muslim is bound to get some over sensitive PCs back up somewhere, just you see. Although I suspect they may just get drowned out by the Historically Accurate crowd this time :haha:

Oberon
06-02-10, 05:40 PM
Haha, though the landing crafts looked familiar when I saw the trailer. :haha: Ah well, gonna watch it anywho... :hmmm:

Oh, it's definitely worth a watch, I won't deny that. Go and see it once. You probably won't need to do so again, and probably won't need a DVD, but it has its good parts, I won't deny that. :yep:

Sailor Steve
06-02-10, 09:05 PM
Yep. I haven't seen it, but in the 'Robin Hood' thread a few weeks ago I mentioned spotting the Higgins Boats in the trailer, drop-ramps and all.

Wolfehunter
06-02-10, 09:17 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SyoA4LXQco4&feature=player_embedded

Best trailer ever... :O:

Reserve your tickets at your nearest Theater now.. :03:

Sailor Steve
06-02-10, 10:30 PM
OH YEAH! The hottest superhero on the planet!:rock:

Jimbuna
06-03-10, 03:47 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SyoA4LXQco4&feature=player_embedded

Best trailer ever... :O:

Reserve your tickets at your nearest Theater now.. :03:

Absolutely brilliant :yeah:

HunterICX
06-03-10, 03:55 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SyoA4LXQco4&feature=player_embedded

Best trailer ever... :O:


:haha: Very nice!

HunterICX

OneToughHerring
06-04-10, 04:14 AM
Haven't yet seen this film, trailer looks intereting though. Might end up buying this.

Battle of Okinawa. (http://www.nipponcinema.com/trailers/battle-of-okinawa/)

HunterICX
06-07-10, 06:19 AM
The Japanese at it again:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0jWm7ziUHXc&feature=player_embedded

Heavy Umbrella Machine gun, only in Japan :rock:

HunterICX

mako88sb
06-21-10, 03:22 PM
Well, you can tell I have a couple youngsters. Seems like the only theatrical movies we see lately are of the 3D type. We saw "Toy Story 3" for fathers day and if you enjoyed the first 2, your in for a treat. I thought the 2nd was better then the original. Not sure yet where to place the latest. Have to watch it a few more times to decide but definitely in good company. However, I don't think it's worth going with the 3D version. I really didn't notice much that would warrant the extra money. My wife and daughters mentioned the same. As for the ending. I think they came up with the best possible finale that anybody could expect.

Jimbuna
06-21-10, 03:58 PM
The Japanese at it again:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0jWm7ziUHXc&feature=player_embedded

Heavy Umbrella Machine gun, only in Japan :rock:

HunterICX


Kill Bill revisited :DL

Weiss Pinguin
06-21-10, 04:54 PM
For Father's Day we all went to see Clash of the Titans... Impressive music and visuals, and just enough story to keep it together. (which is probably a good thing) We saw it at the dollar theater, that's probably about how much it's worth ;)