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Yuor favorite movie!

This is where you can discuss your homework, family, just about anything, make strange sounds and otherwise discuss things which are really not related to the Lancer-series. Yes that means you can discuss other games.

Post Fri Jan 20, 2006 6:14 am

Yuor favorite movie!

Here you can write your favorite movie or movies...my favorite movie is 2 Fast 2 Furious

don't you just love trading with imbeciles?

Edited by - Scorpion Chopsticks on 1/20/2006 6:22:16 AM

Post Fri Jan 20, 2006 6:32 am

My favorite movie? That's hard to decide. But it has to be:

ALIENS II ! It was really gory, especially when some guy got ripped in half.

some people say that crime didn't exist before GTA

Post Fri Jan 20, 2006 6:36 am

Why? I'd love to hear the justification for "2 Fast 2 Furious" being anyone's all time favorite.

I personally can't think of one movie that I put on a pedistal. There are too many that I enjoy watching. Too many that tug at my emotional side. Too many that get me fired up about life. If anyone can pick just one, then I'd love to hear why.

Post Fri Jan 20, 2006 7:09 am

we did this not too long ago, in this thread...

mine haven't changed, although recently I've decided that Cinema Paradiso (director's cut) is my favourite film of all time. Followed by Ran, Apocalypse Now, Magnolia, and Brigadoon (shut up Plasticine Dog, I like what I like)

@Rec - I finally found a copy of Kolberg, on DVD with all the original bits back in!

Edited by - Tawakalna on 1/20/2006 7:23:48 AM

Post Fri Jan 20, 2006 9:44 am

Toss up between "Wicker Park" a romance and "Finding Forester"

Post Fri Jan 20, 2006 9:56 am

INDEPENDENCE DAY, duh.

Post Fri Jan 20, 2006 11:54 am

Something occured to me... I don't watch TV anymore, ever.

I don't have a favourite movie. I like some films, but that's as far as it goes.

I'm not evil, I'm morally challenged

Post Fri Jan 20, 2006 6:14 pm

The Last of the Mohichins
Gangs of New York
South Park: Bigger, Longer, & Uncut
Dreamcatcher
The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring
The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
King Kong (the 2005 one, not 1933.)

EDIT: Duh, I can't belive I forgot about LOTR.





Edited by - Killa on 1/21/2006 1:24:26 PM

Post Fri Jan 20, 2006 9:04 pm

Guest house paradisio, best for insanely hilarious violence and sick humor a plenty,
see it and you will understand.

-I'm the Forsaken your parents warned you about.-

Post Fri Jan 20, 2006 11:09 pm

The Lord of the Rings. My favorite of those is The Return of the King. Great battle scenes, and I liked the music.

I am defcon pilot, watch me nuke!

Post Sat Jan 21, 2006 2:43 pm

@taw - I wasn't going to say a word

Post Sat Jan 21, 2006 9:47 pm

@grom you never do :p
coyote french canadian film

Post Wed Jan 25, 2006 7:32 am

Garden State. Because I watch anything with Zach Braff

Post Wed Jan 25, 2006 8:37 am

@Taw, can't say I know too much about Kolberg, other than it's got something to do with Napoleon's campaign in Germany and it was a piece of propaganda. Any good?

I "obtained" a copy of Ran recently but only managed to see it in bits n pieces. I suspect reading King Lear beforehand might have made it more interesting, being able to compare analogies. And those swirling armies are pretty interesting but I've seen it a few times in Asian cinema. One particularly bad (so bad it's funny) kung fu movie, Evil Cult starring Jet Li, features massive armies of men with the flags on their backs, but then throws in all that Chinese Wushu stuff in the middle. It's ridiculous but arguably just as mesmerising. I definitely need to give it another watch. I still don't quite see what makes it that special in your eyes.

I saw Howl's Moving Castle a few weeks ago too, Miyazaki is still on top form. It reminds me of the type of childrens movie that used to be around in the 80s like Labyrinth, Willow, Dark Crystal, Star Wars, Return to Oz etc. They're all filled with fantastical ideas, magical lands etc and none of it sticks to typical dungeons and dragons style guidelines. The plot doesn't treat the child as stupid or protect it from scary ideas and consequences.

I'm off to see Jarhead tonight, I've been looking forward to it for quite a while!

Post Fri Jan 27, 2006 9:05 am

Kolberg is actually very good (given it was made in 1945 in the last months of the war) the Agfacolor processed cinematography is excellent, all the performances are well done if rather one-dimensional, but the film truly excels in its scale and scope, which of course you couldn't do today without CGI. Thousands upon thousands of troops diverted from the Russian Front and shoved into Napoleonic-era uniforms as extras, and real not fake explosions! Of course it's propaganda but its not obvious propaganda, well except at the end when the Prussian arms are displayed and they're clearly referring visually to the Nazi Swastika banner. And of course the soldiers are unerringly brave and die heroically and the civilians all stand together to resist the invaders even though theyre obv going to lose.

It's a fascinating insight into the minds of the Nazi leadership at this period and their deceit of the German people up until the very last minute, traipsing out this romantic pseudo-historical rubbish. But it is actually a dam fine film, very reminiscent of Gone with the Wind in many ways, even the upbeat final scene. It;s def been the worth the 20+ year wait to see it from beginning to end. An edited version was released in West German cinemas in the 1950s, sanitised of all political content, and was very successful, but of course one always has to see the original cut to get a true impression. I'll do you a copy if you like, I don't think UFA or the Goebbels family will complain about copyright infringement from 1945 do you?

Why do i like Ran so much? I'll answer that very simply - stunning cinematography in every scene, Ran isn't just cinema it's an artistic masterpiece. Every shot is composed and considered, nothing is accidental, and it is visually flawless. The swirling armies technique has been copied many times but Kurosawa invented that language for cinema and he has never been surpassed. Kurosawa took the Japanese story-telling style from prints and silks etc and turned it into cinema and Ran (and many of his other films) are to me like being inside a superb theatrical performance.

Also Kurosawa is an adept at showing the destructive consequences for an entire society of its leaders ambition, pride, arrogance and vainglory, in this case the downfall of the Ichimonjii clan. Kagemusha's final scenes also clearly convey this sentiment.

And Lady Kaede is just about the most single-minded vicious and detrmined b*itch I've ever seen in cinema. She destroys the entire clan and all its hopes for the future as vengeance for her own family, even at the cost of her own life. The scenes where she manipulates all those around her are full of tension and suspense until the final moment of release where she triumphantly declares her victory and why she has brought down the clan - she's terrifying. The cut-and-thrust play of words between her and Kuregane the hatamato is truly compelling, especially the *fox* scene. The duty and loyalty to clan and lord are as always with Kurosawa superbly brought to life.



Edited by - Tawakalna on 1/27/2006 9:16:47 AM

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