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What movie did you watch last week? (04/09-04/15)


I mainly watched a Netflix TV show this week so I decided to share with you some of the best movies I saw a few days before the IMDB boards were shutdown.

This Week:

Sandy Wexler(Netflix 2017): I wouldn't like to be the actual guy whom Adam Sandler was portraying because it was one of the worst characterization ever.  Highly irritating, I warn you. There was some funny situations, some good cameos but that's about it. 90% of the movie feels cheap. Since I quitted 1h20mins into it (there was still 40mins to go!) but I might come back and finish it when I'll be bored, I'll give it 3/10

13 reasons why (Netflix 2017): 10/13 episodes watched. It's good and there is no bad episodes but there is no great one either. I started my binging strong and then it slowed in the past week because it's getting a little bit repetitive and heavy-handed. (I started watching it 3 weeks ago.)

Older viewings:

Close encounter of the third kind (1977 DVD Directors cut): It was my first time seeing it and I would qualify it of pure entertainment. Just fun throughout. The acting was adequate, the special effects were great indeed, the music worked well, the overall ambiance was unique and there was not one dull moment. I bought the collector edition for nine bucks and I'm very happy I did it. 8/10

Apocalypse now (1979 bluray): I meant to knock one big title off my watchlist and it was either this or the godfather. I'm very glad I picked this one. It's a true war masterpiece and an instant favourite.  As you learned in last week's thread, The doors is my favorite band so right off the start, I was pleased. I started with the original version but after an hour in, I thought it was going by so fast that I switched to the redux version. Ahh yeah, a 3 hour grand voyage. The cinematography is stunningly beautiful, the story is gripping and there is so much attention to details. There's choppers, lights, a boat, flares, guns, smoke, a tiger, playboy bunnies, acid tabs, weed and wonderful people. I mean, what's not to like? Or love? Duvall has great lines like " Charlie don't surf" or  "I love the smell of napalm in the morning." Beats both Platoon and Saving Pvt. Ryan. 10/10

C.R.A.Z.Y. (2005 DVD): it's my second favorite French-Canadian movie but probably the best Quebec movie ever made. It took Jean-Marc Vallée 10 years to write this masterpiece. Top notch on all levels. 9.5/10

Children of men: I am discovering this director and I am just amazed by him. The way he shoots the scenes make them feel so real it's scary. I went into this one blindly, as I never watched the trailer, and found myself glued to my seat as it unfolded marvellously. Every single thing that happens on the screen has an effect on me. From the acting to the story to the cinematography (oh! The cinematography!) everything was pretty much flawless. I had heard a lot of praises about this movie but always had my doubts. I was wrong and they were right. It's gripping, breathtaking and unique. Un chef-d'oeuvre mon ami. Right up there, underneath The Pianist. 9/10

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Why do you start on a Monday and go through the following Sunday? Why not start on last week's Sunday and through that week's Saturday?

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I always get mixed up in dates, hehe

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I get the dates mixed up also but it's trivial as far as I'm concerned. I just reflect on what I watched during the past week or so, maybe even more recently.

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That's what I'm doing. After all, who cares if you saw a film within the precise dates, or a little earlier or later?

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changed it

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Children of Men is great - highly underrated

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I did underestimated it. Thought it was going to be a 7, 7.5 top.

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That is a good one. Clive Owen and Michael Caine are wonderful in this.

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The Doors was one of my favorite groups. They were so taboo and groundbreaking.

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For me:

Jason Bourne - touted as the best of the franchise but I was disappointed as well as annoyed with the shaky cam routine.

Ghost Dog: The way of the Samurai - quirky, off-beat but entertaining.

The Relic- run of the mill horror flick with an interesting blend of science and mythology

Lights Out- another horror flick; ok mindless entertainment for just vegging out on the couch but full of inconsistencies

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None of yours yet but I bought Ghost Dog a few weeks ago. Might watch it soon.

Glad you also love The Doors

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Oh and you haven't seen any of mine?

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Oh yes, Close Encounters many times; in fact, segments of it just recently.

Apocalypse Now, long ago; haven't re-watched it in awhile. Not sure if I agree with your comparison to Platoon and Saving Private Ryan. Also, I haven't seen you mention The Deer Hunter which is considered a classic of the VietNam era.

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I saw Deer Hunter for the first time last year and I liked it but thought it was less of a war movie.
Also, my comparison was mostly based on the fact I gave similar ratings to Platoon (9.5) and SPR (10)

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I really can't quite comprehend how you perceive it as " less of a war movie." The juxtaposition of civilian life to the ugly realities of that war is what makes it so. But I can understand your detachment because of your age.
I have a different perspective. I narrowly escaped fighting in that war. And I had an uncle who died at the Normandy Invasion.

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Oh yeah, I should've precise action-war movie let's say.

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?

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This might not make sense to you but I find that all three movies we mentioned have good action war sequences in it while Deer Hunter, not really.
I'm French Canadian by the way so I may have problems expressing myself sometime

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Yes, your last post was cryptic to me. I understand now.

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To me The Deer Hunter is primarily a depiction of friendship between two men, within the context of a wartime setting, than it is about war per se.

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I think it's an accurate depiction of an era, a very confused and turbulent one.

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I love Ghost Dog. It's one of my favorite Jim Jarmusch movies. His movies are so totally different from anything else.

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my wife gave me a choice between Boyhood (2014) and Joy (2015) - I picked Joy and I thought it was so weak. 6/10 at best.

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Same rating here. It was not "so weak", but more uninteresting to me.

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Boyhood was overrated, but still it was much better than Joy.

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The fourth kind
The messenger
Hacqsaw ridge.

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The messenger: the one with Woody? If so, how was it? I almost bought it the other day but took MI3 instead

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The messenger:the story of joan d'arc,have you seen it?

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No, never heard of.

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You should see it, it's one of the best roles of milla,in my opinion.

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Just two movies this week.

Equinox Flower (1958, Japan)
A businessman who often gives sound relationship advice to his family and friends and tries to be modern and open-minded, has a hard time practicing what he preaches when his own daughter decides to marry a man he doesn't like without coming to him for approval. An Ozu Yasujiro movie, it contains his usual themes of the conflict between traditional and modern Japan.

Instinct (1999, US)
An anthropologist who disappeared for two years in central Africa while studying gorillas is imprisoned for murdering poachers and returned to the US, where he's held in a prison for the criminally insane and refuses to speak. A psychiatrist is given the task of getting him to speak again, learning what really happened in Africa and hopefully getting him out of prison. Cuba Gooding Jr. and Anthony Hopkins star.

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For how many movies you seem to watch, I'm shocked that you had never seen Close Encounters, The Godfather, Children of Men or Apocalypse Now... Not to build too much expectation but The Godfather and Godfather II are better than Apocalypse Now imo. But all of those are great films.

I enjoyed 13 Reasons Why... other than the artificial framing device and some weak actors and casting, I think it's a worthy successor to the John Hughes/Cameron Crowe films of the eighties with two very strong leads and some surprisingly multidimensional characters for the genre. (Usually the adults and bullies have the depth of horror movie monsters)

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The heavy drama and some scenes reminded me of Larry Clarke's work. Plus, the guy who plays Justin in 13 reasons Why reminded me of the actor Justin pierce , who had his breaking role in Kids (1995).

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It's been years since I've seen Kids but they definitely have that one scene in common. Larry Clark wasn't the first director to pop into mind, but now that you mention it... I can see it.

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