Jump to content

Last movie you watched?


66 mustang

Recommended Posts

 

Kept it light last night and re-watched Hall Pass with the misses and Goosebumps with the kids. Both fun to watch.

I absolutely LOVE Hall Pass!!!! Lots of people don't see it as more than an average buddy comedy flick, but the chemistry between Owen Wilson and Jason S. and the supporting cast like Stephen Merchant, Richard Jenkins, Derek Waters and Rob Moran delivering one memorable quote after the next is what sets this movie apart form others I think, definitely a classic in my book!

 

Plus Nicky Whelan is a real babe, absolutely stunning!

 

Hall Pass was on tv, however they cut out a lot of parts. So many funny parts in that movie, the part in a hot tub with black and Irish dudes is hilarious.

And yeah Nicky Whelan is nice eye candy

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"Scream" (1996)



A suburban high school full of hip, wise cracking, self aware teens is plagued by a series of horror-movie-inspired murders in the hit that re-vitalized Wes Craven's career and kick-started a new slasher-film craze. For a while it was trendy for "real" horror fans to hate on "Scream" because of all the late '90s PG-13 teenybopper horror awfulness it inspired, but I had to admit that it's actually aged pretty well.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"XX" (2017)

 

Disappointing horror anthology film consisting of four short stories, all written and directed by women (the title refers to females having two "X" chromosomes). All four are well acted and nice looking, but only one out of the four really goes anywhere and even that one falls apart well before it ends. Truthfully the best parts of this flick are the quick, creepy little stop motion animations that separate each segment - they have a cool, scuzzy look (lots of old doll parts and things scuttling around in the dark) like those early Tool music videos. Otherwise, this flick is poop. Avoid!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"Leprechaun in the Hood" (2000)



Three doofus rappers hope to finance their demo tape by ripping off a local hip-hop mogul (Ice-T). What they don't know is that the secret to the music exec's hip hop success is a golden flute stolen from the dreaded Leprechaun. When these wanna-be's accidentally unleash "the Lep" (yes, that's what he calls himself) during their failed heist, it gets REAL, knum' sayin'?


(I can't believe I just typed that...)


...so yeah, this fifth "Leprechaun" installment was awful, of course, but in a totally awesome, hilarious kind of way. I have to give Ice-T particular credit, 'cuz even though the movie is totally ridiculous, he still manages to come off like a bad-ass. Respect!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Baywatch (2017) - a few laughs but overall pretty weak flick

 

Guardians Of The Galaxy Vol 2 (2017) - not as good as the first IMO but loved it anyway...looking forward to Vol 3...

 

Watched the new "Guardians' movie Saturday. Have to agree with you Not quite as good as the first, but loved it anyway. ;)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

'The Hitman's Bodyguard' ... gotta agree with KarpetRyd, this one was brilliant!

 

Saw the trailer for the 'Flatliners' re-make/re-boot ... it looks as though they've taken everything that made the orignal film so good, and just thrown it all away ...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Looking forward to Hitman's Bodyguard.

Also saw the trailer to Flatliners and I'd kind of forgotten about the original Kieffer Sutherland movie.

I'd saw that like Total Recall, and The Magnificent Seven etc, you really have to consider it a different movie to enjoy it.

 

My wife couldn't do that with Total Recall, and she refused to watch it. I thought the new one was pretty good.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"Dragnet" (1987)



Dan Aykroyd plays the straight-laced nephew of the original Joe Friday and Tom Hanks is his cocky, freewheeling new partner in an affectionate action/comedy riff on the classic '50s and '60s cop show. Funny stuff with lots of quotable bits, also notable as one of Hanks' final second-banana roles before becoming a leading man in his own right.

Fun fact: the closing credit tune "City of Crime" is performed by Aykroyd, Hanks and Glenn Hughes (Deep Purple/Black Sabbath)!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Inside Llewyn Davis interesting Coen brothers tale of the winter of 60-61 and the resurgence of folk artists and one mans struggles just before the Bob Dylan changed the scene. Engaging tale and finely acted even if folk tunes aren't your bag it is certainly a good story with a lot of history blended into the fiction.

 

The Great Wall fine action movie with NO relevance to the great wall, movie could have been called anything and was total fiction. Tons of cgi and way over the top action but the 90 minutes will skip right on by.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"His Name Was Jason: 30 Years of Friday the 13th" (2009)



Special FX wizard Tom Savini hosts this entertaining documentary that explores the long history and fanatical following of the "Friday the 13th" film series, featuring interviews and commentary from cast members, directors, producers, and pretty much everybody that's ever had anything to do with an "F13" movie. Cool stuff loaded with trivia for horror nerds.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Get Out - nice thriller... written and directed by Jordan Peele of all people

This one was a surprise and nicely done.

 

About 2/3rds of the way through Eli Roth's The Green Inferno - Liking it so far.

 

 

Also introduced the sprites to The Monster Squad. I love this one and have since 87, the kids enjoyed it as well and my daughter said "this is like the Burbs meets the Goonies".

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"Halloween: The Inside Story" (2010)


Cool made-for-TV documentary about the making of John Carpenter's classic slasher film, featuring lots of behind-the-scenes photos, film clips and interviews with the cast and crew that made it happen. Surprisingly in-depth and thorough considering its basic-cable origins.


"Puppet Master" (1989)


A group of psychics meet at an old hotel to mark the passing of one of their colleagues, where they learn that their deceased friend had been messing with the forces of life and death -- by studying the notes of an old French alchemist who once commanded an army of living puppets.

Aside from the charming and cool stop-motion FX, this cult classic from Charles Band's infamous Full Moon Pictures is cheap looking and suffers from a seriously weak script...but enough people rented this one to warrant nearly a dozen sequels over the next 20+ years so most of'em must have liked it a lot more than I did.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"Cliffhanger" (1993)


Sly Stallone is the leader of a mountain search & rescue team that battles with a gang of plane-crashed bank robbers way at the top of the Rockies. Nothing here ranks very high on the believability scale but it's got a great cast (incl. John Lithgow as a truly slimy villain), impressive stunt work, and awesome scenery. Fun stuff.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Finished up The Green Inferno and it was a very solid movie. Disturbing but good. Worth a watch if you like a good gross out movie with a surreal vibe.

yes, or if you want to see Lorenza Izzo :)

 

:)

 

And who wouldn't?

 

Demolition - another Jake Gyllenhaal film, must be something in the stars, but this one wasn't bad. Jake does fine. Naomi Watts sure looks old? Jake is a thirty something who's wife dies in an auto accident and Jake discovers a lot about himself. Not as Lifetimey as you'd think.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"Jonah Hex" (2010)


Josh Brolin stars as DC Comics' scar-faced Old West gunslinger, bounty hunter, and all around tough guy, who has to stop a crazed former Confederate general turned terrorist (John Malkovich) from attacking Washington D.C. with a super weapon on the day of America's Centennial.

This entertainingly dumb shoot'em-up/blow'em up was subject to constant behind-the-scenes drama and interference during filming so what wound up on screen is a bit of a disjointed mess. It's not as bad as you've probably heard, but it's nowhere near as bad-ass as it could've, and should've been.


"Scream: The Inside Story" (2011)


Another Biography Channel horror-film documentary, this time telling the story of the 1996 hit which re-ignited Wes Craven's career and gave the horror genre a much needed jump start. As usual, there are lots of interviews and stories told by cast and crew members. Entertaining stuff if you're a fan of the series.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Passengers

 

Chris Pratt, that Hunger Games girl, on a ship to the new world, when Pratts sleep pod thingy malfunctions and he is awaken well before the 120 year journey is over. Bad and good choices ensue and there you go. Harmless fluff but worthy of a watch or two.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Into the Wild - quite slow paced but absorbing story of a graduate who gives all his money away to charity and tries his luck living alone in the wilds of Alaska

 

Plus 'Rio' a behind the scenes look at the making of Duran Duran's epic album. Always loved the intro to the Rio track. Turns out it was Nick Rhodes messing about dropping sticks onto the strings of a grand piano and he thought it made an interesting sound & started experimenting with it and recorded it, then played it backwards which became the intro ?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Love & Mercy

 

The John Cusack, Paul Dano acted Brian Wilson documentary. The story was engaging enough but whoever mixed this DVD for dialogue audio versus worthless SHOULD NEVER WORK AGAIN! I mean there was literally a 20 tick on my remotes volume between the dialogue and then a rapid turn down whenever this dork threw in a useless sound bite.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...

  • 2024 HH Donation Drive

    Please support Heavy Harmonies! The donations goal is the out-of-pocket expenses to run the main site and this board for calendar year 2024.



    26% of donation goal reached.
    Donate Sidebar by DevFuse
  • Posts

    • I was a pretty big fan. Nature Of The Beast is a killer song. Saw them with Dave Gleeson from the Screaming Jets singing and he did an amazing job, but pretty sure they have a new singer now  I recently went through the two most recent albums before this one and there were a couple of ok tracks, but mostly mid. Fun fact: I saw the Angels a couple of years before Doc died at the Middle hotel in Ferntree Gully and they seemed to hate each other. Pretty sure Doc said nothing to the crowd all night. Fun fact 2: when they were building the transit bar in Melbourne, a mate and I found a service elevator that went to the roof, which was under construction. After peeing off the roof, which is always fun, we realised that we could clearly hear the music 5 or 6 floors below from a DJ I think. He was playing Am I Ever Gonna See Your Face Again. We started yelling down the No Way Get Fucked, Fuck Off bit thinking we were hilarious. Then soon we noticed people looking up, and for some reason they seemed to be clearly hearing us. Another mate then called us to tell us security were on the way up the stairs so we took the service elevator down and managed to laugh it off. Stoopid drunk story I guess, but fun days.
    • Cheeky, getting your artwork in there. I wonder how you did that.  I like the vocal track on #1 and that'd be my pick. I personally don't dig the female versions of songs, because I'm not a female (yet?) and as these are songs written by ourselves I personally feel the best interpretation is an AI dude voice taking the place of your dude voice. 
    • Yeah, that's great but this is obviously an accomplished musician probably completely in control of this output... not done with Suno, I'd bet. There's definitely dudes out there who are perfectly capable of doing their own music, like this dude, but for whatever reason might not be able to put a project together, again, for whatever reason... but this definitely feels a lot more like AI feeling in the missing gaps for someone otherwise in complete control of what he wants.  Either way, it is very cool indeed.  As Darkstone says, I'm not sure paying is the way to get the best results. I'm also not saying it isn't, especially with other platforms that are not Suno. I think already knowing what you're doing, musically, is the best way to get best results, personally. Suno, for example, is just perfect for someone who might enjoy writing lyrics but is not in any way shape or form an accomplished (or even adequate, lol) musician.  But yeah, it's pretty cool for some fun. I'm not sure if you checked out my links above. Keeping them pretty quiet due to lyrical content, lol, but you might dig some of the stuff in my links. 'As the moment passes by' and 'I'll wait for you' are two of my personal faves. Along with 'Faith to fall.'
    • Yeah, musically it's what you want, but vocally... Maybe Alex should take some vocal lessons from Ken Tamplin. ;}
    • Your Eyes - Darkstone (2024) Two versions of my song number 6     https://suno.com/song/e8c1e85b-21ee-4d35-a64b-e786f00944d2   https://suno.com/song/9144c77a-bd7c-49c1-9508-f724d0832fdb
    • Yep, although I was never a massive fan.
    • Yes, celebrating their fifty years. There only two original members left in the band. Dusty might agree with me the Angels died when the original singer passed away.
    • It's just not the same without the Doc though...
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.