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Zwabu posted:Crossposted from documentary thread:
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 07:42 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 15:15 |
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George Jefferson cop Plantation spooks oppose Slave jests this Ghost Fever
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 08:40 |
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SRM posted:So it's Arrested Development?
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 08:43 |
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The Artist was fantastic. If you don't know about it, it's about an actor (played by the amazing Jean Dujardin) during the transition from silent films to the talkies of the late 20's. The film itself is a silent film of that style and he won best lead actor for the role.
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 14:24 |
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Fiendish Dr. Wu posted:The Artist was fantastic. If you don't know about it, it's about an actor (played by the amazing Jean Dujardin) during the transition from silent films to the talkies of the late 20's. The film itself is a silent film of that style and he won best lead actor for the role. I thought it was a good movie, but I don't think it was worthy of the Best Picture Oscar, and I think its going to be one of those movies that will have people scratching their heads in a few years, and likely even just forgotten. Although, not nearly egregious as Crash or The Hurt Locker winning.
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 14:43 |
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Nihonniboku posted:I thought it was a good movie, but I don't think it was worthy of the Best Picture Oscar, and I think its going to be one of those movies that will have people scratching their heads in a few years, and likely even just forgotten. Although, not nearly egregious as Crash or The Hurt Locker winning. I kind of agree with this (I liked but didn't love the film) but drat if Mr. Dujardin doesn't have the greatest smile, it's just amazing to see. Perfect face for a silent actor.
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 16:14 |
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regulargonzalez posted:I kind of agree with this (I liked but didn't love the film) but drat if Mr. Dujardin doesn't have the greatest smile, it's just amazing to see. Perfect face for a silent actor. I've mentioned this during Artist chat before, but if you love Dujardin and that movie be sure to also check out the OSS 117 movies (Also on Netflix), where that star-director team spoofs 1960s spy flicks in hilarious fashion. Dujardin is just as good when he speaks as well, and those are some of my favorite comedies.
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 16:34 |
Nihonniboku posted:I thought it was a good movie, but I don't think it was worthy of the Best Picture Oscar, and I think its going to be one of those movies that will have people scratching their heads in a few years, and likely even just forgotten. Although, not nearly egregious as Crash or The Hurt Locker winning. I think the fact that, despite being one of the biggest movies of last year, Fiendish Dr. Wu felt the need to introduce it to us with a "in case you haven't heard of it" disclaimer proves its already being forgotten about.
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 16:40 |
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PriorMarcus posted:I think the fact that, despite being one of the biggest movies of last year, Fiendish Dr. Wu felt the need to introduce it to us with a "in case you haven't heard of it" disclaimer proves its already being forgotten about. I did have a parenthetical afterwards that was going to say something about not sure which rock you've been under, but I left it out. I guess I liked it so much because it was so different (by today's standards) and I have a thing for that era.
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 17:14 |
Fiendish Dr. Wu posted:I did have a parenthetical afterwards that was going to say something about not sure which rock you've been under, but I left it out. I liked it, and I definitely think that the cast deserve the accolades it got, however, I don't think it was anywhere near being a best picture nominee in quality.
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 17:43 |
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PriorMarcus posted:I don't think it was anywhere near being a best picture nominee in quality. When is that ever the case, though? At this point I'm just happy that something memorable and weird like The Artist won instead of yet another period piece Oscar bait.
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 18:00 |
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Farbtoner posted:When is that ever the case, though? At this point I'm just happy that something memorable and weird like The Artist won instead of yet another period piece Oscar bait. While I'm all right with it winning, "period piece Oscar bait" is exactly how a lot of people I know looked at The Artist, and I can't really blame them. 2011's Oscars kind of stunk of "remember the old traditions of Hollywood? We should bring them back!" between that, Hugo and others.
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 18:07 |
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You do have to admit there's a certain amount of daring in trying to make and release a black and white silent film at all in the year of our Lord two thousand and eleven. I don't think it's the best film of the year but I don't see it as being particularly unworthy either.
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 18:25 |
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I liked Midnight in Paris better, but The Artist was still wonderful and I don't get why people are begrudging it winning. I thought Hugo was terrible and The Tree of Life was incomprehensible, but a lot of people thought they were brilliant and I appreciate that they were nominated. Hugo was probably the most "baity" movie being period and a loose biopic.Hewlett posted:While I'm all right with it winning, "period piece Oscar bait" is exactly how a lot of people I know looked at The Artist, and I can't really blame them. 2011's Oscars kind of stunk of "remember the old traditions of Hollywood? We should bring them back!" between that, Hugo and others. Eh, I didn't really get that vibe from The Artist or Hugo. I viewed them more as a celebration of the origins of film than a nostalgic pining for those times. There may have been some subtle desire to see a return to passion filmmaking over commercial filmmaking (even if it was very commercial back then), but I don't think it was a major point of either.
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 20:30 |
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Malloreon posted:The West Wing is now on Netflix Instant. All 7 seasons. I've actually only seen maybe one episode of this show, but I'm pretty excited to start now.
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 20:34 |
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mr. mephistopheles posted:I liked Midnight in Paris better, but The Artist was still wonderful and I don't get why people are begrudging it winning. I thought Hugo was terrible and The Tree of Life was incomprehensible, but a lot of people thought they were brilliant and I appreciate that they were nominated. Hugo was probably the most "baity" movie being period and a loose biopic. Of, I'm just arguing about the public perception of the films, I agree they weren't strictly trying for that. I just thought the Academys darlings that year fell along a cerain pattern.
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 20:57 |
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mr. mephistopheles posted:I liked Midnight in Paris better, but The Artist was still wonderful and I don't get why people are begrudging it winning. I thought Hugo was terrible and The Tree of Life was incomprehensible, but a lot of people thought they were brilliant and I appreciate that they were nominated. Hugo was probably the most "baity" movie being period and a loose biopic. Hugo was magical. I think it should have been between Midnight in Paris and Hugo for the top nod. SouthLAnd posted:I've actually only seen maybe one episode of this show, but I'm pretty excited to start now. Its viewed better if you acknowledge what it is: a sitcom. While it does have its serious moments, and certainly tries to take itself very seriously, it is mostly full of the zany antics and frequent one-liners of the White House staff, with President Bartlett in the role of the bumbling dad whose only wisdom comes at the end of each episode where he explains the lesson of the week to the children, or rather his staff. You get such gems as whole episodes centering on the President, sick in bed with the flu, desperately trying to have sex with his wife while his staff have to work hard to try and convince him that he needs to stay in bed to rest. Really, if you put a laugh track over the show, it wouldn't seem out of place at all. The show is respectable for being revolutionary at the time for being one of the only shows at the time of its quality. It was at the forefront of the golden era of television that began in the late 90's with shows like itself, The Sopranos and Six Feet Under, but I think that it is dated now in that there have just been so many other better shows since then.
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 20:58 |
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Nihonniboku posted:Hugo was magical. I think it should have been between Midnight in Paris and Hugo for the top nod. Yeah the West Wing is definitely very Clinton-era-y, but its still fun to watch just because it has so many good actors in it. It is a bit weird watching it in 2012 after two middle-eastern wars, 9/11, and a collapsed economy and in the show they're pondering what to do with the budget surplus or something.
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 21:06 |
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Nihonniboku posted:... but I think that [The West Wing] is dated now in that there have just been so many other better shows since then.
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 21:06 |
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mr. mephistopheles posted:Hugo was probably the most "baity" movie being period and a loose biopic.
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 21:08 |
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kuddles posted:I think you forgot about the movie where an autistic boy remembers his father Tom Hanks who died in the twin towers. Add to that the fact that it only really turns into a biopic in the last hour, the first half being just a Scorcese esque steampunk kids movie.
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 22:18 |
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kuddles posted:I think you forgot about the movie where an autistic boy remembers his father Tom Hanks who died in the twin towers. Intentionally, yes. Also it seemed to have crossed too far over the line between "heartstring tugger" and "exploitative schmaltz" and I think most people were puzzled by its nomination given its general reception. Hugo was a critical darling. Hewlett posted:Add to that the fact that it only really turns into a biopic in the last hour, the first half being just a Scorcese esque steampunk kids movie. True. I might have enjoyed it more if it hadn't felt like it was dragging its feet for the first hour with a stupid orphan cliche trying to solve a personal mystery I felt no investment in. I enjoyed the 30-40 minutes that were actually about Méliès.
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 23:02 |
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I've only seen a few episodes of the West Wing, but one included Toby smuggly giving a condescending speach to WTO protesters infused with the wisdom of moderate liberalism. Go gently caress yourself Toby.
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# ? Dec 26, 2012 23:55 |
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There's a ton of Columbo episodes on Netflix and they are excellent. Not only are the plotlines very interesting, it's always fun to see guests like Leslie Neilsen and Leonard Nimoy show up. For you unfortunate souls who are unfamiliar with the show, Columbo is about a disheveled, friendly detective who solves murders. Peter Falk plays the lead and he is so drat likeable that you can't help but watch episode after episode. It's really great to watch Columbo slowly unravel complex murder mysteries in a way that doesn't involve superhuman abilities(like Sherlock, which rules) or ludicrous technology(CSI).
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# ? Dec 27, 2012 02:27 |
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Columbo rules and I seriously doubt anyone other than Peter Falk could've pulled it off. It's really clever and sly with its protagonist who essentially just irritates people into incriminating themselves.
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# ? Dec 27, 2012 02:39 |
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Columbo is awesome and I wish all the episodes were up. Falk is amazing of course, but you've got to tip your hat to the stellar writing of that series. A 90+ minute detective show where you know who the murderer is right from the beginning, and yet you can always start an episode knowing it will be completely captivating. There are only a few duds in the whole run.
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# ? Dec 27, 2012 03:49 |
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I used to watch Columbo with my grandmother all the time. I love it when the crook thinks he's in the clear and then Columbo goes, "Oh yeah, just one more thing."
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# ? Dec 27, 2012 04:07 |
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kuddles posted:Columbo is awesome and I wish all the episodes were up. Falk is amazing of course, but you've got to tip your hat to the stellar writing of that series. A 90+ minute detective show where you know who the murderer is right from the beginning, and yet you can always start an episode knowing it will be completely captivating. There are only a few duds in the whole run. This is very true, people like to pretend that this is the first time good writing ever appeared in TV shows but they are just remembering the stretch of their childhood that was crammed full of awful sitcoms and cartoons made to sell toys.
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# ? Dec 27, 2012 14:59 |
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Pandabearassault posted:There's a ton of Columbo episodes on Netflix and they are excellent. Not only are the plotlines very interesting, it's always fun to see guests like Leslie Neilsen and Leonard Nimoy show up. Columbo's weird dubious look is a lot of what made his character work. Interestingly it was from him having a glass right eye, it was removed when he was a kid. Watching the show on Netflix on a bigger screen you can really see how fake it is. Once I knew that, Columbo because a 90 minute show about me trying to see his fake eye, just like how MASH is now a 30 minute show where I try to spot radar's crippled hand.
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# ? Dec 27, 2012 15:15 |
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The New Legend of Shaolin, aka Bad Parenting: The Movie, sure is a weird film. I've been on a Wong Jing kick lately. He is everything that is great and terrible about 90's Hong Kong cinema. I really wish God of Gamblers was on streaming.
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# ? Dec 27, 2012 15:20 |
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What's the deal with show availability on Netflix? I understand it's all tied to rights issues about what they can stream and where they can do it, but I don't get the way they go about things. UK shows available only in the US, US shows only available in the UK, Canada getting some seriously good movies releases at times. I mean, I use Unblock-US so it's not an issue, but it's weird I have to use the UK stream to watching the latest Breaking Bad or Portlandia, or Canadas to watch whatever new movie out of the US. poo poo be weird.
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# ? Dec 29, 2012 08:28 |
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Bloody Hedgehog posted:What's the deal with show availability on Netflix? I understand it's all tied to rights issues about what they can stream and where they can do it, but I don't get the way they go about things. UK shows available only in the US, US shows only available in the UK, Canada getting some seriously good movies releases at times. The rights issues aren't just a matter of who has the right to what, but what makes money where. For instance, they've tried to show Breaking Bad on TV in the UK twice and it failed miserably both times, so showing the new season on Netflix isn't hurting anything. Whereas in the US, I'm sure AMC wants to get its fill of reruns first. Likewise, I'm sure there's stuff the BBC can't get on air here so it doesn't hurt to have it on Netflix.
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# ? Dec 29, 2012 11:28 |
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How do you guys manage your international queues? I didn't know that the new season of Breaking Bad was on Netflix UK, and I'd love to have access to the new season of Portlandia. I already have a VPN with nodes around the world so that part isn't a problem, I just want to know how you keep track of what's available where.
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# ? Dec 29, 2012 14:41 |
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I find it funny that 'Girls With Low Self Esteem' is still in the top 10 most popular titles on Instant Watcher but hardly any of the other fake AD shows are in the top 50.
eleven extra elephants fucked around with this message at 17:28 on Dec 29, 2012 |
# ? Dec 29, 2012 17:24 |
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Despite its three star rating I thought Four Rooms was pretty fantastic. Especially the Robert Roduigez segment "The Misbehavers" which turned into an adult version of Looney Toons. Four out of five. Good times.
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# ? Dec 29, 2012 22:50 |
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^^ I've always loved that movie, and I find it kind of surprising that it bombed as hard as it did.FAT WORM OF ERROR posted:I find it funny that 'Girls With Low Self Esteem' is still in the top 10 most popular titles on Instant Watcher but hardly any of the other fake AD shows are in the top 50. I think that just proves the sad fact that if Girls Gone Wild were actually on Netflix it'd be the most watched thing by people who don't know how to search for porn on the internet/don't have a computer. Anyway, I just watched Indie Game: The Movie last night after my misgivings about it. I figured it'd just be an internet-quality fanwank project, but it's actually a really good documentary in its own right. It has all the drama of something like "King of Kong", it just happens to be about small-team game developers. Edmund McMillen and Tommy Refenes (Super Meat Boy) were the most likable and interesting to watch of the bunch, they probably could've made an entire movie just around those two and their families/spouses. JB of Braid was like some inscrutable alien being, and Phil Fish came across like a hot-headed flaming douchebag.
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# ? Dec 29, 2012 22:56 |
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Tewratomeh posted:^^ I've always loved that movie, and I find it kind of surprising that it bombed as hard as it did. I'm not going to post the Netflix Porn site again but there is definitely an undercurrent of people who use it for celebrity/rape porn.
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# ? Dec 29, 2012 22:58 |
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Tewratomeh posted:Edmund McMillen and Tommy Refenes (Super Meat Boy) were the most likable and interesting to watch of the bunch, they probably could've made an entire movie just around those two and their families/spouses. JB of Braid was like some inscrutable alien being, and Phil Fish came across like a hot-headed flaming douchebag. I liked how the hidden theme of the movie, though, was essentially "Working with Microsoft is a complete nightmare."
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# ? Dec 30, 2012 03:00 |
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kuddles posted:It doesn't help that since most of that footage has been filmed, Phil Fish has pretty much revealed himself to be an egotistical rear end in a top hat who has trouble working with others which makes that one-sided portrayal of their fallout much harder to swallow. Well, at first you kind of empathize with Fish when he talks about all of the problems he had during development, about his partner leaving the project and then his girlfriend leaving him. But then later on, as he starts ramping up the drama you get the impression that both of those things might, in fact, be due to Fish's personality and not so much bad things happening to a guy for no good reason. It's especially glaring when you put it up against McMillen and Refenes, who respond to similar pressures in a much more level-headed way. They also seem ready to blame themselves (well, and Microsoft, but that's reasonable) before they blame anybody else for any potential failure. That aside, I laughed my rear end off at Phil freaking out at all the game-breaking bugs. He was just so tense and nobody else seemed to give a poo poo.
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# ? Dec 30, 2012 03:45 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 15:15 |
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May I humbly recommend the fp for your viewing pleasure. Same distro company that ended up with the right to Miami connection (another amazing film). The digital revolution has allowed people to make some crazy poo poo and this my friends is crazy poo poo. The difference between the fp and Miami connection is the fp is always winking at you where Miami connection really wanted to be something. They are both special but Miami connection is not streaming. It's best to see it in a loud cinema at midnight anyhow. https://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/The_FP/70180031?locale=en-US
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# ? Dec 30, 2012 21:21 |