| ||||
Jason and the Argonauts (1963) It struck me towards the end of this master piece how visual effects legend Ray Harryhausen lulls you into proceedings. Beginning with the statuesque Talos, a slow moving almost lumbering giant cast out of bronze. Then we have a couple of Harpies, more complex in their movements especially when in flight. The Clashing Rocks are the calm before the storm so to speak because soon after the shit really does hit the stop motion fan with the multi headed snake like Hydra before the pièce de résistance head f*ck of the "children of the Hydra's teeth" - seven sword and shield wielding skeletons. The stop motion animation work that went into them must have been obscene. Stunning stuff. The rest of the movie pales in comparison. |
| ||||
lf (1).jpg 0784c9a1933f3417a9fb18ede03ee88b.jpg THE THREE MUSKETEERS(1973) THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (1974) An all star cast in these comedy adventures. Full of sword play, action and slapstick moments. These movies stick quite close the Dumas novel. The Three Musketeers (The Queens Diamonds) is the most humorous of the two movies. The Four Musketeers (The Revenge Of Milady) takes a more serious turn with some characters meeting their deaths. Originally filmed to be one big roadshow movie, the cast had no idea that the film had been split in to two movies. This led to a lawsuit by the actors and actresses as they had only been paid for one movie. |
| |||
Godzilla vs Gigan Godzilla vs Megalon Both superd Godzilla movies, and although Megalon is apparently not popular amongst fans, I loved it! Action packed & fast paced. Watched an upload of the withdrawn Tokyo Shock commentary (on youtube) while the movie was playing, amazing! |
| |||
You Should Have Left Kevin Bacon and Amanda Seyfried and bairn go on holiday to Wales. To a house that Ballard would have had nightmares about tbh. Poorly scripted and edited, this just unravels after about 20 minutes. If you take anything away from this, it should be to give this one a swerve. Bairn reasonable. No pets. It made me want to revisit The Skin I Live In, though I can't say why ....
__________________ [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC] [B] "... the days ahead will be filled with struggle ... and coated in marzipan ... "[/B] |
| |||
Kicking off my Gamera set with Gamera: Guardian of the universe. Having only seen about two of these, I'm in awe of how good this is. Made in 1995, it has a Jurassic Park vibe but also seems to anticipate the 2014 Godzilla remake. Very fast paced, with an option of 3 soundtracks (went for original Japanese with subs). Great film, with effects better than most Hollywood films of the last 20 years! |
| ||||
MV5BYjBmMGY1YmItYTI0Ny00NGNmLTg0NzEtZjNiZWQ5MDExMGU0XkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyMzU0NzkwMDg@._V1_.jpg MURDER BY THE CLOCK (1931) Excellent old dark house movie with a cemetery and crypt in the grounds. The crypt has a horn installed in case the owner of the house is entombed alive. Lilyan Tashman is superb as the woman who is scheming to get her hands on family inheritance by twisting men round her finger and getting them to commit murder. 20130929-121808.jpg THE SHUTTERED ROOM (1967) Carol Lynley returns to her mill house family home after being sent away when she was four years old. Despite repeated warnings of a family curse and constant harassment by Oliver Reed and his gang, she and her husband move in to the old mill. There was a bit of an uproar when the mill location, re built in 1820 was bought by the film company to be destroyed. This is interesting and includes the history of the mill and the filming information. Norfolk Mills - Hardingham watermill |
| ||||
Mary Queen of Scots (2018) ★★★★ Working from a book by Dr John Guy, director Josie Rourke and screenwriter Beau Willimon took a lot of liberties with historical facts that, because I haven't studied the Tudors in much depth and are not particularly precious about the characters, dates, and locations from that period, the historical inaccuracies of which I am aware don't bother me at all. The film uses two fascinating characters from a really interesting piece of British history and weaves them together to make the film which, both times I've seen it, has been compelling and enjoyable. It's beautifully directed with exceptional costumes, production design, set decoration, art decoration, make-up, and locations, and shot in such a way to make it visually interesting at all points. I also love Max Richter's score, an innovative and emotional piece of music. This film also has wonderful performances from Saoirse Ronan, Margot Robbie, Adrian Lester, David Tennant, Guy Pearce, Martin Compston, Ismael Cruz Cordova, and Simon Russell Beale – the colourblind casting allows directed Josie Rourke to work with a hugely talented ensemble cast. Mary Queen of Scots is a fine film, though one which will probably irritate those who know their Tudor history too well to accept the story they are being told, wishing it was factually accurate.
__________________ |
Like this? Share it using the links below! |
| |