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Executive Decision. 1996. Good crafted well written and directed tense thriller with Kurt Russell as the office guy dragged along with Steven Seagal and his men to infiltrate a plane in mid flight that's been hijacked by David Suchet. Fortunately Seagal is only in part of the film so all eyes are not focussed on him strutting his stuff and looking out of breath. With a cast of John Leguizamo, Joe Morton, Oliver Platt, Halle Berry, B.D. Wong nobody tries to outshine everyone. Aside from a good built up of tense moments and Platt's character looking like a nervous wreck there is some quirky comments and Morton's character able to give out some laughs while in agony. David Suchet shows he can step out of the limelight from Poirot and step into another role of a mad terrorist. hLjXkFr9fHlWzRVwu1T31QSVHRq.jpg
__________________ " I have seen trees that look like tortured souls" |
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The Film Books Thread |
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Enjoyed watching dirty harry in Magnum Force as my Sunday afternoon film. The only reason I'm posting about it, is because I wanted to mention something that winds up my American wife: a silencer on a revolver. Funny how you sometimes see this in certain movies.
__________________ PSN user name: suspiria-inferno Xbox user name: suspiria742952 |
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The first two mad science themed films The Man They Could Not Hang and The Man With Nine Lives, make the Eureka/Columbia set worth it for me. For the price it can now be picked up definitely. |
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Ah fair enough. Horses for courses Dem. The worse film in the set by a long way for me has been The Black Room, which isn't one of the science films and I seem to recall being the only one you particularly rate. I've just got The Boogie Man Will Get You left to watch. It doesn't seem to have a great rep even though it sounds fun. Last edited by J Harker; 19th February 2023 at 05:33 PM. |
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Christine (1983) Although based on the book by Stephen King, Christine is probably one of director John Carpenter's less heralded works from his golden eighties period. It is with me, i don't know why because it's brilliant, yet last night was only the second time i'd ever seen the film and the first on Blu-ray. More a dark fantasy than genuine horror film, Christine tells the story of the change in personality of geeky school kid Arnie Cunningham and how it affects his relationships with friends and family when he buys a clapped out 1958 Plymouth Fury and decides to do it up, little knowing the car, named Christine, has a murderous back story. As with so much of Stephen King's work Christine is beautifully realised in a human sense with it's depiction of older teen culture. Arnie, really well played by Keith Gordon, has our sympathies to begin with but the longer he is influenced by the car the more we root for girlfriend Alexandra Paul and best friend John Stockwell as they are the ones being sidelined by the car's presence in Arnie's life. So much of the film is basically classic US college drama that you forget it's also a supernatural thriller until Christine gets to work on the dudes that have made Arnie's life a misery through high school. Christine is a gorgeous looking car, i know at one point i doubted if it would fit through my standard driveway being an American vehicle from the fifties that's wider by far than typical cars nowadays. Christine develops so much of her own evil personality that come the finale i actually found myself rooting for Stockwell's Bulldozer as if it were Robot Wars or something. As a piece of celluloid entertainment, Christine hits all the right marks. It's well acted - there's a great support adult cast including Harry Dean Stanton, Robert Prosky and Roberts Blossom - rattles along at a good pace with some terrific set pieces and is a lot of bad to the bone fun. |
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