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Hunger Games: Mockingjay Pt 1 Katniss is back and this time she joins the Revolution trying to upend The Capital, along with people from the 1st two Movies, she succeeds in getting others to join. But Peeta is being used as propaganda to turn people against her. It has a different plot to the original Movies as it was focused on rebelling and with it being the 1st part, it was always going to end in a cliffhanger. I did like it though. Bottoms 2 High School Teens who are Gay, form a Fight Club disguised as a Self Defense Club in order to get closer to the Girls they like. But they run fowl of the High School Football Team. OK, this one is a bit strange, it's a Indie Comedy where the 2 leads are quite unlikeable but the supporting cast (The Football Team and Teacher especially) are quite hilarious. It's one of those that I won't buy full price but will if it goes really cheap. Not sure if I'd recommend it. BTW, Thanksgiving was advertised, I really hope that some of the kills were kept of the Trailer. Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2 The Revolution is in full force but Katniss must decide whether the leader of the Resistance is really right for the position or just wants to take over from President Snow. In a way this was quite disappointing, it was too long but Donald Sutherland excels as the mean Bad Guy, Woody Harrelson is quite good as well. |
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Alone In The Ghost House FF. Some idiots travel to the backwoods in search of ratings. What they find wasn't all that exciting, and the "twist" literally came out of nowhere. And not in that cool Sleepaway Camp style either. Meh. Little Murders (1971, Alan Arkin) Checked this one out as I do love The In-Laws (1979). Elliot Gould gets saved from a beating by a passing woman. They decide to get hitched after some back and forth. Both sets of parents have plenty to say about this. An oddity. What I loved was the dialogue here, in that there was dialogue and not just plot convienence parroted. Recommended. Go in blind with this one. Suitable Flesh (2023, Joe Lynch) Heather Graham and Barbara Crampton? This one. Irking the purists with an adaptation of a Lovecraft story (the only one with a woman character tee hee) certainly, I sat amused when it began to unfold. Lawdy it's silly. Not necessarily a bad thing.
__________________ [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC] [B] "... the days ahead will be filled with struggle ... and coated in marzipan ... "[/B] |
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John Wick 3: Parabellum. 2019. John must try and survive when a top bounty is placed on his head. This one does start off promising, basically starts where the previous film ends and Wick constantly clock watching and a good use for a heavy book in a library and then becomes a non stop action film. The film is brutal especially in a armory and using different weapons but then it does slow down a bit and picks up again. We have more interaction with Ian McShane and Lance Reddick who helps defeat the first wave of assassins at the Continental. Halle Berry has a small role but her character is strong and not wasted even with two dogs who know how to bite and where exactly to bite on a guy, again like the previous films fight scenes are decently choreographed. download.jpeg
__________________ " I have seen trees that look like tortured souls" |
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John Wick 4. 2023. Condemned to be on the run, Wick manages to find a way to beat the high table but faces more challenges. More fights, more action and more dog fighting and plenty of Paris Street fighting and using cars as a advantage to take out a enemy. Bit more in depth of Wick and his past that was not mentioned in the previous films. Think this got a lot of negative reviews on the release due to running time and drifting away from the plot and more characters, but this is for me a solid entry into the franchise on how those who serve under the high table use their position to negotiate what they want as Ian McShane's character uses his position to get his hotel back. Bill Skarsgard is decent as the antagonist who seems to agree on a few things yet changes on how it should go and still be without a conscience and know he has to face a tough enemy. 81fk-N7tvbL._AC_UF1000,1000_QL80_.jpg
__________________ " I have seen trees that look like tortured souls" |
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French Connection II (1975) Cracking sequel to William Friedkin's seminal thriller in which Gene Hackman's Popeye Doyle travels to Marseilles to find Alain Charnier, the drug smuggler that eluded him in New York. Blundering in to French police operations, Doyle is given a less than friendly welcome. As good a Euro thriller as you'll find and surely an inspiration to every Italian crime film that nabbed itself an American name to headline it. This is brilliantly shot by John Frankenheimer in the seedy port of Marseilles with Hackman every bit as good as the earlier film that won him an Academy Award. Midway through there's a genuinely disturbing twenty minutes that details Doyle's withdrawal after being forcibly addicted to heroin by Fernando Rey's drug ring, and all these years later it remains a hard watch and i always find it really off putting, were it not so well done it wouldn't have had the same impact but it totally kills the films momentum as well. Thankfully the final third is a full on revenge thriller with Doyle taking no shit from the French in his destructive quest to dismantle the drugs ring culminating in an exhausting foot chase for Doyle along the docks as Rey is seemingly escaping by boat. |
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Dream Scenario Nicholas Cage is a Professor who is somehow (Not explained) able to appear in dreams of multiple people. The Film follows how it is seen as a bit of a phenomenon but after the dreams start turning violent, people start turning against him. This was done as a Indie Movie but the concept could have been used as a mainstream Horror Film (Freddy Kruger was mentioned) Pretty decent watch. SPOILER: |
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AMITYVILLE 4: THE EVIL ESCAPES – The Amityville films are kind of a blur in my mind – I remember the first from TV when I was a kid, but I’ve never been overly wowed. “Get Out!” says the scary voice. I always liked that bit, but I wonder what I’d think of the whole thing now. The deliciously tripe-laden and yet somehow dark ‘Amityville 2’ is the king when it comes to a certain kind of bargain basement eighties fx driven schlock that I’m guessing had little in common with what the makers of the original were going for, but the later numbers and off-shoots are just one big haze to me. ‘The Evil Escapes’ is quite nice though really, very much a rainy afternoon film. It’s about a possessed lamp, into which the ‘evil’ from the original house has relocated itself, and basically unfolds as a steady stream of low intensity cheapo ghost-house moves – there’s gunk and a severed hand in those pipes, but who put the parrot in the oven? A cat’s eyes glow red at the end! A pleasing ‘direct to video’ vibe persists throughout, though now I find it was made for TV – didn’t know that. AMITYVILLE: A NEW GENERATION – Another sequel. I got them when they were going dead cheap in the last VS sale. I don’t think I’d ever be tempted to pay big bucks for any of them, but for a markdown it’s all pleasantly nostalgic stuff. This one is about a bunch of ‘creatives’ who hang out in a converted warehouse in New York. They look a bit too clean-cut to be the type I remember from my time as a wannabe performance artist, but maybe I went to the wrong art school. Anyway, one of them finds out that the homeless guy across the road is a pivotal long-lost figure from his past, only there’s a mirror involved, and some haunting-related stuff happens, but then someone’s done a load of really mad paintings so maybe they’re possessed. Et Cetera. As always, those tiny moments, such as when a bad glowing green demon effect sprints around for a few seconds then hides in a labyrinth of awful pictures, make it worthwhile. The mid-nineties always make me think of panpipes and Gregorian chants set to slow beats, but I’m not saying either of them feature heavily in this. |
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