dt_toronto_geek
Superstar
I highly recommend Danny Boyle's "127 Hours", a gripping, terrifically shot tragedy that puts you into the agonizing situation with James Franco who gives a tremendous performance.
I also think so.well I change the topic...
A film that could have been the best of all time but failed...
Passion of the Christ.
The movie had an awesome story and really the best parts in the film or those scenes which are usually corny everywhere else. Where Jesus is delivering his messages, where the man picks up the cross, where his mother meets up Jesus in the end.
Really I think the film would have benefited from having more sermons.
However these legendary scenes, great storyline is just overshadowed by the flogging scene.
Its a B film, however I am sad at how it could have been one of the best films ever.
I watched Citizen Kane again on the eve of the US midterm election. The film is timeless, not only in its delivery but also in its content: the social commentary of America is as relevant today as it was then. What is remarkable is that Orson Welles directed and starred in this masterpiece when he was just 26 years old.
I watched Citizen Kane for the first time ever last month. I liked it a lot but I'm not sure if I would call it a masterpiece though.
"The Good, The Bad and The Ugly" ( restored 3 hour version ) was wonderful at Lightbox on Saturday!
As for 2001, I still haven't watched it again, after turning it off on my first viewing during that long and dumb scene with all the people dancing around in cheap monkey suits. It is still probably the worse thing I've ever seen put to film, either TV or movie.
For aesthetics and intellect:
THE DRAUGHTMAN'S CONTRACT (Peter Greenaway)
Best Canadian film:
LAST NIGHT (Don McKellar)
Best 70s Shlock:
THE ABOMINABLE DR. PHIBES and DR. PHIBES RISES AGAIN
Best single scene - 80s Sci-Fi:
"TIME TO DIE" - Blade Runner
Best slow-tension build-up
TAXI DRIVER
God a list like this could go on forever...