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The Movie Thread


radio master666

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  • 2 weeks later...

I enjoyed Mad Max 4. It was fantastic visually. There was nothing super annoying about it stylistically such as way over use of slow motion. It might have ruined a franchise a little bit with next to zero dialog and... I was going to say that there is zero arc of development for any characters, but that is short of totally true. There is one character that develops just a little bit. Lastly the quality of the action was a little herky jerky as in a modern kung-fu movie, and that ruins a franchise a little as well. This is not a recommendation, just a report. What I recommend is getting a Honda Civic, keeping the tires properly inflated, and car pooling. Thanks for your consideration.

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I see they're cashing in on' date=' ahem, re-making 'Poltergeist', Hate remakes. Watched 'The Evil Dead' again recently, love it :) 'Let the Right One In' is a great film too (original)...great atmosphere.[/quote'] Lat den ratte komma in is maybe one of my favorite films ever. As you said, the atmosphere is really great, but is the plot and everything around it is amazing too. Rewatched it once again a few days ago.
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I'll have to make do with Let Me In as I can no longer see well enough to watch subtitled films. Speaking of vampires...Dracula (1931 there's been so many I felt the need to specify). Ah for the days when horror was more about atmosphere and the slow build of tension then blood and gore. Top notch acting all around and a film which stands up even 84 years on.

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Great book with some terrific film adaptations. It's a shame so many movies utterly fail to treat their source material with respect. Think I'll have me a little Vincent Price movie marathon tomorrow. Now there's an actor truly born for horror, his presence, his delivery, his naturally creepy voice, much like Anthony Hopkins Price is a prime example of how the subtle nuances of acting, tone of voice, body language, etc are often far more terrifying then any special effects, blood and gore, or faceless killer.

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