Minions. Silly and fun. I also rented The Man from U.N.C.L.E. Can't wait to watch it today!
My daughter got 'Minions' for Christmas. It stayed in the DVD player pretty much nonstop......until a couple of days ago when someone kicked a copy of Sponge Bob to my son. Minions are definitely the lesser of the two yellow evils.Minions. Silly and fun. I also rented The Man from U.N.C.L.E. Can't wait to watch it today!
"Earth vs. The Flying Saucers" - Cheesey, hokey but Ray Harryhausen???? Every time I can get my hands on him I grab him. Great way to spend a couple of hours!
Worf
While I can totally agree with Worf's stance on Harryhausen movies, and am of the same camp, I also must agree with Fading Fast's assessment of this one. It's darn good, but it just seems to lack that certain something. I'd definitely give it a six out of six, but I need about four of them before I turn this one on.With a little more oomph in the script, this one could have had some legs in the cult movie milieu. It just doesn't have enough ridiculousness, enough over-the-top acting or enough interaction with and anthropomorphizing of the aliens to give it that "watch again and again because it is so silly / fun / goofy" quality a cult classic needs. That said, I watched it recently all the way through and just watched about an hour of it again on TCM.
My daughter got 'Minions' for Christmas. It stayed in the DVD player pretty much nonstop......until a couple of days ago when someone kicked a copy of Sponge Bob to my son. Minions are definitely the lesser of the two yellow evils.
Sent from my XT1030 using Tapatalk
Really want to hear your impressions. I want to see it, but work has been busy and I'm incredibly behind on life's fun stuff: reading, movies, TV.
We're showing "Spotlight," the hard-hitting journalistic drama based on the true story of the Boston Globe's investigation of the Catholic Church child-molestation scandal. A tightly-written, intensely-acted picture that you never notice is over two hours long, and one which will make you appreciate the real value of print newspapers, even in the internet age.
The cast is uniformly good, but gawdawmighty, Michael Keaton was almost unrecognizable.
Mad Max: Fury Road.
I was pretty indifferent to the old Mad Max films, but I gave this a try because it appeared on virtually every ten-best-films list for last year I read. And now that I've seen it, I really don't understand why! Sure, it's got great action sequences and some very cool production design... but I didn't believe any of it for a second. No exposition, no explanation, no characterization, barely any coherent dialog... there was absolutely nothing I could grasp onto that would pull me into the alleged story.
As I've said here before, I'm not a fan of action films per se, and I don't respond at all well to style over substance. This film was clearly not my thing, but even so, I'm mystified as to why it's being considered a masterwork. Two hours I wish I could get back.