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Post by hi224 on May 17, 2019 18:34:55 GMT
seeing two as well.
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Post by Deleted on May 18, 2019 2:47:55 GMT
See John Wick Chapter 3 twice cause the rest of the choices look like trash .
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Post by Nora on May 18, 2019 3:11:50 GMT
See John Wick Chapter 3 twice cause the rest of the choices look like trash . wick and long shot everything else is bad or mediocre at best. no contest.
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Post by Deleted on May 18, 2019 6:33:05 GMT
Not sure about the movies you have listed above and haven't heard of some of them but the movie I am looking forward to seeing the most this year is 'Clementine' and sadly we will have to wait until it comes out on DVD here to see it in Australia but I heard from Sydney fans who saw it at the Tribeca Film Festival it was a brilliant movie and Sydney Sweeney gave the best performance of the year so I would suggest seeing that if you can.
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Post by politicidal on May 18, 2019 23:35:59 GMT
Prepare for war.
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Post by joekiddlouischama on May 19, 2019 4:40:23 GMT
The Intruder is lousy, but it manages to be watchable—and to maintain a tenuous hold on mediocrity—for most of its length, until it becomes truly insulting at the end (mainly for stylistic reasons). Overall, one could describe The Intruder as a somewhat entertaining form of ridiculousness, if also a waste of money.
I actually deem Tolkien "pretty good," meaning above-average yet certainly less than a full-fledged "good" film. The movie is, perhaps, too sentimental to be anything greater, but it is attractively lit and shot (often by identifiable light sources within the frame) and it taps into a potent combination of hope and despair, or romanticism and fatalism. The film explores such matters as seeking individualism while yearning for community, of trying to be different yet wanting to fit in with a group, of escaping society's conventions but wondering if one can really overcome a difficult background, of whether writing can truly be meaningful. The archetypes of male friendship and heterosexual pining are, perhaps, predictable, but they receive a respectable treatment, and overall the movie indeed defines the formative genesis of Tolkien's visionary novels. I am going to view the film one more time.
I am not going to see the Wick movie, as I have not viewed the first two and this kind of film carries no interest for me.
I might see Long Shot, but I could also pass on it. The star combination is slightly intriguing, but this sort of setup seems fairly predictable and frivolous. The Hustle, meanwhile, appears to be even more of a throwaway, so I will pass on that one.
Of these five films, Tolkien is almost certainly the one that a viewer could receive the most from.
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