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Post by Tim on Feb 15, 2024 19:18:44 GMT
Civil War (Alex Garland) After 19 states secede from the union, America breaks out into a modern-day civil war. - Speculative fiction that could become a documentary. Nice one Paul, didn't know there was an Alex Garland on the way too
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Post by MartinT on Feb 15, 2024 21:14:12 GMT
Hints of The Handmaid's Tale?
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Post by Slinger on Feb 15, 2024 22:28:36 GMT
CIVIL WAR
In the near future, a team of journalists travel across the United States during a rapidly escalating second civil war that has engulfed the entire nation, between the American government and the separatist "Western Forces" led by Texas and California. The film documents the journalists struggling to survive during a time when the government has become a dystopian dictatorship and partisan extremist militias regularly commit political violence.
The two leads appear to be Kirsten Dunst and Wagner Moura, who I've seen in Shining Girls and Mr. & Mrs. Smith. You might also recognise Stephen McKinley Henderson (Dune, Dune 2, Devs), Cailee Spaeny (Devs, Mare of Easttown, and the upcoming Alien: Romulus), Jesse Plemons (Killers of the Flower Moon, Antlers, Love & Death, Fargo), and Nick Offerman (The Last of Us, The Umbrella Academy, Devs [again] and Good Omens).
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Post by julesd68 on Mar 21, 2024 20:59:27 GMT
Alien: Romulus - teaser trailer
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Post by Tim on Mar 22, 2024 11:25:30 GMT
I just can't get excited about Romulus at all and it'll be interesting to see how well it does? You can be my tester for this one Jules
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Post by julesd68 on Mar 22, 2024 12:07:58 GMT
I'm not excited about it either Tim, I only posted it because a lot of people are expecting big things from it. We'll have to see but on first viewing it looks like they are trying to go back to basics with the first two films in mind. Nothing inherently wrong with that but it will never satisfy those of us who grew up with those films, however it may well find an audience with younger sci-fi / horror punters.
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Post by rfan8312 on Mar 22, 2024 13:12:41 GMT
Guys, Fede Alvarez is directing it. Something tells me Romulus will be just fine.
The main character could be a can of garbanzo beans and Fede would make it work.
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Post by julesd68 on Mar 22, 2024 13:28:05 GMT
Oooh - Robert is going large on Romulus! Are you offering guaranteed refunds for those of us who book a ticket and don't like it??
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Post by petea on Mar 22, 2024 13:38:08 GMT
You're not supposed to like it, Jules. You're supposed to be scared shitless!
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Post by rfan8312 on Mar 22, 2024 14:24:06 GMT
Oooh - Robert is going large on Romulus! Are you offering guaranteed refunds for those of us who book a ticket and don't like it?? Yes Jules. Mark my words. Romulus will have us all looking like Leigh Wannell at the end of the first Saw film when the corpse stands up. Just heart pounding eyes dilated terror overload.
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Post by julesd68 on Mar 22, 2024 15:00:10 GMT
Oooh - Robert is going large on Romulus! Are you offering guaranteed refunds for those of us who book a ticket and don't like it?? Yes Jules. Mark my words. Romulus will have us all looking like Leigh Wannell at the end of the first Saw film when the corpse stands up. Just heart pounding eyes dilated terror overload. I like your style Sir, I will book a seat. And keep the receipt.
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Post by rfan8312 on Mar 22, 2024 16:12:42 GMT
100% Jules. The conversion rate from USD to British Pound will be a toughy, but hey, it's Fede Alvarez.
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Post by Tim on Mar 22, 2024 19:04:45 GMT
I'm not excited about it either Tim, I only posted it because a lot of people are expecting big things from it. We'll have to see but on first viewing it looks like they are trying to go back to basics with the first two films in mind. Nothing inherently wrong with that but it will never satisfy those of us who grew up with those films, however it may well find an audience with younger sci-fi / horror punters. I think that's why it's not exciting me, it's rinsing and repeating the first two, which for me are exceptional films - understandable to go backwards to something that worked I guess, but it's no longer an original idea, but like you say, it might be for a newcomer.
I like the idea of a money back guarantee though . . I'll keep my receipt too
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Post by julesd68 on Mar 22, 2024 21:34:08 GMT
The poster also strikes a back to basics tone - very nicely done to be fair.
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Post by Tim on Mar 22, 2024 21:58:13 GMT
That is a good poster
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Post by MartinT on Mar 23, 2024 8:03:35 GMT
"In space, no-one can hear you scream"
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Post by Tim on Mar 29, 2024 10:40:37 GMT
Ryuichi Sakamoto | Opus 2023 ‧ Documentary/Music ‧ 1h 43m
Out next week here, not sure about elsewhere?
I'm sure most here likely know who Ryuichi Sakamoto is, but if not you will know his music . . . . he passed away a year ago yesterday.
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Post by MartinT on Mar 29, 2024 11:20:16 GMT
I look forward to that, Tim.
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Post by Slinger on Mar 29, 2024 17:43:42 GMT
Ryuichi Sakamoto: Opus review – a stark, emotional finale from master musicianIn his last weeks of life, the Oscar-winning composer is filmed at the piano by his son. It is an almost wordless paean to a remarkable careerShort of presenting nothing more than music and a blank screen, this documentary about the late Japanese composer-performer Ryuichi Sakamoto’s last appearances is as stark and minimal as a concert film can get. And yet it’s a work suffused with emotional tones and shades, surprisingly not all of them sad even though the subject knew at the time of filming he had mere weeks left before he’d die of cancer. There are moments when director Neo Sora, Sakamoto’s son, turns up the lighting for the more upbeat songs and we can see the master smile, pleased with his own performance, or the composition, or … we know not what, as there is almost no dialogue, no nattering about the life. We had all that in an earlier documentary, Ryuichi Sakamoto: Coda. In Opus it is the music, played by the man himself, that is completely sufficient to the moment and all that remains, with the occasional very human stumbles and missed notes. When he says he needs a break for a while, exhausted by a performance, the strain is painfully visible, audible, practically palpable. Shot in black and white with silvery shades of grey, the camera tends to track slowly or pan leisurely, in sync with the lento to moderato tempi of his playing. Sometimes we focus just on his hands, all the better to appreciate the way he occasionally conducts for himself with his right. Elsewhere, the camera pans up to his face, that shock of white hair, those signature round tortoiseshell spectacles. All the way through, the sound is rich as could be, exquisitely recorded in Sakamoto’s favourite studio. As one might expect given the circumstances, the music selection spans his career – from soundtrack work for The Sheltering Sky, The Last Emperor and Merry Christmas, Mr Lawrence, to adaptations of songs recorded with the electronic trio Yellow Magic Orchestra from the 1970s, and on to cuts from his later collaborations with German musician Alva Noto. The austerity of the film-making affords a rare chance to meditate on his range and the variety of his work as well as the consistency of his voice as a composer. Ryuichi Sakamoto: Opus is in UK cinemas from 29 March. SOURCE
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Post by Tim on Mar 30, 2024 10:54:46 GMT
I'm seeing it on the 8th April.
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