|
Post by MartinT on Jun 15, 2020 17:34:35 GMT
I'm going to disagree and walk away in a huff!
|
|
|
Post by julesd68 on Jun 15, 2020 17:40:57 GMT
|
|
|
Post by Slinger on Jun 15, 2020 17:47:11 GMT
|
|
|
Post by MartinT on Jun 15, 2020 21:49:07 GMT
No, but seriously, how could Ron Howard be associated with that appalling dreck?
Ok, I'm going now.
|
|
|
Post by julesd68 on Jun 16, 2020 8:46:40 GMT
I watched Inferno last night.
I would comfortably put it in my Top 10 films of all time.
|
|
|
Post by Tim on Jun 16, 2020 14:58:29 GMT
I'm going to disagree and walk away in a huff! I'm going to agree with Paul, 6.6 seems about the right score - not brilliant, but not totally awful either. It's what I'd call an ironing film, as in no concentration needed and you can be doing something else without losing the thread. Mainstream entertainment doing what it says on the tin.
See, I thought Alien Covenant was absolute dreck and that's 6.4 on IMDB
And folks, if you fancy watching this on Netflix, it leaves at midnight tomorrow
|
|
|
Post by Slinger on Jun 16, 2020 15:07:27 GMT
I watched Inferno last night. I would comfortably put it in my Top 10 films of all time. Nope, nearly said something. I'm saying nothing instead. That's safest.
|
|
|
Post by julesd68 on Jun 16, 2020 15:15:32 GMT
LOL! I decided I wanted to watch some completely undemanding but entertaining. Not Big Ron's finest hour of course but it moves along nicely and the locations are just gorgeous - I want to go to Florence even more now and am kicking myself for not visiting the underground cisterns of Istanbul when there many moons ago ...
|
|
|
Post by MartinT on Jun 16, 2020 15:31:47 GMT
And folks, if you fancy watching this on Netflix, it leaves at midnight tomorrow Diane Ruger - I'm tempted. It's hard watching a full film on a weekday evening, though.
|
|
|
Post by MartinT on Jun 16, 2020 15:34:22 GMT
I decided I wanted to watch some completely undemanding but entertaining. Have you seen Man On Fire, Jules? Now that's a 10/10 action film.
|
|
|
Post by Slinger on Jun 16, 2020 15:51:30 GMT
LOL! I decided I wanted to watch some completely undemanding but entertaining. Not Big Ron's finest hour of course but it moves along nicely and the locations are just gorgeous - I want to go to Florence even more now and am kicking myself for not visiting the underground cisterns of Istanbul when there many moons ago ... The locations are terrific, but of the three films this was my least favourite. I think, probably, because I felt it deviated from the book by too great a distance. They are all definitely "Sunday Night" films to me; something that can hold your attention without demanding all of it.
|
|
|
Post by TheMooN on Jun 16, 2020 16:38:43 GMT
|
|
|
Post by julesd68 on Jun 16, 2020 17:15:11 GMT
I decided I wanted to watch some completely undemanding but entertaining. Have you seen Man On Fire, Jules? Now that's a 10/10 action film. Cheers Martin, will watch that this week ...
|
|
|
Post by julesd68 on Jun 16, 2020 17:16:06 GMT
LOL! I decided I wanted to watch some completely undemanding but entertaining. Not Big Ron's finest hour of course but it moves along nicely and the locations are just gorgeous - I want to go to Florence even more now and am kicking myself for not visiting the underground cisterns of Istanbul when there many moons ago ... The locations are terrific, but of the three films this was my least favourite. I think, probably, because I felt it deviated from the book by too great a distance. They are all definitely "Sunday Night" films to me; something that can hold your attention without demanding all of it. Ah, I never read the books so I was easily pleased!
|
|
|
Post by julesd68 on Jun 17, 2020 0:31:49 GMT
I watched In The Fade last night.
Extremely well put together and a terrific central performance. Unrelentingly depressing though.
|
|
|
Post by Tim on Jun 17, 2020 12:27:10 GMT
Extremely well put together and a terrific central performance. Unrelentingly depressing though. Haha, yup, that's my type of film - gritty, edgy, hard hitting and relentlessly depressing.
You can keep your cheery rom-com's and comedies, now they do normally depress me unless they are extremely well written and acted
I watched Alien (Directors Cut) again last night, lost count of how many times I've watched Alien and it still cuts the mustard.
|
|
|
Post by MartinT on Jun 17, 2020 13:21:13 GMT
I watched Alien (Directors Cut) again last night, lost count of how many times I've watched Alien and it still cuts the mustard.
A true classic.
|
|
|
Post by TheMooN on Jun 17, 2020 14:35:56 GMT
|
|
|
Post by Slinger on Jun 17, 2020 19:40:44 GMT
...I watched Alien (Directors Cut) again last night, lost count of how many times I've watched Alien and it still cuts the mustard.
I bought this set a long time ago. All four Alien films on 9 DVDs. Over 40 hours of addidional footage. Four discs containing the original theatrical versions of each film in addition to the extended versions with Alien containing the 2003 Director's Cut and Aliens 3 including Fincher's workprint. An additional four discs containing new, detailed commentaries, interviews, multi-angle anamatics, pre-production, production and post production featurettes, 252 pages of Stan Winstons fascinating workshop, screenplays and intriguing Easter Eggs. The final bonus disc contains rare still archives, theatrical and television trailers, interviews and fascinating special effects footage. From Amazon.co.uk
The Alien Quadrilogy is a nine-disc box set devoted to the four Alien films. Although previously available on DVD as the Alien Legacy, here the films have been repackaged with vastly more extras and with upgraded sound and vision. For anyone who hasn't been in hypersleep for the last 25 years this series needs no introduction, though for the first time each film now comes in both original and "Special Edition" form. Alien (1979) was so perfect it didn't need fixing, and Ridley Scott's 2003 Director's Cut is fiddling for the sake of it. Watch once then return to the majestic, perfectly paced original. Conversely the Special Edition of James Cameron's Aliens (1986) is the definitive version, though it's nice finally to have the theatrical cut on DVD for comparison. Most interesting is the alternative Alien3 (1992). This isn't a "director's cut"--David Fincher refused to have any involvement with this release--but a 1991 work-print that runs 29 minutes longer than the theatrical version, and has now been restored, remastered and finished-off with (unfortunately) cheap new CGI. Still, it's truly fascinating, offering a different insight into a flawed masterpiece. The expanded opening is visually breathtaking, the central firestorm is much longer, and a subplot involving Paul McGann's character adds considerable depth to the story. The ending is also subtly but significantly different. Alien Resurrection (1997) was always a mess with a handful of brilliant scenes, and the Special Edition just makes it eight minutes longer. On the DVD: Alien Quadrilogy offers all films except Alien3 with DTS soundtracks, the latter having still fine Dolby Digital 5.1 presentation. All four films sound fantastic, with much low-level detail revealed for the first time. Each is anamorphically enhanced at the correct original aspect ratio, and the prints and transfers are superlative. Every film offers a commentary that lends insight into the creative process--though the Scott-only commentary and isolated music score from the first Alien DVD release are missing here--and there are subtitles for hard of hearing both for the films and the commentaries. Each movie is complemented by a separate disc packed with hours of seriously detailed documentaries (all presented at 4:3 with clips letterboxed), thousands of photos, production stills and storyboards, giving a level of inside information for the dedicated buff only surpassed by the Lord of the Rings extended DVD sets. A ninth DVD compiles miscellaneous material, including a Channel 4 hour-long documentary and even all the extras from the old Alien laserdisc. Exhaustive hardly begins to describe the Alien Quadrilogy, a set which establishes the new DVD benchmark for retrospective releases and which looks unlikely to be surpassed for some time. -- Gary S Dalkin
MORE DETAILS
|
|
|
Post by TheMooN on Jun 20, 2020 10:37:12 GMT
|
|