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Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
Mr_Adams wrote:You, sir, are an idiot.
Timminz wrote:By that logic, you eat babies.
Neoteny wrote:I'm going to show my absurd side on this one, just watch me...
Closer
Garden State
Inside Man
No Country
Superbad (I can't help it)
No particular order, of course.
I could probably turn gay (genetically, of course) for Jude Law and Clive Owen. I don't know why...
spurgistan wrote:Hmmm, you really liked 2007, didn't you, Neo?
Completely arbitrary list:
Dr. Strangelove: Or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love The Bomb
The Seven Samurai
Monty Python's The Life of Brian
Apocalypse Now
Taxi Driver
How the f*ck did I go from Kubrick to Kurosawa to Monty Pythonto Coppola to Scorcese?
jonesthecurl wrote:Well, none of those movies made my list but love them all.
and you know, kubrick's doing well on this thread - If someone lists The Shining and Eyes Wide Shut (do i hav that title right) we've virtually got the set.
reminisco wrote: (we can skip Spartacus for all i care, a good picture, but nothing compared to the rest of the library.
reminisco wrote:Jenos Ridan wrote:1) The Original Star Wars Trilogy
2) All three LOTR moives
3) All the even-numbered Star Trek films (2, 4, 6)
4) The Indiana Jones Trilogy
5) The Pink Panther movies
there always has to be on ornery person who can't resist listing more items than the thread suggests. congratulations, you win the prize this time!
maybe i should list my top 86 most favorite films.
Nataki Yiro wrote:I actually found it quite entertaining and well made. It was merely a documentary on how Neo-Darwinism denies all other theories access to science. Darwin challenged the theories of his day and was successful. If anyone challenges the theories of our day they are silenced. Is that what science is about? Silencing ideas that we personally don't like...
I would suggest you go see it (I'm assuming you haven't seen it because that would be just too good for you to see a movie then made a judgment about it). It has very good discussions between the leading people of Neo-Darwinism and those who reject Neo-Darwinism.
Have you seen any of the movies I posted?
It's a Wonderful Life is one of my favs. I watch it every Christmas without fail...
spurgistan wrote:Hmmm, you really liked 2007, didn't you, Neo?
Completely arbitrary list:
Dr. Strangelove: Or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love The Bomb
The Seven Samurai
Monty Python's The Life of Brian
Apocalypse Now
Taxi Driver
How the f*ck did I go from Kubrick to Kurosawa to Monty Pythonto Coppola to Scorcese?
reminisco wrote:Neoteny wrote:I'm going to show my absurd side on this one, just watch me...
Closer
Garden State
Inside Man
No Country
Superbad (I can't help it)
No particular order, of course.
I could probably turn gay (genetically, of course) for Jude Law and Clive Owen. I don't know why...
still haven't seen Closer all the way through. got about half way through it. always meant to finish it, but was watching it with a girl i was seeing at the time, we, um, got distracted, and our affair fizzled before I got the chance to finish it.
all of the other movies are great. i gotta love Garden State... i mean, i grew up in Jersey. Inside Man was a phenomenal heist picture, one of the few that kept me guessing right up to the end. No Country was great, and Superbad... damn, that was one of the best comedies ever made... i usually don't laugh for the entire 90 minutes of a comedy. in fact, it's been shown through tests (like, legitimate sociological study) that most people CANNOT keep laughing for longer than 45 minutes. which is interestingly correlated with the professional stand-up set -- clocking in at 50 minutes. of course, feature length films are defined as being 90 minutes in length (in the last 20 years, 80 minutes has become the minimum cut-off, but by the old school definition...)
so comedies are already in a losing position, and often times will stack the best gags in the first 45 minutes of the picture. i tend to find myself either laughing at the first 45 or the second 45 minutes, when i see comedies for the first time in the theater (if they're funny). but Superbad... i couldn't stop laughing for the entire movie. defies the "laws" of comedy.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
What I especially like about it, is that if you freeze frame any part of the film - you would have an excellent image worth framing and hanging on a wall. Every shot is composition perfect.Nataki Yiro wrote:O Brother, Where Art Thou? is one of my favs. Probably the best Homer retells ever...
Pedronicus wrote:What I especially like about it, is that if you freeze frame any part of the film - you would have an excellent image worth framing and hanging on a wall. Every shot is composition perfect.Nataki Yiro wrote:O Brother, Where Art Thou? is one of my favs. Probably the best Homer retells ever...
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
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