What about No Country For Old Men then?
Best film I've seen in ages and a real return to form for the Coen brothers.
Atmospheric, well photographed, well cast and acted - excellent!
I saw "I Am Legend" the other day and it was *really* disappointing.
It's hard to say how poor it was, but it never gripped me at all. I kept waiting for him to get really involved, but it never happened.
The second last scene (in the lab) was really poor - why didn't he just turn on the lights ?
It was interesting to hear the "There is no God . . ." line in a big flick like this. I reckoned once we had this line there was a 90/10 chance of yer man having a revelation before the end of the film.
z
“Heroes never die . . . they just reload.”
Sounds like we might have a good candidate for the list of worst films of '08 even though it's only January!
Rambo!
Check out the Rambo death chart. Must be a lot of riddlin' with an average of 2.5 people killed per minute: easily surpassing the kill rate of all previous Rambos. (The kill rate with his shirt off thankfully has collapsed to zero).
no country for old men is certainly not happy feel good movie but thought it was excellent. it will not put you in a good mood so be warned.
I spoke to a friend in Florida who saw Rambo....Don't go and see it if you have a weak stomach.
I wonder if Stallone gets an old age pensioner discount on his ammo
thought Deathproof started off okay but the dialogue in the second half was awful, embarrassing even, the soundtrack was great but not worth getting out.DVD not cinema, but I saw Deathproof over the weekend.
Have to say I thought it was a hoot - I'm not exactly a loyal Tarantino fan but loved both Pulp Fiction and Jackie Brown.
Deathproof has all the Tarantino hallmarks - some knowing and tricksy directorial flourishes, great dialogue, occasional shocking violence, humour, a cameo from the man himself and of course - a good soundtrack.
Saw Once too which was quite touching and natural. Surprised at the amount of music (even though it was good music IMO) - stay away if you're not a fan of Glen Hansard.
It's basically an insight into how modern warfare (Iraq in this case) scars the young lads who enlist and the families left behind differently than any war in the past, except maybe 'Nam.
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