Tree of Life was the last movie I walked out on. It was just so up its own ass. I started laughing and couldn't stop and had to walk out to not distract the one other person in the theater.
Guinness, while I agree with you on some of the physics holes in the film, but I was so pumped to see a sci-fi film without ray-guns, faster than light travel, aliens speaking English with an American accent, time travel, and artificial gravity in spaceships, I decided to suspend belief on the rest and just enjoy the ride. We aren't so critical of the fantasy science in Star Trek, Star Wars, or even other Marvelized entertainment content, I figure we can give others a break too. I understand your response though, I had it too initially in some scenes in the film but I gave my head a shake and decided not to let it ruin the rest. You know, we don't even worry about interbreeding with alien Vulcans these days (we accept a Spock as possible), never-ending multi-verses, Jedi mind tricks or time travel, why worry about evil cosmic rays from Neptune.Ad Astra - I watched this on the flight home to Detroit last week. While I get that it was more the story of a guy trying to reconnect with his distant father, the physics made no sense, but that, and the slow pacing were distracting and frankly boring.
Based on the critical reviews, I feel like they only exist to self congratulate the industry, because otherwise they watched a different film than I did. 4/10
Guinness, while I agree with you on some of the physics holes in the film, but I was so pumped to see a sci-fi film without ray-guns, faster than light travel, aliens speaking English with an American accent, time travel, and artificial gravity in spaceships, I decided to suspend belief on the rest and just enjoy the ride. We aren't so critical of the fantasy science in Star Trek, Star Wars, or even other Marvelized entertainment content, I figure we can give others a break too. I understand your response though, I had it too initially in some scenes in the film but I gave my head a shake and decided not to let it ruin the rest. You know, we don't even worry about interbreeding with alien Vulcans these days (we accept a Spock as possible), never-ending multi-verses, Jedi mind tricks or time travel, why worry about evil cosmic rays from Neptune.
I saw one Ad Astra review complaining that in space, a tear in one's eyes should not flow downward on your face. Geez, if I complained about all the holes in all sci-fi movies, I could draw you up a list a mile long. I'd rather complain about the fact that there are way too many zombie movies out recently.
If slow-pace is distracting, then you'll also have issue these days with much of the art-house indie and foreign fare films out there. Anyway haven't seen you in awhile guinness, hope all is well and may the Force be with you
Was anyone else extremely thrown off by JGL's eyes in this? I know why they did it but it reminded me of when they put in a CGI human character into a movie, it just looked so unnatural.Looper - 9/10
You could say it threw for me a loop, but one that I thoroughly enjoyed.
Was anyone else extremely thrown off by JGL's eyes in this? I know why they did it but it reminded me of when they put in a CGI human character into a movie, it just looked so unnatural.
63 Up (2019) Directed by Michael Apted (documentary) 8B
In 1964, director Michael Apted released the first film in this series, 7 Up. The movie borrows its central premise from Aristotle (or maybe St. Ignatius of Loyola. There is some debate): "Give me a child for 7 years and I will show you the man." In the original film, Apted interviews fourteen British 7-year-olds from all walks of life and they talk about their dreams and expectations. Since then, every 7 years Apted releases another film--14 Up; 21 Up; 28 Up; and so on--updating these individuals' lives, almost all of whom have continued to participate in this ongoing project. 63 Up is the ninth installment and for viewers like myself who have followed the series from its inception, it is like running into a bunch of old acquaintances and finding out what kind of hand life has dealt them since I saw them last. Some have done wonderfully; some have had great hardship; one has died--but whatever the case, I can still see in each of them a healthy portion of that 7-year-old who I first met all those decades ago. In fact, it is astonishing to see how much of one's life is determined at such an early age. While each documentary provides enough back story to be a stand-alone film, it helps if you have seen at least the first film of the series. But the Up series represents a fascinating idea extremely well-executed. Anyone with even a mild interest in other human beings should find this film and the others well worth exploring.
Would you recommend going back and watching them all, starting from 7 Up?
63 Up (2019) Directed by Michael Apted (documentary) 8B
In 1964, director Michael Apted released the first film in this series, 7 Up. The movie borrows its central premise from Aristotle (or maybe St. Ignatius of Loyola. There is some debate): "Give me a child for 7 years and I will show you the man." In the original film, Apted interviews fourteen British 7-year-olds from all walks of life and they talk about their dreams and expectations. Since then, every 7 years Apted releases another film--14 Up; 21 Up; 28 Up; and so on--updating these individuals' lives, almost all of whom have continued to participate in this ongoing project. 63 Up is the ninth installment and for viewers like myself who have followed the series from its inception, it is like running into a bunch of old acquaintances and finding out what kind of hand life has dealt them since I saw them last. Some have done wonderfully; some have had great hardship; one has died--but whatever the case, I can still see in each of them a healthy portion of that 7-year-old who I first met all those decades ago. In fact, it is astonishing to see how much of one's life is determined at such an early age. While each documentary provides enough back story to be a stand-alone film, it helps if you have seen at least the first film of the series. But the Up series represents a fascinating idea extremely well-executed. Anyone with even a mild interest in other human beings should find this film and the others well worth exploring.
I'd suggest watching 7 Up first, and then the latest one, 63 Up. Which may be enough. But, if your interest continues after watching those two, go back to 14 Up and proceed in chronological order. After the first two, though, I would spread subsequent chapters out over some significant time period so as not to get bored with the format.Would you recommend going back and watching them all, starting from 7 Up?
Or perhaps it's a better idea to just watch the latest one, and then decide whether it's worth going back and starting from the beginning?
Proceed to 1917 and hit the trifecta.Little Women - 9.5/10
Between this and Uncut Gems, what a weekend!
Proceed to 1917 and hit the trifecta.
I liked it a lot initially, but then took my partner to it and all the flaws you pointed out became obvious on second viewing. Fine performance by Driver, but your comparison to Before Midnight is really telling. It made me realize how less convincing and insightful A Marriage Story is.Marriage Story" was pretty good. One of those movies where the whole ends up being greater than the sum of its parts. The two leads are good, Driver in particular, but unfortunately every other character is just a stock stereotype. There's also one eye-roll moment that felt like it came from a different movie.
Hard not to compare it to something like "Before Midnight," which I thought had a way more natural feel to it. Marriage Story doesn't really have many surprises in store, both in the large-scale sense and within individuals scenes themselves. You kind of know where everything is going, for the most part, save for one scene late in the game with Driver, that, surprise surprise, turns out to be maybe the most memorable scene from the movie, partly because it comes out of left field.
Anyway, still worth checking out, but I was hoping for something with a little less calculated of a feel.
I'm surprised at so much negative reaction to Marriage Story. It's dealing with subject matter that can just inherently come across as sappy and contrived but I don't think it ever swayed too far in that direction. The opening monologues had me a bit worried, but they turn that on its head pretty quickly. I think the caricature-like performances by Dern and Liotta worked so well because of the juxtaposition vs. the 2 more subtle performances by the leads. It's just showing a heightened sense of the ugliness that can be prevalent in the legal aspect of divorce, it doesn't need to be super realistic.
The main reason I loved it so much though was because of how funny it was. It packs in a lot of heart, but I honestly think this may have been the funniest movie I've seen since maybe The Nice Guys in 2016. Widely released straight up comedies don't really exist anymore, and the ones that do don't hold my attention at all (last one I'd consider decent was probably Game Night), so the funniest movies I see are never labeled or thought of as straight up comedies. This movie was packed with character humor (Liotta, Dern, ScarJo's mom and sister, court-appointed evaluator), commentary on divorce, and situational humor. Driver has a comedic background and I thought he did such a good job at being subtly hilarious throughout. Honestly, the knife scene could have been straight out of There's Something About Mary or something, yet somehow it still worked perfectly in a divorce drama. That is insanely difficult to pull off convincingly.
God Told Me To. On the surface and for much of its actual run time it doesn’t really fit or feel like a sci-fi movie. But then when it gets sci-fi, it gets real sci-fi. I’ll spare a plot recap because it’s an interesting mash-up of a few genres and despite being decades old, if you can see it with an empty mind, I encourage you to do so. Ahhh Larry Cohen (RIP, 2019) one of cinema’s great el-cheapo schlock masters. Not quite as revered as a Roger Corman, but much more going on than a guy like Charlie Band. There are actual interesting ideas here within its nutso story that are far bigger than something like this probably deserves. Not particularly well acted and I’m not confident it FULLY works, but I’m still pawing it around in my brain and that’s got to count for something, right?
I’ll never miss a chance to plug Gymkata.