I liked Identity... it's possile I've liked everything John Cusack has ever been in.
Tara ,'Get It Done'
Buffista Movies 7: Brides for 7 Samurai
A place to talk about movies--old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
I liked Identity, too, but I knew the "surprise" going in. I did watch it for the Cusack, but I also thought it was an interesting idea - could have been executed better.
Identity freaked me out because the important date happens to be my date too. We had to pause the movie so I could wig out.
(don't know why I'm being spoiler-avoidant on a movie that's been out for yonks...)
My favorite BY FAR is "Orphan." I thought that was a joke when I saw the posting on Gawker months ago. What an awesomely crazy twist.
My favorite BY FAR is "Orphan." I thought that was a joke when I saw the posting on Gawker months ago. What an awesomely crazy twist.
I agree! I thought the beginning was really well done, with a nicely realistic portrayal of a family that was *not* a happy, perfect movie family. Good tension, etc., and then BAM! Total horror movie crack! It was excellent!
wrod, re "identity" being a cool thought being poorly executed(har, har) And I give The Forgotten a pass because I would *so* hit it with Domenic West in tormented-American mode, it's ridiculous. (Not as ridiculous as renting "Mona Lisa Smile" to watch him again, however. That is something extremely mockworthy, for which I am deeply shamed.) Seriously? Julia Roberts as either sexy or Bohemian should have made *that* DW's science-fiction role. And somehow that film was insulting to womankind for trying to be empowering; I'm not sure why. And there is a dumb twist in that one, too, involving DW and his service at Anzio.
Ooo. It's "Noir City DC" next week at the AFI. [link]
Which explains why they're showing Out of the Past on Halloween. Followed by Shaun of the Dead & the Howling (I'm pretty sure those aren't part of the noir fest).
I saw Funny Games last night. It was...strange. And not as interesting as I'd hoped. The meta moments didn't elevate the film above its base premise.
The original or the remake?
Remake. Which is apparently shot-for-shot. I have no desire to watch the original.
I think the Austrian one was well received, but this one generally wasn't, and I'm wondering what the difference is/was.