00Stinger
100 - 7
Bill & Ted face the music
Probably as shit as you would expect it to be tbh
3/10
Sent from my SM-S908E using Tapatalk
Probably as shit as you would expect it to be tbh
3/10
Sent from my SM-S908E using Tapatalk
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I understand the criticism of the white hero trope, the idea that Kevin Costner being a good guy who sees through the racism bullshit is someone white viewers can feel they would be if put in the same situation. At the same time, the movie did NASA dirty because the racism shown simply didn't happen. There was no 'coloured coffee pot', she wasn't made to run half a mile to the coloured toilets, one of the major characters wasn't denied a supervisor role, she was a supervisor before the time in which the film was set. NASA was one of the few places where people were treated on merit and had a wildly diverse group of employees (including a few ex-Nazis).Yeah it's got the white hero trope which is usually a made up character so the audience can "relate"
Standard Hollywood formula where they need to soften it to mild head shaking at a sanitised version of discrimination
That's the thing though they portray these as true stories and they're largely theatreI understand the criticism of the white hero trope, the idea that Kevin Costner being a good guy who sees through the racism bullshit is someone white viewers can feel they would be if put in the same situation. At the same time, the movie did NASA dirty because the racism shown simply didn't happen. There was no 'coloured coffee pot', she wasn't made to run half a mile to the coloured toilets, one of the major characters wasn't denied a supervisor role, she was a supervisor before the time in which the film was set. NASA was one of the few places where people were treated on merit and had a wildly diverse group of employees (including a few ex-Nazis).
But I also understand why they included it that way because they would have encountered racism in every other aspect of their lives and it helped demonstrate just what they overcame to achieve what they did. I don't think the film 'softened' the racism other than a few Costner moments, simply seeing black people have to drink from separate water fountains, sit at the back of the bus, get kicked out a library is jarring. As it should be.
I understand when you're making a movie, you need drama and excitement, so sometimes timelines and events get conflated to make it interesting. For example, John Glenn did indeed ask for her specifically to check the numbers, but it was three days before, not moments before lift-off. She wasn't invited into the control room to see his return, as the control room was in another state, but it made for a satisfying conclusion. These changes are fine, inventing things to heighten drama or make certain viewers more comfortable not so much.That's the thing though they portray these as true stories and they're largely theatre
It's Hollywood's idea of what it should have yave looked like and people take this as that is what it was
Also great for the whole we don't do racism anymore because we all drink from the same fountain
I enjoyed the movie and these issues are common throughout films that are based on a true story not just when doing this sort of movie
Changing real life to hit the formula shits me in general
Yep, that was how I felt afterwards too.Yeah it is, but it's very well done. There was a certain detachment that ran as a theme that left you walking away from the experience feeling a little numb, but very sick. Both emotionally and physically. Punishing is a great adjective.
I think it’s also a bit of the whole streaming model.It still topped the charts, brought part one back into the charts, so maybe they think it worthwhile.
I contributed to this, I watched it even though I thought part one was crap. I'm sorry. But sometimes I eat fast food even though I know it's terrible.
A ...
It's mostly villains who drive the story. They bring chaos that the hero has to respond to. The Joker, every Bond villain.
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This is sort of the point though.The Talented Mr Ripley - Netflix - 1999
I dont think I ever saw this on release and had no plans to until I saw the series on Netflix (see TV shows I have watched)
Just to see what differences there were and how the movie differed etc and how 25 years changes the story
To be fair they both had merits and differing approaches - the movie in 2hours plus change was certainly more pacier than the series and revealed a few more details not included
Matt Damon , Jude Law, Gwyneth Paltrow, Cate Blanchett and Phillip Seymour Hoffman make up the main cast and all do a fine job - Matt Damon especially
For a group of people who despise money so much they sure spend a lot of it
The Secret Life of Walter Mitty... this has been on my watchlist for a while now and despite being vaguely aware of the plot (daydreamer goes on an adventure) had managed to avoid knowing too much about it. Plenty of positive reviews here had me keen for it, only for it to leave me a little flat. I kept expecting a twist that would give the film a little more heft, something about the human spirit, but instead, it kinda plays it straight and is a two-hour Just Do It message. It's still quite charming and largely fun, with some beautiful locations, but not the real thought-provoker I thought it might be. 7/10
I watched Mitty at the cinemas on new years eve in 2013 and it just ******* hit for me.
I absolutely loved it and it will always occupy a special place in my heart.
Yep, definitely the case for me. I spent months waiting for it to come out and wasn't disappointed in the slightest.I watched Mitty at the cinemas on new years eve in 2013 and it just ******* hit for me.
I absolutely loved it and it will always occupy a special place in my heart.
Watched Alien for the first time last night. Wife and baby are away for a week so trying to get through some big epics that I can have as loud as I like.
Ehhh, it was alright. I can understand (like with Star Wars which I’m also not a big fan of) that if you were a teen in the late 70s that this would be really scary and mind blowing. I don’t think it has dated though, the Alien looks really good due to using costume/animatronics rather than poxy cgi. It’s not my genre but it was good enough.
Alien was so well ahead of its time, its a quality movie and holds up very well today, especially when you consider it is 45 years old.I think Alien does a bit more than just that. Sets the standard for a lot of what horror would become and gave us a genuine female heroine opposed to a last girl.
This is why Maverick and even the first Top Gun are brilliant.
The villain is almost irrelevant, the tension in the films comes from the journeys of the protagonists.
Spoilers but Tom Hanks does not come out of that movie even more awesome.There's the reluctant hero that we commonly see - such as Sisu or Robert McCall.
The professional hero, like Superman or Batman, who pretty much do it for a job. It needs an interesting villain.
Then there's the American patriot hero - like Maverick in Top Gun or the Tom Hanks character in Saving Private Ryan. They go on a journey of being awesome, having some hurdles thrown in their way then coming out even more awesome.
In the Top Gun movies the evil foreign villain country is left anonymous but we can make assumptions about who they are. But like you say, the villains are irrelevant. The dramatic tension is created by the rivalries and love interests of the main characters. Ultimately they are all on the same side. Maverick and Iceman want to ride each other's tail. Jennifer Connelly and Tom Cruise fly off into the sunset. They are 'Merica, * yeah" characters designed to muster up jingoistic feelings.
Hot Shots is a brilliant piss take! Some genuinely laugh out loud moments.