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Showing content with the highest reputation on 12/28/18 in Posts

  1. 2 points
    Just a quick FYI that has nothing to do with this shitty movie, Zouks is getting more shout outs in the comic book world, and not just for Heynong Man. The constant talk of Jacob's Ladder situations has been used as a call out in one of the newest issues of Batman.
  2. 1 point
    Most consistently hilarious guest of the year! I love his absurdity. Big ups to people of all Stars and Stripes, of course, but props to Shaun for bringing the LOLs all year.
  3. 1 point
    Yea, Batman Begins is without question a better movie than Batman and Robin. But on a rainy day if I were given the choice to watch one or the other i'd more than likely go with Batman and Robin.
  4. 1 point
    Hayes' joke that Bane was born in a dark roast got stepped on, but it was magic to me.
  5. 1 point
  6. 1 point
    I would argue the opposite: this is still wildly relevant today. People still look at people of color and women in their jobs as they did Mr. Tibbs - a range of disdain to low expectations. Very little has changed. I mean, he got arrested solely for reading while black, which still to this day happens constantly (and have triggered the Black Lives Matter movement). What I like about the movie is what they said in the episode: it's not full of monologuing or preaching or whatnot. I found the police case to be realistic in that regard too -- instead of showing a racially charged murder to condemn racism, the movie focuses on a regular murder and shows the racism all around that. It's in the autopsy, in the coworkers and boss, in the victim's wife, in the interrogation suspects. If Tibbs showed up down there and solved a KKK murder case or something, that starts to push into melodrama. Instead, it reflects reality, showing us how deeply racism is embedded in the everyday routine. That's also why I believe it gets a balance in not just being about racism. It is about a murder case. The comments on society just come along with that.
  7. 1 point
    I guess I'm the only "no" vote here (not my usual position!), so I'll just say that I agree with Amy -- it's a movie with some great lead performances and is an easy enough watch, but the movie doesn't feel "timeless" to me. It feels like something that is absolutely a product of its time and is mostly only interesting as a snapshot of that time. Some of the issues they discussed about Jewison's direction are (IMO) things that tend to show up throughout his career, especially in "social problem" movies like this: being generally over-emphatic with the emotional beats and concentrating so much on the message of the movie that he loses the function of the plot a little bit. The structure of the movie is a police procedural and murder mystery, but they clearly want the film to be "about" racism . . . yet the resolution of the mystery has nothing to do with racism. These little things bugged me, though Poitier and Steiger were so good together that the movie kind of works anyway. If I just look at the other Best Picture nominees from 1967, I'd say both Bonnie and Clyde and The Graduate have held more relevance throughout the years than In the Heat of the Night. I'd be okay taking it off the list. I guess I could be convinced to keep it on because there's nothing else to showcase Poitier, who is a major figure in American film history.
  8. 1 point
    side note: the "sexual healing" smooth jazz cover during the drunk driving ad this week made me laugh very hard
  9. 1 point
    Hey, little thing, let me light your candle, ā€˜cause-a mama youā€™re a dwarf in the dark and you clearly need help.
  10. 1 point
    I am the Michael Jordan of being nothing like Michael Jordan.
  11. 1 point
  12. 1 point
    Maybe I should just repost this with the short version
  13. 1 point
    Maybe...Itā€™s just a lot of these movie *do* entertain me - just maybe not in the way the filmmakers intended. Like, Iā€™ll watch Batman & Robin anytime and have a great time. So, in a way, it is successful. Kind of what you were saying earlier, I guess the only movies I would consider ā€œbadā€ are movies like Hard Ticket to Hawaii. Movies that were never meant to be good, just exploitive. I mean, of course there are movies that are more to my taste than others, but I donā€™t know that I like the idea of ranking movies as being ā€œbad.ā€ I feel thereā€™s a fine line between teasing in a playful manner and bullying, and I try (although I donā€™t always succeed) to stay on the more positive side as much as possible.
  14. 0 points
    dr. gameshow's last episode was yesterday and it's all your fault for not listening to it.
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