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Showing content with the highest reputation on 06/24/19 in Posts

  1. 5 points
    You can always use Cameron's Letterboxd list to see what's been picked https://letterboxd.com/cameronh/list/musical-mondays/
  2. 4 points
    Watch Out for Snakes is making their 2nd pick, and it will be....
  3. 3 points
    Hereā€™s @JammerLeaā€˜s spreadsheet https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1nxEQ2DcPdRarmFhHckyoSxma7D4IE5Nc0a0UlQOQlhw/htmlview
  4. 3 points
    Well, there's no rule that says no repeats...... Baked beans, anyone?
  5. 2 points
    So, I was only recently introduced to HDTGM, but I got Stitcher Premium and have now listened to all 215 episodes (watched Serenity last night and listening to 216 today) in a matter of a few months. I decided to wait until I had listened to them all before joining the forums, so here I am. Now I just need to get used to waiting for new episodes.
  6. 2 points
    I donā€™t now if that would be appropriate simply because weā€™re guests on this thread. Usually, I just search ā€œrotationā€ to figure out whoā€™s next.
  7. 2 points
    Weird request: is it possible to have a thread pinned at the top with the current rotation and chosen movies?
  8. 2 points
  9. 2 points
  10. 2 points
    Good lord. Did you watch all the movies too? Either way, you deserve the highest honour that John can award: a DVD of Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen. Congratulations.
  11. 1 point
    I think JammerLea has a spreadsheet of all the picks on her forum profile. If not, I can link to the thread that has them all in a bit
  12. 1 point
    I'm really interested to see what the gang has to say about... I found Bugsy Malone on the Criterion Channel but the whole movie is available for free on YouTube. This came out in 1976, the same year Jodie Foster appeared in Taxi Driver.
  13. 1 point
  14. 1 point
    For what it's worth, Roger Ebert seemed to really like this movie, though I think he was mostly enamored with Vanessa Williams. "A lot of the plot is standard, but a lot of it isn't, including the relationship between a young man from Cuba (the Puerto Rican singing star Chayanne) and a gifted dancer (Vanessa L. Williams) who says, "I don't want to be in love." It goes without saying that these two people are destined to fall in love. But the movie sees Ruby, the Williams character, clearly and with surprising truthfulness; she has a depth associated with more serious movies."
  15. 1 point
    As a programmer, I have a thick skin for software nonsense in movies. So when Mr. The Rules was explaining the twist I was ready for some strained metaphors, and it wouldn't be too interesting to hear about the painstaking process of a thirteen year old googling "how to program a game". However, one metaphor that drove me crazy was this bit that Mr. Rules shoehorned into his Catch The Tuna explanation: "The lighthouse. Light/dark. One/zero. The fundamental process." I understand that "ones and zeroes" is a 75% of what people know about computers, sure. What I don't like is how it misconstrues lighthouses! A lighthouse doesn't blink on and off. Even in the background of that scene it's clear that the light is always on while it rotates in a circle. So it doesn't have two states of "one/zero" at all. You could argue it has at least 360 states, one for every degree of rotation, or more depending on how high-fidelity the kid has made the graphics in his MILF-banging simulator.
  16. 1 point
    I love how that was simultaneously a logical, relatively innocuous question, but also one that perfectly plays into the contentiousness between Scott and Paul's characters.
  17. 1 point
    The one thing I know is she was dancing with him because his previous partner quit during the movie (not shown but said) and he was the "best". Vanessa wanted solely to win. (Not that it's a knock. That was her character until the very end.) UPDATE: That makes me wonder who was her partner up to that point? I don't remember ever meeting him.
  18. 1 point
    At the end of the movie, thereā€™s a news report that identifies him as thirteen and says he goes to high school. Which is a bit young for High School, but heā€™s supposedly bright so maybe he skipped a grade? I think itā€™s less that heā€™s been exposed to certain types of media than heā€™s been placed in a shitty situation. Like, I donā€™t believe that his mother cheated on his father, but I think their relationship happened too soon after his fatherā€™s death (in his mind anyway) that it felt like a betrayal. Regardless, he only has a single, half-formed memory of his real father yelling about a fish and almost a decade of being with a shitty, abusive, alcoholic. Itā€™s kind of the tragedy that Jason touches on in the episode. Without a healthy role model, the dysfunction gets normalized. He doesnā€™t have any other frame of reference for how a healthy adult functions and that plays out in his version of adulthood in the game.
  19. 1 point
    Correction: The kid did not make the game, but was modding it by adding in characters that represented his dad, mom and stepdad. That's explained when nerdlinger gets to Dill and tells him about the game being basically a bunch of minigames set within this island world, with fishing being one of the more popular ones and the favorite of the son. But with the son modifying the game so that he could play out this fantasy, the game was trying to combat that kind of intrusion by doing things like having the nerdlinger give Dill a uber-fish finder, the son of the store owner coming back to town because he was "lucky," and even Djimon's character paying some locals to beat the stepdad up so he didn't come to the boat. With modding, it can be done so much that the game becomes unplayable because it get's bogged down with extra data and items that it didn't forsee being a part of its coding, and what this kid was doing was basically loading a code from Grand Theft Auto complete with murderous spouses, escorts, drunken tourists, and the ability to kill, into a game of Club Penguin, and the code of the original game was trying to level itself out as to not become unplayable, before whatever gobbledeegook about the kid being god was said to nerdlinger and he decided to help out Dill. As for the various M. Night clues there were quite a bit of them, and they were pretty easy to see knowing the twist beforehand. Things like the opening scene being an aerial run over the ocean up to Dill's boat was a bad opening cutscene, the camera pans were laggy changes in camera angle due to the modifications to the game, the side mission of finding Diane Lane's missing cat, the offering of better bait or equipment were microtransactions, and how all of the townspeople are NPCs in that they just talk solely in mission prep dialogue to the fact that there are only really maybe 10 people on the island and never more than 4 on screen at once. Even scenes where Dill isn't present like the ones with the mom and stepdad in the hotel are pulled from expansive sandbox games like GTA and Assassin's Creed where expository scenes are shown to the player outside of their character to give them a bit more backstory before moving forward in the game. What I found funny was that this movie is basically a film version of a second opinion that was read during the Jack Frost episode where the writer wrote that they put a snowman together in the hopes their dead dad comes back like the dad in that film. It's like Stephen Knight heard that and thought, "I can make that movie but I'll update it with video games."
  20. 1 point
  21. 1 point
  22. 1 point
    I mean, it's right there in the title. This movie is w i l d. I'm obsessed with how ridiculous it is. While Sam Elliot's acting is fantastic and the twist completely unexpected and well thought out (imo), the story is a little jumbled with all of the flashbacks and the pacing is super awkward. They spend most of the movie giving a sort of back and forth exposition on the Hitler part, but only like twenty minutes on the actual Bigfoot part. And that Bigfoot is the thing of nightmares. Also---what the fuck is in the box???!?
  23. 1 point
    This is why we canā€™t have nice things
  24. 1 point
    I fell asleep towards the beginning of this movie and woke up during the night vision sequence and legitimately thought I was hallucinating.
  25. 1 point
    I could see this happening, they should just invite Rebecca to be the guest. I can't imagine there's anyway she doenst already know this was a garbage movie.
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