Recommended Posts
caress 0
Rocky Horror Picture Show
The Wall-Pink Floyd
point of no return
Hunt for Red October
Somethings gotta give
As good as it gets
Dawn of the dead ( original)
Men of Honor
Green Mile
Forrest Gump
Old Yeller
My friend Flicka
Star wars/ Empire strikes back and Return of the Jedi
3 ( movie about Dale Earnhardt)
Out of the Blue
Out cold
The King and I ( Debra Kerr/Yul Brenner)
Sommersby
Contact
Stand By me
G.I.Jane
Heavy Metal
BraveHeart
Pretty Woman
Just off the top of my head Oh yeah and numerous porno flick too-Caress
The Wall-Pink Floyd
point of no return
Hunt for Red October
Somethings gotta give
As good as it gets
Dawn of the dead ( original)
Men of Honor
Green Mile
Forrest Gump
Old Yeller
My friend Flicka
Star wars/ Empire strikes back and Return of the Jedi
3 ( movie about Dale Earnhardt)
Out of the Blue
Out cold
The King and I ( Debra Kerr/Yul Brenner)
Sommersby
Contact
Stand By me
G.I.Jane
Heavy Metal
BraveHeart
Pretty Woman
Just off the top of my head Oh yeah and numerous porno flick too-Caress
I've learned.... That being kind is more important than being
right.
right.
I've seen Paris, Texas and a lot of other movies.
Wong Kar-Wai is not for everyone. I personally liked Fallen Angels and In the Mood For Love but I might not reccomend them to someone whose tastes are more conventional.
Ebert accurately summarizes Wong Kar Wai as
"Wong is more of an art director, playing with the medium itself, taking fractured elements of criss-crossing stories and running them through the blender of pop culture."
"...will appeal to the kinds of people you see in the Japanese animation section of the video store, with their sleeves cut off so you can see their tattoos. And to those who subscribe to more than three film magazines. And to members of garage bands. And to art students. It's not for your average moviegoers--unless of course, they want to see something new. "
Start out on a healthy diet of Akira Kurasawa, David Lean, Stanley Kubrick types of films before you jump into Fellini's 8 1/2, French New Wave cinema, or Lynch's Eraserhead.
Wong Kar-Wai is not for everyone. I personally liked Fallen Angels and In the Mood For Love but I might not reccomend them to someone whose tastes are more conventional.
Ebert accurately summarizes Wong Kar Wai as
"Wong is more of an art director, playing with the medium itself, taking fractured elements of criss-crossing stories and running them through the blender of pop culture."
"...will appeal to the kinds of people you see in the Japanese animation section of the video store, with their sleeves cut off so you can see their tattoos. And to those who subscribe to more than three film magazines. And to members of garage bands. And to art students. It's not for your average moviegoers--unless of course, they want to see something new. "
Start out on a healthy diet of Akira Kurasawa, David Lean, Stanley Kubrick types of films before you jump into Fellini's 8 1/2, French New Wave cinema, or Lynch's Eraserhead.
"Buttons aren't toys." - Trillian
Ken
Ken
Every damn animated Disney movie made. No kidding.
The Karate Kid -sorry, I had a crush on the blond 'bad' boy when I was a kid!
Top Gun -'nuff said.
Super Troopers -and I still laugh my ass off every time
The Sound of Music -the most beautiful and romantic movie ever made. Ever.
The Karate Kid -sorry, I had a crush on the blond 'bad' boy when I was a kid!
Top Gun -'nuff said.
Super Troopers -and I still laugh my ass off every time
The Sound of Music -the most beautiful and romantic movie ever made. Ever.
~Jaye
Do not believe that possibly you can escape the reward of your action.
Do not believe that possibly you can escape the reward of your action.
Quote"Wong is more of an art director, playing with the medium itself, taking fractured elements of criss-crossing stories and running them through the blender of pop culture."
sounds like somone who mediates culture, not a critic. Oh, and reductive. There is a big difference.
Funny that you mention Kurosawa...the most Western of all Japnese directors. As oppossed to say, Ozu, Mizoguchi, Ichikawa, Oshima, etc.
That's my point. Start with Kurasawa... then watch Ozu's Good Morning and Floating Weeds.
edit: besides the popular taste in movies here appears to be The Sound of Music and the 5th Element.
edit: besides the popular taste in movies here appears to be The Sound of Music and the 5th Element.
"Buttons aren't toys." - Trillian
Ken
Ken
Bada- BIG- Boom
***
F LORIDA!
F LORIDA!
The Warriors
Blues Brothers
The Dirty Dozen
The Holy Grail
Blues Brothers
The Dirty Dozen
The Holy Grail
mischo 0
I am pretty much down with your entire selection, some recent additions could be, Sin City and Desperado.
mish
mish
jimoke 0
you'll put your eye out with that!.....A Christmas Story
I watch it every year at least once or twice
probably seen it 20 times or more
Fa RA RAA RA RA
I watch it every year at least once or twice
probably seen it 20 times or more
Fa RA RAA RA RA
The ground always, remembers where you are!
Broke 0
Canable the Musical
Brazil
Monty Python Quest for the Holy Grail
Sgt. Kabukimon NYPD
Blues Brothers
Princess Bride
Fight Club
Evil Dead
Evil Dead 2
Army of Darkness
Brazil
Monty Python Quest for the Holy Grail
Sgt. Kabukimon NYPD
Blues Brothers
Princess Bride
Fight Club
Evil Dead
Evil Dead 2
Army of Darkness
Divot your source for all things Hillbilly.
Anvil Brother 84
SCR 14192
Anvil Brother 84
SCR 14192
...the door was open
SKYDIVERGIRLS.COM
Share this post
Link to post
Share on other sites