If I'm going to follow these forums again I need something to help pass the time!
Rate the last movie/series you watched on a scale of 1-10.
Dark Knight Rises 6.5/10 (Probably the worst Batman)
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If I'm going to follow these forums again I need something to help pass the time!
Rate the last movie/series you watched on a scale of 1-10.
Dark Knight Rises 6.5/10 (Probably the worst Batman)
I would give THE THREE MUSKETEERS 9/10 :D
My favorite one is TITANIC. 10/10 of course :D
I want to give 'Inside Out (2015)' 9/10
For everyone who is tired of raunchy R-rated comedies, computer-animated talking animals and superhero movies with computer-animated battles and explosions, I recommend Wonderstruck, which opens today. Oakes Fegley, who starred in last year's Pete's Dragon movie, plays a boy in 1977 who loses his mother and then loses his hearing. Millicent Simmons plays a young deaf girl in 1927 who enjoys silent movies. Both deaf children, one in 1927 and one in 1977, go to New York City and.....well, I won't say more than that. Wonderstruck is a wondrous movie.
Disney/Pixar's Coco, despite all the talking skeletons and morbid theme, is much better than I thought it would be. The film is very frenetic and fast-paced but it ends with a scene that will.......no, I won't spoil it here. I give Coco a 10.
Fun things for Disney fans to watch for: The Toy Story Pizza Planet truck passes by Miguel's house; a Nemo doll is on a table at the marketplace and dolls of Woody and Mike Wazowski are hanging from a stall; and a poster for the upcoming movie The Incredibles 2 is on a wall in an alley.
I saw "Coco" yesterday and I give it a 9. The theme is kind of creepy. There was also a new "Frozen" film before "Coco" and I found out that it will only be shown until this Thursday so if you want to see it, you have only three more days left.
I saw "The Greatest Showman" today. Hugh Jackman did a really good job playing P.T. Barnum but the songs were very modern and did not fit well. The dancing is good. I give the movie a 7.
My wife and I just saw The Greatest Showman and Hugh Jackman does indeed do a very good job portraying P.T. Barnum. I was expecting the character to be a flamboyant huckster and hustler but Jackman played him as an enterprising businessman who just "gives the people what they want." The musical numbers were a bit overwhelming, though, and there were too many of them. Every five minutes, someone broke out in song. The numbers with Zac Efron and Zendaya Coleman, for obvious reasons, came across as scenes from a circus-themed High School Musical. And the movie was overly preachy. Many of the songs and much of the dialogue dealt with the importance of accepting others who are different. I give The Greatest Showman a 9.
In 1981, two UCLA film school graduates launched the Golden Raspberry Awards to honor the worst films and worst actors of 1980. The "Razzies" have been presented every year since, always on the day before the Academy Awards ceremony. Transformers: The Last Knight leads this year's field with nine nominations. Tom Cruise, Zac Efron, Goldie Hawn, Tyler Perry, Johnny Depp (!), Mel Gibson, Baywatch, The Mummy and The Emoji Movie are among the nominees. Here is the list -- and they could easily have had ten nominees in each category instead of five:
http://www.msn.com/en-us/movies/news...D=ansmsnnews11
It isn't just Russian trolls who are trying to stir up racial strife -- now we have American trolls. They're posting false reports of white movie-goers being attacked by blacks at showings of Black Panther and including pictures of bloodied faces, pictures obtained from other websites. Twitter has suspended the accounts of these trolls. The trolls are sick. Truly sick.
Trolls on Twitter make false claims of being assaulted at screenings of Black Panther
http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-...217-story.html
Here are this year's Razzie Award winners -- or losers, if you prefer:
Tom Cruise, Tyler Perry and The Emoji Movie score big at the Razzie Awards
Los Angeles Times, Mar 3 2018 2:00 PM
This weekend brought the awards show that makes us laugh, cry and wince. No, it's not the Oscars. It's the annual lead-up to that gala ceremony — the Razzies. The annual ceremony was co-founded in 1981 by industry veterans and former UCLA film students John J.B. Wilson and Mo Murphy. The year's biggest cinematic losers were winners Friday at the 38th Golden Razzies, which playfully honor the year's worst movies and performances with $4.97 trophies.
One of the night's big winners was The Emoji Movie, which earned multiple awards, including worst movie, screenplay and director. The Sony Pictures Animation film also landed a Razzie for "worst screen combo," which highlights on-screen chemistry (or lack thereof). The honors went to "any two obnoxious emojis" from the film.
Tom Cruise, a veteran Razzie bridesmaid, nailed his first worst actor win for his work in The Mummy. Perhaps the most controversial honor of the evening went to Tyler Perry, who triumphed in the worst actress category for his portrayal of Mabel "Madea" Simmons in Boo 2!: A Madea Halloween.
Mel Gibson won for worst supporting actor for Daddy's Home 2 and Kim Basinger won for worst supporting actress for 50 Shades Darker. The annual Barry L. Bumstead Award, which honors failed TV-to-film adaptations, went to CHiPs, a project that emcee Bill Jones described as a journey "from a bland 1970s TV series to a 2017 regurgitated $25 million bomb" that "found a gullible audience and robbed them of $18.6 million."
An "In Memorial" tribute spotlighted several men disgraced by sexual harassment and other scandals, including Harvey Weinstein, Steven Seagal, Bill Cosby, Brett Ratner, James Toback, Russell Simmons, Kevin Spacey, Danny Masterson and Louis CK. As the images faded to black, the words appeared: "Very sorry, but we won't be missing you — or your kind."
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment...303-story.html
Jimmy Kimmel, President Trump get into 'lowest-rated Oscars' spat
Los Angeles Times, Mar 6 2018 1:49 PM
Jimmy Kimmel and President Trump’s war of words just took another ratings-fueled turn. The President, in his signature self-ingratiating way, tweeted this morning: "Lowest rated Oscars in HISTORY. Problem is, we don’t have Stars anymore - except your President (just kidding, of course)!" Kimmel, who hosted the awards show for the second year in a row and has made no secret of his loathing for Trump, wasn’t having it. "Thanks, lowest rated President in HISTORY,” the late-night host snapped back at the reality-TV-star-turned-politician.
Trump, who’s managed to turn his Twitter feed into a sort of must-see TV, didn’t keep quiet about the Oscars last year either. The president blamed Hollywood’s obsession with him for contributing to Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty’s botched best-picture announcement.
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment...htmlstory.html
"The illusions of division threaten our very existence. In times of crisis, the wise build bridges while the foolish build barriers." Was T'Challa talking about Wakanda -- or about the United States?
Black Panther passes Titanic to become third highest-grossing film of all time
http://www.msn.com/en-us/movies/news...D=ansmsnnews11
Robert and Richard Sherman wrote several hits for Hayley Mills and Annette, several songs for Disney theme park attractions (including it's a small world) and dozens of songs for Mary Poppins, The Parent Trap, The Jungle Book, The Aristocats, The Sword In The Stone, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, all the Winnie-The-Pooh movies and many other films. Richard Sherman wrote two new songs for Disney's Christopher Robin, which opened yesterday. During the closing credits, Sherman plays a piano on the beach and sings one of the songs while the crowd starts dancing. The other song is heard afterward.
As for the movie itself, the stuffed-animals-come-to-life lack the charm and cuteness of the animated characters, although they more closely resemble the E.H. Shepard illustrations from A.A. Milne's Winnie-The-Pooh books. Bronte Carmichael was excellent as Christopher Robin's young daughter Madeline. I loved her reaction upon seeing Pooh, Piglet, Eeyore and Tigger for the first time. I rate this movie an 8 -- and now I'm awaiting Disney's live-action versions of Mulan, Dumbo and Aladdin.
Billionaire Boys Club, based on a true story, is about a group of young men in the 1980s who start a get-rich-quick scheme that turns deadly. The movie opened yesterday in only ten theaters. Judging by its opening-day gross, only ten or eleven people paid to see it. Ya know what's really deadly now? Putting Kevin Spacey in a movie!
Kevin Spacey's new movie Billionaire Boys Club made only $126 on opening day
https://www.msn.com/en-us/movies/new...66jz?ocid=AMZN
Billionaire Boys Club grossed only $126 on Friday but, as you can see, drew much larger crowds on Saturday and Sunday.
Kevin Spacey's Billionaire Boys Club opens with an abysmal $628
https://www.msn.com/en-us/movies/new...bcg6?ocid=AMZN
De Havilland says the FX series Feud: Bette & Joan is malicious and defamatory. Yeah, I can see how the negative portrayal of her could make it difficult for her to get roles in upcoming movies.
Olivia de Havilland, now 102, will take Feud to Supreme Court
https://www.msn.com/en-us/tv/news/ol...lRWv?ocid=AMZN
"Say, Ollie, this new motion picture about our 1953 British tour is really swell." "It soitenly is, Stanley!" Steve Coogan and John C. Reilly play Laurel and Hardy. The film will premiere October 21 at the BFI London Film Festival and open January 11 in theaters in the UK. Sony Pictures Classics will distribute the film in the US, where it will open December 28 in "limited release" -- in other words, in a very small number of theaters in a very small number of cities.
Stan & Ollie preview
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=qw-xrSQ7gkk
https://stanandollie.co.uk