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Cheese_Ed "The Provolone Ranger"
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Posted - 01/21/2007 : 16:45:19
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quote: Originally posted by Conan The Westy
1994 had some gems: The Shawshank Redemption Forrest Gump The Madness of King George Pulp Fiction Ed Wood Bullets over Broadway Quiz Show Three Colours: Red Heavenly Creatures The Lion King The Mask Maverick Muriel's Wedding Clerks True Lies
And not forgetting those sleazy (and in one case freezy) classics - John Wayne Bobbitt Uncut Eskimo Gang Bang
As an added bonus it saw the end of the Police Academy franchise with Police Academy: Mission To Moscow
I also like/love (not guaranteeing that my years are correct):
Dumb & Dumber Hoop Dreams Professional, The (Leon) Last Seduction , The Ace Ventura: Pet Detective Clear and Present Danger Crumb Death and the Maiden Ed Wood Four Weddings and a Funeral Getaway, The Hudsucker Proxy, The Il Postino Nobody's Fool Star Trek: Generations Reality Bites
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Cheese_Ed "The Provolone Ranger"
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Posted - 01/21/2007 : 16:50:16
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quote: Originally posted by GHcool
1999 and 1939 are generally considered stellar years for Hollywood cinema. Although it is overshadowed by its adjacent year, I rather enjoyed the films of 1998, and kind of liked that a lot of the best films all had a similar theme of characters that don't feel alien to the world they inhabit:
American History X ("2 fascists, too furious." - Tequila Mockingbird) Antz ("Ant-y totalitarian flick." - MguyX) Dark City ("Riff Raff rags Rufus." - Randall) Life is Beautiful Pleasantville ("Thinking inside the box." - Salopian) Shakespeare in Love ("Gwyn: 'Nice play, Shakespeare!'." - Randall) The Truman Show ("The Screw Carrey Show." - thefoxboy) What Dreams May Come ("Paint and suffering." - noncentz)
From cheese:
Cruise, The Happiness Ronin Rushmore Saving Private Ryan Sliding Doors Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels Blade Permanent Midnight Run, Lola, Run Simple Plan, A Wild Things
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Cheese_Ed "The Provolone Ranger"
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Posted - 01/21/2007 : 16:56:39
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quote: Originally posted by turrell
I thought of 1999 too when I saw the posting.
6th Sense Matrix Austin Powers American Beauty Any Given Sunday Fight Club Green Mile Magnolia Being John Malkovich Three Kings
So many of these films were not just great, but almost revolutionary. They busted genres and have been imitated. I realize this is a modern biased list, but these films are all most universally better than any films from th elast couple of years in my opinion.
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Nice list benj, gonna be hard to beat. To the 1999 list I'll add:-
The Insider Gloomy Sunday - Hungarian, one of my favourites from this year Boys Don't Cry All About My Mother My Father and Mother (aka The Road Home) - Zhang Yimou
and, meant to be good but I haven't seen it:-
October Sky.
Let's not forget:
Office Space American Movie: The Making of Northwestern Fantasia 2000 Buena Vista Social Club One Day in September Ravenous Iron Giant, The Virgin Suicides, The
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numbersix_99
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Posted - 01/29/2007 : 15:39:04
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1999? I prefer 2001, with Mulholland Drive, Donnie Darko, Royal Tenenbaums, Amelie, the Pledge, Sex and Lucia, Y Tu Mama Tambien, Ghost World, and the first LOTR film.
But my favourite is 1974, Godfather Pt 2, Chinatown, Parallax View, The Conversation, Young Frankenstein, the Enigma of Kasper Hauser, Alice doesn't Live here anymore, a woman under the influence, Taking of Pelham 123, Lenny, etc. (some include Amarcord and Scenes from a Marriage, but I believe they were first releaed in 1973).
quote: Originally posted by benj clews
Okay, this should make for some interesting debate... what was the best year for cinema?
I'm far from knowledgeable enough on this subject and I'm sure there'll be a lot better suggestions than this, but I have a lot of love for 1999.
This is the year we had end of the century purpose-of-life pondering from the likes of Fight Club, American Beauty and the brilliantly quirky Being John Malkovich.
The Sixth Sense threw a curve ball so influential it's been obligatory to feature a twist in every film since.
One of the best CGI films ever made- Toy Story, was actually bettered with, well... Toy Story 2.
Bond was back with a proper freaky villain (after the rather limp Jonathon Pryce in Tomorrow Never Dies) and Brosnan was also busy making a cool, decent remake of The Thomas Crown Affair. Meanwhile, Steven Soderburgh made pensioners mean and hip with The Limey.
Sci-fi was reinvented (as were cinema effects) with The Matrix and suddenly Canoe Reeves was fashionable again. Also, the Star Wars saga was at last begun (albeit somewhat shakily) with Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace.
It was also a good year for comedy. Steve Martin was actually funny in Bowfinger (which was then cancelled out by The Out-Of-Towners), Rob Schieder was tolerable in Deuce Bigalow, Austin Powers was a lot funnier than his overrated first outing and we had one of the best teen comedies in years- American Pie. Woody Allen was back on fine form after his serious period and a run of slightly ho-hum efforts with Sweet And Lowdown. There were some great genre piss-takes with the likes of Galaxy Quest and Mystery Men, and Drop Dead Gorgeous darkly spoofed the heck out of beauty pageants. Talking of darkly comic, we also got the excellent Election. Oh... and we got more "fuck"s in one film than before or since with South Park: Bigger, Longer And Uncut.
Dark Castle pictures was born and they had a darned good try at bringing back the old haunted house movie with House On Haunted Hill (shame about the big effect for the finale). The Blair Witch Project divided cinema-goers and showed a clever idea, cunningly marketed can still go a long way without the need for a huge budget. Lake Placid was a decent stab at reviving the shocks of Jaws in it's prime, Tim Burton gave us a good old fashioned ghost story in Sleepy Hollow, and we got the most horrifying film ever made: Guest House Paradiso.
There were some nice happy moments in 1999, too- Notting Hill made us all believe we could run into Julia Roberts in a bookshop, David Lynch shocked the world and made not only a warm, affectionate film, but also one that made sense with The Straight Story. And Takeshi Kitano also did an about turn, going from violent action films to a childish road trip in Kikujiro.
We had the critically acclaimed likes of The Cider House Rules, The Virgin Suicides, Magnolia, Buena Vista Social Club and Girl, Interrupted.
The Mummy was an enjoyable romp, not quite up to but certainly trying to be in the spirit of Indiana Jones. Three Kings was an off-beat, dark-humoured war drama doing that whole bullet-whizzing through someone's guts thing before anyone had heard of CSI. And Jim Carrey, hot off the back of The Truman Show, continued to impress with his brilliant Andy Kaufman/ Tony Clifton rendition in Man On The Moon.
Unfortunately, we also had Wild Wild West, but it had Selma Hayek busting out of provocative dress, so I can even forgive that. Oh... and us Kate Winslet fans got Holy Smoke.
All in all, not a bad year (and this is just my blinkered view on it)- it's amazing to see just how much of my DVD collection is from 1999.
Anyone else want to suggest a year?
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Demisemicenturian "Four ever European"
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Posted - 01/29/2007 : 18:20:08
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Well, for me, the literal answer would be 2005. In terms of more general selections (well, selections at all), I am torn by the arguments for 1976 (good year for new creations to first be seen by the world ), 1994, 1998, 1999 and 2001. Maybe I'd plump for 1998 at a push, but it's hard.
On top of GHcool's and Cheese_Ed's selections:
Waking Ned The Red Violin Meet Joe Black (boring film but Brad Pitt looks amazing) Gods and Monsters The Big Lebowski 42 Up
And not seen by me but thought good by some:
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas The Horse Whisperer Little Voice Pi Primary Colors Ring Velvet Goldmine The Waterboy The Wedding Singer
Plus lots of filth, including the amazingly unreviewed Nude Bondage Tea Party
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Edited by - Demisemicenturian on 01/29/2007 18:40:23 |
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ChocolateLady "500 Chocolate Delights"
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Posted - 01/30/2007 : 06:15:10
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quote: Originally posted by Salopian
On top of GHcool's and Cheese_Ed's selections:
Waking Ned The Red Violin
Both great films - you may recall The Red Violin is coming with me to that deserted island.
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Meet Joe Black (boring film but Brad Pitt looks amazing)
Hm... I can think of many better drool factor films. This remake of Death Takes a Holiday is just blah!
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Gods and Monsters The Big Lebowski 42 Up
Yes, yes and okay, sure - any and all of the 7up films are good.
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And not seen by me but thought good by some:
Little Voice Primary Colors
I'd recommend these two films very highly.
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Demisemicenturian "Four ever European"
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Posted - 01/30/2007 : 09:07:08
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quote: Originally posted by Salopian
Plus lots of filth, including the amazingly unreviewed Nude Bondage Tea Party
As if by magic, there are now five reviews there! Mine's still pending, though. |
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damalc "last watched: Sausage Party"
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Posted - 02/18/2007 : 17:19:50
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i'm not sure what the best year for films was but 1986 was, no question, the best year ever for comics.
that year laid the groundwork for a lot of the films we love, some we hate, and some we doubt will ever be made: "Watchmen" (perpetually in development), "Batman: The Dark Knight," "The Man of Steel," "Daredevil: Born Again," "Classic X-Men," Walt Simonson's run on "Thor."
i know many of you are a little eccentric in your film tastes as am i. i promise you will dig these tales. they're available at your local comics store, probably in graphic-novel form. they may be a little pricey for paper-and-ink but i guarantee you will witness some brilliant story telling.
i also guarantee that i don't own a comics store. |
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