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  #10331  
Old 05-01-2019, 08:51 AM
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Originally Posted by DeadbeatAtDawn View Post
I Trapped the Devil, 2019. 7/10

Director: Josh Lobo




This film was really good. It does mirror POD by Mickey Keating but goes a bit deeper and darker.
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A QUIET PLACE (2018). Thought this was pretty good and somewhat amused at all the slams from IMBD, particularly about the waterfall, the nail, lack of military success, the kids etc. Very suspenseful and good job by Krasinski. ***1/2
I enjoyed it. In many ways it was an original film. The concept has a few predecessors, but I don't I ever seen it played this way. I always like seeing one family's own utopia. I was disappointed with the ending... wasn't how I would have done it , I wasn't expecting some quite as cliche... especially irked by the last father scene, maybe just how it was done. But all in all I definitely enjoyed it.

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The Wind

This was disappointing. Being compared to The Witch and The Babadook, i expected something really good but this is nothing compared to those movies. The story is interesting enough and there was definitely potential to be something great but it falls flat on delivery. The visuals and the sound are done really well especially the wind aspects but it lacks a compelling narrative. The fact that its played out of order doesn't do it any justice either.

5/10
That's too bad. Still good to see producers taking swings at this material.

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Originally Posted by Tommy Jarvis View Post
Seed Of Chucky: Silly, but funny at times and over all an entertaining watch. Pretty much what you would expect from a Chucky-film.

The Room: Finally saw this flick. If you go in expecting the right things, it delivers on every level: the dialogue, the delivery, the story,... Can you make a joke about this that has not already been made? How Tommy Wiseau looks like a badly done wax sculpture of Gene Simmons? Or how this movie was an improvised excuse to cover up a sex tape (thank you, Doug Walker)?
I haven't seen the room or Disaster Artist yet. Do you think it's good to see The Room before Disaster, or does it matter?

Is Seed of Chucky trying to be seedy? No pun intended.
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Last edited by Sculpt; 05-01-2019 at 08:55 AM.
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  #10332  
Old 05-01-2019, 12:03 PM
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Tommy Jarvis Tommy Jarvis is offline
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I haven't seen the room or Disaster Artist yet. Do you think it's good to see The Room before Disaster, or does it matter?
I have not seen The Disaster Artist as a whole yet either. I did see a few clips and I do remember feeling sorry for Tommy during the premiere scene. Wether's that's Franco's merit or not is something I leave in the middle.

Interesting to see if the order of viewing the films has any impact on the viewer's perception.

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Is Seed of Chucky trying to be seedy? No pun intended.
Well, it has the cheesy puns you would expect from a Child's Play-film, but I don't think it was intentionally trying to be seedy. But I may be interpreting that word differently or incorrectly.
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  #10333  
Old 05-01-2019, 05:47 PM
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I have not seen The Disaster Artist as a whole yet either. I did see a few clips and I do remember feeling sorry for Tommy during the premiere scene. Wether's that's Franco's merit or not is something I leave in the middle.

Interesting to see if the order of viewing the films has any impact on the viewer's perception.



Well, it has the cheesy puns you would expect from a Child's Play-film, but I don't think it was intentionally trying to be seedy. But I may be interpreting that word differently or incorrectly.
You'll probably appreciate The Disaster Artist more having seen The Room.You'll get the parody.

Reminds me of Young Frankenstein, I had hadn't seen Son of Frankenstein before Yound Frankenstein, and I missed the parody.


By seedy, I mean the straight dictionary definition... basically just being obscene. Child Play had plenty of that. I appreciated the attack on the popular 'cutsie' schick of the late 80s with the Munchie-chies, Smurfs, Pretty Pony, Strawberry Shortcake, Care Bears (with respect to that) etc. But there was a stream of 80s films that were just trying to be obscene for obscene's sake that doesn't entertain me in the least, so I was asking if that sort of obscenity is a big part of Seed of Chucky.
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Last edited by Sculpt; 05-01-2019 at 05:50 PM.
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  #10334  
Old 05-01-2019, 10:37 PM
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By seedy, I mean the straight dictionary definition... basically just being obscene. Child Play had plenty of that. I appreciated the attack on the popular 'cutsie' schick of the late 80s with the Munchie-chies, Smurfs, Pretty Pony, Strawberry Shortcake, Care Bears (with respect to that) etc. But there was a stream of 80s films that were just trying to be obscene for obscene's sake that doesn't entertain me in the least, so I was asking if that sort of obscenity is a big part of Seed of Chucky.
I guess that's all a matter of personal interpretation. Wether or not you consider a masturbating doll as obscene.

The movie is about Chucky, Tiffany and Glen(da)'s search for a human body. So they decide to inject Jennifer Tilly with Chucky's semen (as you do). I cannot remember anything genuinely explicit, so I would rather classify it as silly than obscene. But that might be related to me being European as well.
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  #10335  
Old 05-02-2019, 01:10 AM
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cheebacheeba cheebacheeba is offline
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The first person kill scene was done well.
The rest?
hm.
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  #10336  
Old 05-02-2019, 05:56 AM
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No One Lives.
It was ok. I prefer this guys earlier films though I might take a look at his Lupin3.
Acting was patchy, production value wasn't great...but, it was watchable, with a kind of interesting relationship. Nothing seriously creative, pretty bare bones, but it's effective and entertaining.
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  #10337  
Old 05-02-2019, 10:33 AM
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Originally Posted by cheebacheeba View Post
The first person kill scene was done well.
The rest?
hm.
what are you referring to, Seed of chucky?
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  #10338  
Old 05-02-2019, 04:34 PM
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Yep
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  #10339  
Old 05-02-2019, 08:14 PM
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Synopsis: This German horror anthology features three films all of which focus on the dark, violent, and disturbing nature of love and sex were written and directed by three controversial underground filmmakers: the legendary Jörg Buttgereit, Andreas Marschall, and Michal Kosakowski.

It’s been a while since I got the chance to sit down and really pay attention to a horror film. It isn’t that I’m not consistently immersed in the genre, more that I tend to have old standby’s running in the background while I work. That being said, sometimes my attention is caught, and I have to stop and appreciate something. This was one of those instances. I glanced at the synopsis, and a name jumped out at me. Jörg Buttgereit, mostly known as the director of the infamous Necromantik films ( as well as decent follow ups; Der Todesking and Schramm ), is a pioneer of German envelope pushing horror and the reason I sat down and really give this one a chance. It’d also been a while since I watched something from the more extreme end of the spectrum ( last one was Deep Web XXX, and I spent most of that flick’s runtime checking the internet for something to give a fuck about.)

Buttgereit’s Final Girl is the first of the three and it definitely delivers the sort of visceral and poetic presentation he’s known for. It begins during the end, with the titular girl contemplating the path that led her to her current position. Said position being straddling her bound, piece of shit father and wielding a pair of scissors meant for a very specific task. A simple premise, and a familiar one, but before anyone goes spitting on any graves, there’s plenty done here to set it apart, and the lead performance coupled with fantastic direction totally lived up to my expectations.

Next up is Michal Kosakowski’s Make A Wish, and while I am not familiar with him, the sophomore entry in this anthology doesn’t disappoint. The story involves a deaf polish couple wandering through an abandoned building in Berlin, flirting and seemingly enjoying their alone time. Unfortunately, a group of thugs enters stage left, and puts an immediate and rather brutal halt to their fun. However, our innocent victims aren’t as helpless as they seem. The truly interesting part of this one, is the rather up front and stark light that Kosakowski shines on a uncomfortable and unavoidable issue that has plagued Europe since the war. Here, the nature of oppression and inherited hate are explored with a supernatural twist. I found the segment managed to present this very real and ugly topic without being pretentious or turning into a straight morality play.

Lastly, we have Alraune from Andreas Marschall, and it’s certainly not the least. This one concerns a guy who is regaling his almost ex girlfriend with the tale of what went down when he decided to meet with a girl he met through a porn site. But, rather than being “ Catfished “, he embarks on a dark and bizarre sexual odyssey that definitely delivers on equal parts horror and sleaze. This one sports a Cronenberg feel, with some excellent visuals and a compelling narrative that pulls you in and holds you close, forcing you to revel in the debauchery that precedes something sinister.

Overall, I thoroughly enjoyed this flick and ( while the subject matter isn’t for everyone ) there’s plenty here to like. In the end, I came for the old, stayed for the new, and enjoyed the ride.

7/10
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  #10340  
Old 05-02-2019, 11:55 PM
FryeDwight FryeDwight is offline
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THE GOLDEN COMPASS (2008). This has potential, but the film just seems crammed with situations that really don't resonate or make You care. Have heard it's based on a trilogy and trying to get that in under two hours doesn't bode well, although the ending is left open for a sequel. Decent enough CGI (quite a bit of LORD OF THE RINGS/GAME OF THRONES situations) and nice to see Christopher Lee, Claire Higgins (HELLRAISER), Sam Elliot (FROGS) and Jim Clark (Carson on DOWNTON ABBEY!). **1/2
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