I started watching Lost In Translation, but so far, I just keep hitting pause and wandering away to do something more interesting. Unless someone can tell it gets drastically more interesting towards the end, I'm giving up and going to watch the rest of Shaun the Sheep, Season 1.
Quote from: jbeany on September 03, 2011, 04:56:49 PMI started watching Lost In Translation, but so far, I just keep hitting pause and wandering away to do something more interesting. Unless someone can tell it gets drastically more interesting towards the end, I'm giving up and going to watch the rest of Shaun the Sheep, Season 1. Gah! That horrible, horrible film! Run straight to Shaun the Sheep and don't look back, jbeany!
If you include British Films:Anything with Monty Python Mr. Bean (Rowan Atkinson)
Oh, us Brits have WAY better films than that! And foreign? *chuckles* ... foreign to me is defined by anything 'non-English speaking'. But that's made me think ... America is foreign but I suppose I know so much about you that you're not, not really.
Hostel was good, but hostel 2 was a little bit of a disappointment.
*shudder*I don't do horror movies. Nope, none, sorry, ugh.
Anyone like Bollywood movies?
Quote from: mcclane on September 06, 2011, 02:19:43 PMHostel was good, but hostel 2 was a little bit of a disappointment.Agreed. Did you know they've made a Hostel 3, based in the US (Las Vegas)? I think it's a direct to DVD, but I don't think it's been released yet. I love horror, particularly horror that seems as though it 'could happen'.
Hehe, the outlook for Hostel 3 is not good, mostly because Eli Roth isn't involved at all (it's on imdb.com, but there's lots of info if you Google it too.)Earlier this year one of my students asked me if I'd seen The Human Centipede. No, I said. Is it good? Yeh, let me find you a picture, he said. And boy, did he find me a picture. Oi, you're logged on as me, I shrieked. Bluddy teenagers. It's been on the tellybox lots over here just recently, but I've not watched it (that damn picture put me off!)I don't even remember the first horror film I saw. I do know that when I was nine I wanted to watch The Omen and had a real strop because my brother (who was about thirteen at the time) was allowed to watch it.
When it comes to "horror" movies, give me the old ones. The ones where you didn't see all the blood and gore , you used your imagination! Believe me, I have a vivid enough imagination that I don't need to see it! I'm talking movies like "Night of the Living Dead" (the original in B&W) or "The Tingler" ( I remember how scared I was!) or "The Birds" (The day after seeing that, I came out to go to school, the local birds had gotten drunk on Pyracantha berries and were lined up on the wires and fences [just like in the movie]) and, of course, "Psycho" (the original with Anthony Perkins).
Oh, I gave up long before The Ring came out! I think the Shining was enough for me - I watched it on video when I was about 12, and that was the end of wanting to see horror movies. I did watch Seven, though - and generally wished I hadn't. My then-hubby rented it, popped it in and said, "It's a cop movie." Well, yeah, I suppose. Ugh.
We saw Contagion today, and I have to admit to really liking those disaster movies about epidemics, pandemics, germs, viruses, rampant bacteria and such. I love previews, and we saw a preview of the American remake of Girl With the Dragon Tattoo. I was a little underwhelmed by the original Swedish version. I felt that the portrayal of Lisbeth Salander, one of the most intriguing characters in fiction today, was a tad bit "cleaner" than in the book, but that's a bit picky, I know. I wasn't thrilled with the casting of the male lead, and I am hoping Daniel Craig will bring a bit more oomph to it in the new movie (although the character himself was a little dull, especially compared to Lisbeth). I generally like the original, foreign-language version to the usual tarted up US version, but this just may be an exception. Still, it was only a preview, but it looked exciting. I can't wait.
We saw Contagion today, and I have to admit to really liking those disaster movies about epidemics, pandemics, germs, viruses, rampant bacteria and such. .