Gods and Monsters (1998). The story of the last days of film director James Whale, an open homosexual who lived out his days quietly in the mid century. The story is mildly interesting The performances are very good and nuanced especially Ian McKellen as Whale (no surprise), Brendan Fraser stretches here but keeps up.
I absolutely love the way this is shot. Obviously film . It's beautiful but not self-conscious. Simple, the camera is never in the way or shouts look me. It tells the story, builds or relives tension, let's the actors lead, it exactly how to bring a play to screen.
It's not a great movie. It's a good movie. Worth a couple of hours.
Some of the actors cast then were nobodies but became somewhat somebodies (Rupert Grint, Johnny Galecki), but overlooking Taylor Hawkins as Iggy Pop in inexcusable, lol.CBGB. 2013. Alan Rickman is the lead as Hilly, not too many notables in the cast (Malin Akerman is gorgeous as Debby Harry). This is just a lot of fun. There are historical inaccuracies, but who cares really?
Some of the actors cast then were nobodies but became somewhat somebodies (Rupert Grint, Johnny Galecki), but overlooking Taylor Hawkins as Iggy Pop in inexcusable, lol.
I saw it probably a year or two after its release. I know Rickman was alive when I saw it. It's light entertainment for music fans who remember that scene, and in that regard it's an enjoyable nostalgic trip. But I never sought it out again.
'In Germany, one of the most important pioneers of science fiction was the Expressionist Fritz Lang. His 1927 film Metropolis was the most expensive film ever released up to that point. Set in the year 2026, it included elements such as an autonomous robot, a mad scientist, a dystopian society, and elaborate futuristic sets.'Seems like most modern sci fi is dystopian, dark, grimy, dirty, you can hardly see what's happening sometimes. I liked that this movie was bright, w/ some beautiful cinematography. That house in the sky was amazing. I think mostly filmed in Iceland?
Anyway I really enjoyed the film, have watched it several times over the years.
'In Germany, one of the most important pioneers of science fiction was the Expressionist Fritz Lang. His 1927 film Metropolis was the most expensive film ever released up to that point. Set in the year 2026, it included elements such as an autonomous robot, a mad scientist, a dystopian society, and elaborate futuristic sets.'
weirdorama.
back in grammar school, the shop steward of our local 'we hate piano lessons' union, scored a dvd with a double feature, 'the 5,000 fingers of dr t,' and 'metropolis.' i asked pops aboot the flix, and he said something like 'so u guys got a union, too? that mad piano teacher story was around in my time. and no, we are not ending ur piano lessons.' about metropolis, 'that's a good sci-fi story.' we figured out the silent part on our own. he was right, and it was my first silent film too. grand, scary, and dark. very german in hindsight, and very great still today. same questions, different props.Never expected that Metropolis to get a mention in this thread. Fritz Lang's "Metropolis" goes way back with me. Aside from some Charlie Chaplin films, it was one of the first silent movies that I ever saw. I first saw it when I was a kid, I think in my teenage years, and it immediately struck a chord with me, and this movie stuck with me ever since. It is one of my favorite silent movies, and one of my favorite science fiction films as well.
About a decade or so ago, they re-released Metropolis with added found footage. Real Art Ways sponsored a showing with a live-music accompaniment by the Alloy Orchestra. Cool movie with a live soundtrack made for a great night. The Alloy guys were spent at the end, no breaks.Never expected that Metropolis to get a mention in this thread. Fritz Lang's "Metropolis" goes way back with me. Aside from some Charlie Chaplin films, it was one of the first silent movies that I ever saw. I first saw it when I was a kid, I think in my teenage years, and it immediately struck a chord with me, and this movie stuck with me ever since. It is one of my favorite silent movies, and one of my favorite science fiction films as well.
About a decade or so ago, they re-released Metropolis with added found footage. Real Art Ways sponsored a showing with a live-music accompaniment by the Alloy Orchestra. Cool movie with a live soundtrack made for a great night. The Alloy guys were spent at the end, no breaks.
Doesn't that describe everything he's done the last 5 years or more? He's been attached to a lot of B grade stuff, seems like they use him to try to draw an audience and he might not play much of a role. Seems like he's one of those "won't say no to anything" kind of actors when it comes to roles and projects.Ever wonder what Bruce Willis phoning in a roll just to cash a check would look like? Well, this movie is it. He is underutilized and barely trying.
Watch it and tell me. For me it was a new level of suck.Doesn't that describe everything he's done the last 5 years or more? He's been attached to a lot of B grade stuff, seems like they use him to try to draw an audience and he might not play much of a role. Seems like he's one of those "won't say no to anything" kind of actors when it comes to roles and projects.
I'm gonna have to pass. I've mostly been avoiding Mr. Willis for a while now.Watch it and tell me. For me it was a new level of suck.
Well you can still do that and watch this movie, since his screen time is fairly minimal.I'm gonna have to pass. I've mostly been avoiding Mr. Willis for a while now.
That's about 75% of what he's done since 2007's "Live Free or Die Hard". 45 films since then, nine in 2021 alone. And he's got 10 more in production for 2022-23. My over/under is that most people haven't heard of more than 11 of those.Ever wonder what Bruce Willis phoning in a roll just to cash a check would look like?