Rochester, NYI would guess it was filmed somewhere in the Northeast.
The Wolverine. Rewatched this one, which is mostly disconnected from MCU and even the X-Men franchises. Set mostly in Japan, with some interesting visuals, and cultural references. It starts in Nagasaki during WWII, and Wolverine is a POW. The guards release the POWs before the bomb comes, and Wolverine saves on. Flash to the present and Logan is struggling with the death of Jean Grey and living as a recluse. The real story revolves around that man, now old, his family including his lovely and tall daughter Mariko (Tao Okamoto). Logan's mutation plays a key role here and of course, Mariko becomes a love interest. This does align to stories from the comics, so wasn't entirely invented for the film. Of course the Yakuza are involved, as well as a group of ninjas that have served the old man's family for generations. All in all, this is pretty good. The focus is on the characters and story, not on CGI or action sequences (with one exception).
The Wolverine. Rewatched this one, which is mostly disconnected from MCU and even the X-Men franchises. Set mostly in Japan, with some interesting visuals, and cultural references. It starts in Nagasaki during WWII, and Wolverine is a POW. The guards release the POWs before the bomb comes, and Wolverine saves on. Flash to the present and Logan is struggling with the death of Jean Grey and living as a recluse. The real story revolves around that man, now old, his family including his lovely and tall daughter Mariko (Tao Okamoto). Logan's mutation plays a key role here and of course, Mariko becomes a love interest. This does align to stories from the comics, so wasn't entirely invented for the film. Of course the Yakuza are involved, as well as a group of ninjas that have served the old man's family for generations. All in all, this is pretty good. The focus is on the characters and story, not on CGI or action sequences (with one exception).
And to think Slade never made a dent on US record charts.Quiet Riot was several years ahead of Motley Crue and others from the whole LA metal scene. Toiled for years, had a good following in the clubs but just couldn't get a record company to sign them.
Same. I just couldn't get into it. Tried for 30 or 40 minutes and called it good. I loved the trailer for it.I wanted to like it
Because I couldn't post two videos in the same post, I put "Mama, Weer All Crazee Now" in a text link. So here's that one.What?! Okay, another remake that I never realized was a remake. Now I'm thinking the Quiet Riot version wasn't so much an homage as flat out a rip off. Vocals are very, very similar.
Everything everywhere all at one. It's a spectacular failure. I wanted to like it because the director was shooting for the moon and decided to be as indulgent as he possibly could be. That kind of self-belief can produce something amazing or a big sloppy mess. This is the latter.
It's way too long. There's probably an hour of kung fights. Some are clever but not nearly enough to warrant this amount of time spent on fights with predetermined outcomes. The story line is well conceived and has a lot of heart. The premise device is clever but it becomes a dead horse that is beaten and beaten and beaten and beaten. The performances of the principles is probably the best part of the movie. The rest of the cast is pretty much wasted. This is a high end film making by folks who know what they doing in terms of cinematography, special effects and editing. There are some interesting and fun ideas explored here. Not enough to save the movie.
Three stars for the attempt. One star for the movie.
Same. I just couldn't get into it. Tried for 30 or 40 minutes and called it good. I loved the trailer for it.
I knew Smokin' in the Boys Room from Motley Crue in the 80s. It wasn't until decades later that I heard the Brownsville Station version that preceded it. The Crue sure didn't stretch much for that cover, barely changed a thing.At least when Cheap Trick covered songs by The Move, they kinda tried to make them their own.
Yeah, I loved that tune before the Crue were out of junior highI knew Smokin' in the Boys Room from Motley Crue in the 80s. It wasn't until decades later that I heard the Brownsville Station version that preceded it. The Crue sure didn't stretch much for that cover, barely changed a thing.
A lot of good scenes in that movie. I like when he cuts off the Israeli soldiers hand and then counts to 10. You wouldn’t think that counting to 10 would create more tension then chopping off someone’s hand.World War Z. Brad Pitt, zombies. Fast zombies. Watched on the plane, and enjoyed it. Brad plays a UN troubleshooter/investigator who had recently retired from his dangerous job. Then he’s called back when the Zs arrive. The speed of these zombies ups the ante quite a bit. It’s solid and there is some intelligence to it. My favorite moment is when a Mossad agent explains why the Israelis knew first. He explains the 10th man process. If 9 agree the 10th must disagree and try to prove the thing they don’t believe. In this case a report of zombies Coming from India. It’s brilliant and the kind of thinking we could use more of. Solid film.
I always wondered why Big Country chose The Alarm's Mike Peters as their new frontman after Stuart's suicide. But this song is the perfect meld of Big Country and The Alarm at their early 80's peak.