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Posted on 12/17/15 at 11:46 am to LeonPhelps
quote:
Where do they get these lists? Some cafe in San Francisco with a bunch of Prius's parked out front?
I haven't seen one of these movies
Posted on 12/17/15 at 12:51 pm to LeonPhelps
quote:
Where do they get these lists? Some cafe in San Francisco with a bunch of Prius's parked out front?
I hate to break it to you, but that is precisely where the only movie on the list you liked (the Pixar film for children) was created
Posted on 12/17/15 at 12:57 pm to RLDSC FAN
AV Club has gotten on my nerves over the years more and more.
I'm pretty sure they all fart into champagne flutes and smell it.
I'm pretty sure they all fart into champagne flutes and smell it.
Posted on 12/17/15 at 1:04 pm to RLDSC FAN
quote:
1. Mad Max: Fury Road
Have we all died and gone to Valhalla? This is a movie—a grand, impossible blockbuster—that shouldn’t even exist. George Miller, an Aussie genre veteran in his 70s, somehow shook $150 million from Hollywood’s pockets, then spent it crashing cars in the desert to realize the demolition derby of his wildest dreams, the Mad Max movie he’s been working toward since the very start. Fury Road bucks just about every trend in big-budget franchise filmmaking: It’s a self-contained joy ride through its creator’s limitless imagination, an art movie stretched across the canvas of an IMAX screen. And beneath its layers upon layers of awe-inspiring imagery—a blitzkrieg of practical effects, whipped up into a two-hour car chase—beats the heart of a surprisingly subversive entertainment, one that dares to put its mythic hero (Tom Hardy, a fine substitute for Mad Mel) into the passenger seat, while a metal-armed Charlize Theron leads the charge against misogyny incarnate. That this super-charged passion project made it to screens fully intact, like some spectacle from another universe, is cause to keep grinning, with or without a mouth sprayed in a glorious shade of chrome.
Posted on 12/17/15 at 1:07 pm to Green Chili Tiger
quote:
Me and Earl and The Dying Girl
Good call. Reminded me of perks of being a wallflower. Both great, great young adult genres, which if done right, are some of the best movies out there, but if done wrong can be horrible.
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