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What Was The Last Movie You Watched?

Tiki Tom

My Mail is Forwarded Here
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3,399
Location
Oahu, North Polynesia
Watched Florence Foster Jenkins starring Meryl Streep and Hugh Grant. Set in New York City in 1944. I thought Grant stole the show. At first I thought his character was a gold digger. Only gradually does the truth come out and Grant plays it believably and sympathetically. The movie is unsettling and haunting at some level. Why was it necessary to make this movie? To remind us that, to varying degrees, we all live in fantasy worlds of our own making? As a jab at middle-brow pretentions? As an uncomfortable reminder that it is the smug little cruelties that really hurt? Anyway. Well done movie about a rather odd subject matter. (All true, btw. I googled Florence Foster Jenkins and the film seems to stick to the facts of her life fairly closely.)
 
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LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,766
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
We're in the middle of a two-week run of Loving, a dramatization of the case of Richard and Mildred Loving, the interracial couple from Virginia who figured in the 1967 Supreme Court ruling that ended all state "anti-miscegenation" laws in the US. Well done all around, revealing the Lovings as two very ordinary people who weren't out to make any particular sweeping point -- they just wanted to live together as man and wife in the state where they were born. The most entertaining portrayal in the picture is that of the Loving's ACLU lawyer, Bernard S. Cohen -- who was the greenest of greenhorns when he took the case, and comes across as an overeager, overenthusiastic but well-meaning goof who nonetheless carries the case to victory. Considering that Cohen himself is listed in the "Acknowledgements" section of the credit crawl, it's evident that he has a sense of humor about his callow younger self.

Period detail is very well observed, with the only significant gaffe I noticed being the presence of a zip code sign on the front of a post office in a scene taking place in 1958. Fix it in CGI, kids.
 

Worf

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,207
Location
Troy, New York, USA
Watched Florence Foster Jenkins starring Meryl Streep and Hugh Grant. Set in New York City in 1944. I thought Grant stole the show. At first I thought his character was a gold digger. Only gradually does the truth come out and Grant plays it believably and sympathetically. The movie is unsettling and haunting at some level. Why was it necessary to make this movie? To remind us that, to varying degrees, we all live in fantasy worlds of our own making? As a jab at middle-brow pretentions? As an uncomfortable reminder that it is the smug little cruelties that really hurt? Anyway. Well done movie about a rather odd subject matter. (All true, btw. I googled Florence Foster Jenkins and the film seems to stick to the facts of her life fairly closely.)

If you've the stomach for it, watch the French version "Margeritte" and the Documentary on the same woman. Puddin' did the trifecta earlier this year. I only watched FFJ. It was a good film.

Worf
 
Messages
17,220
Location
New York City
Miracle on 34th Street (1947). Such a wonderful film.

We watched half of it onThursday and will finish it up when back from the relatives for Christmas. The scenes of the parade are great little time capsules.

Also, I'm pretty sure the apartment scenes were shot in real NYC apartments lining the parade route. I've been in some of those and they are incredibly accurate - also, they didn't have CGI then to create the effect.
 

AmateisGal

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,126
Location
Nebraska
We watched half of it onThursday and will finish it up when back from the relatives for Christmas. The scenes of the parade are great little time capsules.

Also, I'm pretty sure the apartment scenes were shot in real NYC apartments lining the parade route. I've been in some of those and they are incredibly accurate - also, they didn't have CGI then to create the effect.

If I had an apartment like those they featured, I might be able to live in NYC. :D
 

Lean'n'mean

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,087
Location
Cloud-cuckoo-land
'The Grey' (2012)..........I have seen it a few times before & found it ridiculous, the animatronic black wolf, stolen from a 70's werewolf movie is just hilarious, especially the liquid pouring out of it's nostrils, a la ' Alien' ......................the scenery though is sometimes stunning.
 
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