Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. I just shared it with my kids. But we're godly seeing across the spiderverse tonight, so that might change.
Asklemmy
A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions
Search asklemmy π
If your post meets the following criteria, it's welcome here!
- Open-ended question
- Not offensive: at this point, we do not have the bandwidth to moderate overtly political discussions. Assume best intent and be excellent to each other.
- Not regarding using or support for Lemmy: context, see the list of support communities and tools for finding communities below
- Not ad nauseam inducing: please make sure it is a question that would be new to most members
- An actual topic of discussion
Looking for support?
Looking for a community?
- Lemmyverse: community search
- sub.rehab: maps old subreddits to fediverse options, marks official as such
- !lemmy411@lemmy.ca: a community for finding communities
~Icon~ ~by~ ~@Double_A@discuss.tchncs.de~
We had our 19 year old nephew watch that this last weekend, a beautiful masterpiece still.
This is my all-time favorite. One of my favorite memories of this movie was β when I showed it to a way less idealistic friend of mine, he felt so sad when the last of the memories is being removed. I did not expect him to do that let alone like the movie.
Definitely Spiderverse. It was almost too fast moving at times, but fantastic story telling and, of course, art design.
Edge of tomorrow. Really hoping for a sequel including Emily Blunt.
Isn't it too late for a sequel?
Why? Top gun got a sequel after nearly forty years.
This tread has been a moment of personal discovery. In trying to imagine what movie I've seen this month I realized I haven't seen a movie yet this year - unless you count standup specials which live in the movie section of Plex. I'm like 80% sure the last movie I watched was the Bob's Burgers Movie. What happened to me?!
Across the Spidervetse was incredible
Ikr?!
Dune. While there's no way to perfectly capture the magic of the intricate machinations of (Frank) Herbert's universe, the movie gets about as close as anyone could, I think. The only thing in its league is Jackson's LOTR trilogy, and I think Dune is at least as good if not slightly better. Can't wait for the second (and hopefully third!) one!
I loved the movie, but I feel like they didn't include enough Dr. Yueh. I also feel like they could have ended the movie a few scenes earlier.
Asteroid City was surprisingly good. Eccentric, but in the best way.
Very Wes Anderson-y in a good way.
Usually not my cup of tea, I watched an Indian movie, two of them actually: Bahubali and Bahubali 2. Yes, it's clichΓ© and cheesy but all in a very fun and spectacular way.
It's basically life-action anime but with more musical and dancing bits.
Extraction 2, but there wasn't much competition because I only saw 2 movies this month.
New movie: Across the Spiderverse without a doubt. Gave it a 9/10. I think i like the first more but it's a beautiful movie.
Old and overall: i rewatched Toy Story 2. It's a 10/10 from me.
It's not a new one, but I rewatched the 1998 film Dark City (IMDB/RT) 2 weeks ago and totally forgot how atmospheric it was. Whilst it takes it self seriously there's some pretty bizarre moments, I totally cracked up at a scene where one of the 'strangers' exclaims "HE CAN TUNE!" which is followed by a shot of a child stranger smiling and chattering their teeth (YouTube clip)
Emily the criminal was pretty decent. Good acting, the story is okay, but nothing special. Enjoyable. Then I watched Oh Lucy! With Josh Hartnet. That was a downer of a movie somehow. It's about a japanese lady who is kinda unsatisfied with her life, tries to change things up, opens up a bit, but it's not as successful as one expects. Not bad, rather weird movie!
I really enjoyed Elemental! My boyfriend slept through most of it though haha. It seems to be one of those polarizing movies.
The animation of Fire and Water was so beautiful and the story did resonate with me as a kinda/sorta immigrant.
'The Wandering Moon' directed by Lee Sang-il and based on the novel by Yuu Nagira. The story contains some controversial themes but it's beautifully shot and put together with a lot of care and love. At two and a half hours it's a really nice length to just sit back and allow yourself to get fully immersed in the visual experience. It has that sort of slow, melancholic beauty that appears in a lot of modern Japanese art. If you've ever read a Murakami novel you'll know what I mean.
Do the final two episodes of Star Trek: TNG count? If so, that.
For a series with its ups and downs, they really nailed everything that's great about Star Trek in the final two episodes with none of the lows. Relevant social commentary, intelligent dialog, an intriguing science fictional mystery, some action, and a superbly dramatic Picard! Not just Picard either. Almost everyone in the cast gets a chance to shine across the three time periods. Brent Spiner especially gets a nod for the subtle changes to old Data's character.
Happy Gilmore. Iβve seen it before, but not for a long time. Donβt think Iβll ever get tired of it.
Across the Spider-Verse of course (respect the hyphen), however I also just watched Submarine (written and directed by Richard Ayoade) and thought that was really good.
I'll check out Submarine. Apologies for the hyphen.
Lol don't worry, the hyphen is meant to be there! It's Spider-Man, not Spiderman!!!
Blackberry was awesome. Funny, good moments of tension, totally worth a watch.
Blackberry was fun, but at times it felt like a poor man's The Social Network. At least for me.
I think Iβd agree with that. Blackberry is a really good movie, The Social Network is an all-timer.
I recently watched Beau if a Afraid, I wouldnβt say itβs my favorite but it definitely made me feel things, mainly anxiety lol
I... have not seen any movies this month actually. Definitely want to check out Spiderman though and Asteroid City looks like it might be fun too.
Asteroid city looks awesome, let us know how it is of you catch it
Definitely Across the spider verse, 9/10 best movie of the year so far, but can't wait to watch Past Lives
I marathoned The Godfather trilogy a couple of weeks ago. 1 is still one of my favourite movies
Absolutely, by necessity. Can't really take it for granted that being a lurker won't overall impact the site. Unfortunately, my usual subs that I participate in haven't yet made the leap of faith, so its hard to provide quality contribution until that improves
You seen to have posted to the wrong asklemmy post. The one you're looking for was about being more active.
Yeah, it's unfortunate when it happens. But some of the apps are still buggy when loading posts.
Sometimes it'll load comments from a previous post, so I have to go back and reload the post again just to make sure everything's right.
Yeah that's an issue I've noticed on Jerboa
I'd say The Covenant but BlackBerry was a close second
man across the spiderverse is the only movie i've watched this month
The Mario movie was way better than I expected tbh
I haven't watched any movies this month, but I've been staring at John Wick 4 in my queue for weeks. Does that count?
Ice Planet (2001) because of Starhunter Redux. They lost $5 million trying to make a TV show out of the movie.
I enjoyed Fool's Paradise. Wasn't perfect but I feel privileged to watch Charlie Day's creative mind at work. Also the cast was great, if not utilized to the fullest extent. Satire of the film industry is always a favorite of mine.
The critics gave it a really hard time though.
Headhunters (2011)
just the kind of weirdly entertaining movie I was looking for, with a bonus Nicolaj Coster Waldau
Apocalypse Now. Watched it in an airplane so wasn't as good of an experience as it should have been, but it was an incredible movie regardless. My favorite Vietnam movie definitely
"The perks of being a wallflower."
I'm an introvert. And I relate to almost every scene in the film.