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Which films have you seen lately? ΚΓ' - The thread is your movie hegemon.

I watched that British gangster movie where Tom Hardy plays two twins. It's decent.

The script is middling. The camerawork middling. The soundtrack middling.

Tom Hardy is good, though. I think he is my favorite actor of this generation. I don't think Gosling is his equal.

Hardy is kinda husky which I think may prevent him from larger profile roles. It is the movie business, unfortunately. It's just kinda his build, too, if he got ripped, he'd still be barrel chested and broad shouldered. Too bad, I don't think there are hardly any movies at all he does not make better.
I am not of a watcher of anything that isn't Star Trek related these days...and it's regrettable as I haven't seen that Tom Hardy movie as well but I heard about him playing two roles and it piqued my curiosity a bit.
I also agree with your assessment of Gosling, though I did liked him in Drive and Blade Runner's sequel he comes across more like a women eye candy actor than a true tough guy.
And that's the vibe I like about Hardy. Every little bit I saw of him forms a picture in my mind of a tough guy, little talking, taking decisive action when needed, almost like he has a Charles Bronson aura.
His rendition of Max Rockatansky was absolutely marvellous!
 
I am not of a watcher of anything that isn't Star Trek related these days...and it's regrettable as I haven't seen that Tom Hardy movie as well but I heard about him playing two roles and it piqued my curiosity a bit.
I also agree with your assessment of Gosling, though I did liked him in Drive and Blade Runner's sequel he comes across more like a women eye candy actor than a true tough guy.
And that's the vibe I like about Hardy. Every little bit I saw of him forms a picture in my mind of a tough guy, little talking, taking decisive action when needed, almost like he has a Charles Bronson aura.
His rendition of Max Rockatansky was absolutely marvellous!

FWIW I liked Hardy in the twins movie, but I've grown to like him in anything that isn't ST Nemesis. Maybe I should go back and watch it.

Microcosmos, 1996. French insect documentary with video work that is absolutely AMAZING for the mid-1990s. This is Planet Earth level detail. (This movie was prompted by my cinema buddy’s apartment being literally colonized by bees.)

Twelve Angry Men, 1997. The first time I ever watched TAM was the remake in high school, for creative writing or speech class (same teacher, same classroom). Watching this thirty years later was a...wholly different inexperience, in part because I knew the story and largely because I knew so many actors.

Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, 1954. A musical comedy about some backwoods boys lookin’ for lady-types.

In the Army Now, 1994. Two slackers (Pauly Shore & Andy Dick) who work in an electronics store are fired for general incompetence, and decide to join the Army Reserves as weekend warriors specializing in water purification. Are they concerned? No, because the last war was like, what, WW2? (Boy, you guys need libertarian friends who will give you lectures on all of DC’s foreign policy misadventures.) Things happen, and soon the “waterboys” soon find themselves not only in a war, but behind enemy lines in a place where only they can do something. I watched this a lot in the 2000s. Watching it in 2025 adds nostalgic elements because there are records and tape decks being sold. There are also aspects I didn’t appreciate as a kid, like the absurdity of Libyan camp guards shooting machine guns during an air raid.

Payday, 1973. Watched this solely because it was filmed in and around my hometown, so I was constantly pausing and rewinding to study background details and figure out where shots were being taken. There is a plot about a country-music singer whose life of excess is destroying him and those around him.

Renaissance Man, 1994. Danyn DeVito plays an unemployed ad man who is assigned to work at a military base and teach a small group of boots who are judged being on the verge of flunking out. There’s no curriculum, so after a few halting attempts at finding some way to teach “comprehension”, DeVito stumbles into teaching ….Hamlet! The students include a very young Mark Wahlberg, as well as a minor character from The Sopranoes. While a lot of the film is weak, sense-wise, there’s a lot of humor and heartwarm-y stuff. My favorite part was the Sopranoes character, who is fond of Al Pacino impersonations, reading Henry V as Pacino in Scarface. (He does not do this in the big finale, where for some reason his DI demands he quote some Shakespeare, so he performs the “Band of Brothers” speech.) One impressive feat the film does is slowly humanizing a group of largely obnoxious students – Private Motormouth in general – so that the viewer can actually like them by the end. Ditto for DeVito’s character, who starts off very much like Emilio Estevez in Mighty Ducks but finds his passion.

Jay and Silent Bob Reboot, 2019. Jay and Silent Bob have to go to Hollywood to stop Kevin Smith from making another Jay and Silent Bob movie. “What kinda broken down [creeps] still WATCH this stuff, anyway?!”

Along the way, Jay discovers he's a dad, and viewers are forced to deal with annoying teenagers. While my attitude during the movie was more toleration than wholescale enjoyment There were nice parts, though, like cameos from Matt Damon & Ben Affleck. (Damon's was the funniest, since he kept doing Bourne references.) There are a lot of inside references, like Kevin Smith's daughter (playing Jay's daughter) saying she hates Kevin Smith because he forces his daughter to act in all his movies. The ending is amusing, though.


"How old are these guys, anyway?"
"I think they were alive during the nineties."
"No way! That's before they built THE INTERNET!"

"Silent Bob says, failure is success training."
"...then why aren't you the most successful man in the world?"

Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back, 2001. Watching Reboot made me realize that either (1) I've only watched unconnected clips from Strike Back or (2) it's been so long since I watched the movie I remember nothing about it. In Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back, Jay and Silent Bob learn that a movie is being based on them, so they run off to Hollywood to stop it.


Enroute, Jay falls for a young woman and unwittingly joints a diamond-stealing gang as their love-smitten patsy. There are cameos from Ben Affleck and Matt Damon, and....a pre-Daily Show Jon Stewart, not to mention Will Ferrell. Dante and Randall also appear a few times, to my delight. On the downside, Jay repeatedly refers to an orangutan as a chimp and still worse, a monkey.

Will Ferrell: I'm from Federal Wildlife Managment. Is the monkey in there?
Cop: The ape.
WF: What?
Cop: The ape. The orangutan is a member of the ape family. It's not a monkey.

WF: Why are you shooting at me?
Bad Girl Band: Two reasons! One, we're walking, talkin', bad-girl cliches! Two, you're a man!

At this point, I think the only View Askview movies I've not seen are Mallrats and Chasing Amy.
 
FWIW I liked Hardy in the twins movie, but I've grown to like him in anything that isn't ST Nemesis. Maybe I should go back and watch it.
Wouldn't recommend...it's a bad movie, sure it serves as the basis for Picard, which also sucks imho, although Tom Hardy is definitely one of the highest points of the movie for me.
 
Wouldn't recommend...it's a bad movie, sure it serves as the basis for Picard, which also sucks imho, although Tom Hardy is definitely one of the highest points of the movie for me.

Oh, I've seen Nemesis a couple of times, but it's been 15 years at least. FIrst Contact is the only TNG movie I like re-watching.
 
At this point, I think the only View Askview movies I've not seen are Mallrats and Chasing Amy.
Can recommend the latter, haven't seen the former.

But I did recently find an (old?) interview with Kevin Smith -- I think it was on rogerebert.com -- in which he was asked about Mallrats, and his answer basically boiled down to "I don't know WTH I was thinking when I made that movie!"
 
Out to Sea, 1997. Walter Mathau and Jack Lemmon are a couple of old codgers who Walter enlists as "dance hosts" on a cruise ship. Walter's not in it for a cruise, though, he wants to gamble & try to lure in some old biddie with a lot of money. He winds up falling in love with a youngish woman who (unbeknowst to him) is also a gold-digging con artist. Meanwhile, Lemmon struggles with being a widower in love. Entertaining, and it has Brent Spiner singing.


The Drop. 2014. James Gandolfini and Tom Hardy, madonne! Gandolfini plays the former owner of a bar who was pushed out by some Cheychans who use the bar for some gangland things. His nephew Bob (Tom Hardy) tends the bar. One night they're robbed by a couple of nogoodniks, annnnnd the Cheychens want their money back. I've always only ever seen Hardy in roles where he's very self-assure -- Shinzon, Bane, Bronson, etc -- so seeing him as a mild-mannered barkeep was fascinating. Continue to be impressed by his acting chops. Bittersweet to see Gandolfini in his last role before he left us all too soon.

 

:eek:

First hunt. Last chance.

From the director of Prey, watch the brand-new trailer for Predator: Badlands, in theaters November 7.“Predator: Badlands,” which stars Elle Fanning and Dimitrius Schuster-Koloamatangi, is set in the future on a remote planet, where a young Predator, outcast from his clan, finds an unlikely ally in Thia (Fanning) and embarks on a treacherous journey in search of the ultimate adversary.
 
Yesterday I watched Watchmen (2009), a serious, deep film. Watching the movie now, you can imagine Dr. Manhattan as an AGI, which even makes the film even more relevant for the modern viewer.
 
RRR on Netflix. Bollywood has superheroes in this 3 hour extravaganza! I am not a big Bollywood fan, but this one was worth it. Superheroes doing superhero stuff in pre-independence India and you even get a few traditional and epic dance moves. The Brits take it on the chin. The choreographed fight sequences were pretty spectacularly done. :thumbsup:
 
I watched Solomon Kane recently. I finished The Savage Tales of Solomon Kane book and decided to give the the Blu Ray that came with the book (my brother’s xmas gift) a proper watch from beginning to end.
Altough M. J. Basset's plot is original it does feel like it could have come from the pen of Robert E Howard and it does give a full backstory to Solomon of which the writer only left little hints sprinkled across his tales. I would've enjoyed the movie further if it was based on one of Robert's tales, but the ones as grandiose and fantastic as this movie's plot take place in Sub-Saharan Africa so they could not be replicated without hurting audience's feelings...shame for that:yeah:
James Purefoy is able to incarnate the fictional spirit of Solomon Kane with convincing acting and a generous cast of other stars helps make the illusion ever more real. From these stars I underline the likes of: Alice Krige (our trekkie beloved Borg Queen), Pete Postlethwaite and Max Von Sydow.
 
^^^ I really like that movie. It is underrated and fairly unknown, but I've seen it two or three times. Purefroy is perfect as Kane. The crucifixion scene was excellent and moving. Bit over the top at the end - with the supernatural aspects - but def worth watching for some pulp.
 
R.i.P Hulkster

First saw him on the A-Team, then on Rocky 3 as Thunder Lips (he gave my boy Balboa a hard time!) and of course on WWF and the comedy kids action movies at the height of 'Hulk-Mania' - 'No Holds Barred', 'Suburban Commando' and 'Mr. Nanny'.

Gremlins 2 cameo was :D

tumblr_n6tbwejQXC1r5r8duo2_250.gif


20250722_WWERemembers_HulkHogan_v2_16x9%20%282%29.jpg


Hulk Hogan, wrestling star and actor, dies aged 71​

The WWE star and vocal supporter of Donald Trump died after suffering a cardiac arrest at his home in Florida


Hulk Hogan, the wrestling star turned vocal supporter of Donald Trump, has died at the age of 71.

Hogan’s manager Chris Volo told NBC Los Angeles that Hogan, given name Terry Gene Bollea, suffered a cardiac arrest at his home in Clearwater, Florida, and died surrounded by his family.

Rumors about Hogan’s health have swirled for weeks, after he reportedly was hospitalized. Last week, his wife, Sky, denied rumors that he was in a coma, stating that his heart was “strong” after multiple operations.

Instantly recognizable from his blonde horseshoe mustache and bandannas, Hogan was one of the most popular wrestling stars of the 1980s and considered one of the greatest of all time. Known for his ring theatrics and sizable physique in his prime, Hogan clocked in at 6ft 7in and weighed 320lb (145kg) – he helped transform professional wrestling into home entertainment, primarily through his partnership with Worldwide Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) and the performance routine known as Hulkamania.

The entertainment company confirmed Hogan’s death and mourned its former star in a statement on X: “WWE is saddened to learn WWE Hall of Famer Hulk Hogan has passed away. One of pop culture’s most recognizable figures, Hogan helped WWE achieve global recognition in the 1980s. WWE extends its condolences to Hogan’s family, friends, and fans.”

“The Hulkster” headlined WrestleMania, WWE’s signature event, eight times, including a seminal showdown in 1987 with his 520lb mentor Andre the Giant at Michigan’s Pontiac Silverdome, before a then record crowd of 93,173. Hogan won the WWE championship six times during his career.


In 1996, Hogan founded the New World Order (NWO) and became Hollywood Hulk Hogan. He was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame in 2005, only to have his status revoked after scandal following the release of a secret recording of a sexual encounter, during which Hogan made numerous racist comments. The 2010s blog Gawker first published the recording; Hogan subsequently sued the website, winning and forcing it out of business.

Hogan was once again inducted in 2020, as he became a more prominent figure in Donald Trump’s “Make America Great Again” (Maga) movement. He starred at the 2024 Republican national convention, ripping off his shirt, WWE-style, to reveal a Trump 2024 T-shirt.

Ever the performer, Hogan maintained a decades-long acting career, appearing in the 1982 film Rocky III as the character Thunderlips, as well as films such as No Holds Barred, Suburban Commando, Mr Nanny, Santa With Muscles and the 1994 syndicated series Thunder in Paradise. As one of the most recognizable figures of the 1980s – at his peak, he was the most requested celebrity for the Make-a-Wish foundation – Hogan appeared as himself in many shows and movies, including the A-Team, Baywatch, Gremlins 2: The New Batch, Spy Hard and Muppets From Space. He also lent his voice to episodes of Robot Chicken and American Dad!


In 1985, he co-hosted Saturday Night Live along with Mr T. The same year, he was the star of his own cartoon series on CBS, Hulk Hogan’s Rock ‘n’ Wrestling. Hogan parlayed his fame into reality television, starring on the VH1 reality show Hogan Knows Best along with his then wife Linda and his children Brooke and Nick, from 2005 until 2007.

The Guardian has contacted Hogan’s representatives for comment.

Tributes poured in on social media in the hours after his death, including from Maga political figures.

“We lost a great friend today, the ‘Hulkster,’” Donald Trump, a longtime friend, posted on his official Truth Social account. “Hulk Hogan was MAGA all the way – Strong, tough, smart, but with the biggest heart. He gave an absolutely electric speech at the Republican National Convention, that was one of the highlights of the entire week. He entertained fans from all over the World, and the cultural impact he had was massive. To his wife, Sky, and family, we give our warmest best wishes and love. Hulk Hogan will be greatly missed!”

JD Vance also posted a tribute on X: “Hulk Hogan was a great American icon. One of the first people I ever truly admired as a kid,” he wrote. “The last time I saw him we promised we’d get beers together next time we saw each other. The next time will have to be on the other side, my friend! Rest in peace.”

“We all have fond memories of Hulk Hogan,” wrote Mike Johnson, the Republican speaker of the House, on X, alongside two photos – one with Hogan, the other of Hogan arm-wrestling Trump. “From my childhood in the ‘80s, to campaigning with him last year, I always saw him as a giant in stature and in life. May he rest in peace.”

Sylvester Stallone, Hogan’s co-star in Rocky III, said via Instagram: “I had the pleasure of meeting this brilliant personality and showman when he was 26 years old. He was absolutely wonderful and his amazing skill made Rocky three incredibly special. My heart breaks.”

“I Am Absolutely Shocked To Hear About The Passing Of My Close Friend,” Hogan’s friend and fellow wrestling star Ric Flair posted on X. “Hulk Has Been By My Side Since We Started In The Wrestling Business. An Incredible Athlete, Talent, Friend, And Father! Our Friendship Has Meant The World To Me.”

And John Cena, who followed Hogan’s path from WWE star to Hollywood actor, simply posted a photo to his Instagram account of Hogan holding André the Giant’s head in one of their showdowns, appearing triumphant.

His signature move, the Atomic leg-drop -

hulk-hogan.gif


Boom!
 
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RRR on Netflix. Bollywood has superheroes in this 3 hour extravaganza! I am not a big Bollywood fan, but this one was worth it. Superheroes doing superhero stuff in pre-independence India and you even get a few traditional and epic dance moves. The Brits take it on the chin. The choreographed fight sequences were pretty spectacularly done. :thumbsup:

Ray Stevenson and Alison Doody were great as the cartoony villians, James Cameron and his wife were impressed with the movie too and JC has offered to help the director if he ever wants to make a Holly-Wood based movie.
 
The Last Class. In a theater. It is about Robert Reich and his last semester teaching at Berkeley. It was really good and worth the time.
 
Fantastic Four: First Steps- Not terrible, shockingly… and actually quite decent. Saw it in Miami at movies with family on my last day of summer vacation and I only dozed off once, so…. high marks. :D

It was a good decision by the writers not to try and shoehorn it into the existing MCU canon, but to just use the priceless “multiverse” concept to make it its own thing.
 
I finally saw Barbie, since it was on TBS last night.

I didn't get why the Mattel executives in the film thought it was such a crisis that a real-life Barbie was in this world. What was the risk to them as a company if that should be the case?

I thought it didn't quite cohere. The Barbie and Ken co-plots were too much each their own thing.
 
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