#5571
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Its not one i view a lot, but when i do its still enjoyable.
__________________ " I have seen trees that look like tortured souls" |
#5572
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Quote:
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#5573
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I watched Romero's original during the first lockdown and it really hit me different than any other time I seen it I went from liking it to loving it.
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#5574
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Maybe it's worth a reappraisal. I only watched it the once donkeys ears ago and thought it was awful. Sent from my SM-G780G using Tapatalk |
#5575
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WHAT LIES BELOW – If your mum’s new boyfriend invites you down into his red-lit cellar to view his lamprey collection, try not to menstruate in his boat. That might be the lesson in store for Liberty, bookish teenager (though played by relative croc Ema Horvath) at the heart of the fishy goings on in ‘What Lies Below’. We meet her on an outing to the family lakeside retreat, where mum’s new romantic acquisition will be unveiled; it’s hunky scientist John (Trey Tucker), who doesn’t seem to think it’s a big deal that he wanders around with nothing on (and that he breeds lampreys). He’s a biologist investigating the dynamics of freshwater organisms, or so he says – there’s something about his general demeanour that sparks thoughts of ‘possible alien involved in fish breeding colonisation weirdness that ends badly for everyone present’, but I’ll let you find out for yourselves. What’s interesting about ‘What Lies Below’ is that its hackneyed set-up finds room for some genuinely strange and uncomfortable moments, most of them focussing on the grubby attraction between John and Liberty. An array of fairly creeped-out scenes dominates the movie’s mid-section and charts the progression of scientist guy’s freaky boundary-pushing behaviour, which ranges from a heckle-raising bathroom visitation to a scene on a boat where he basically ends up licking menstrual blood(!) The ending is a bit of a blur, a whirl of multicoloured fragments, fishy bits and lots of running around by a lake, but before then ‘What Lies Below’ stays its course with some evocative imagery such as John‘s immersion in waters that pulsate with an otherworldly radiance. I liked it; it seems to have attracted mostly mediocre or bad reviews, maybe because frankly it’s all a bit of a downer.
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#5576
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Quote:
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#5577
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Streamed it on Prime. Not sure it's one I'd bother to buy, even though apparently I enjoyed it much more than most reviewers.
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#5578
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Another round up then ... The Creeping Flesh (Freddie Francis) What a horrible wee tale. Sibling rivalry and oneupmanship being the main concerns ahem. Hadn't seen this since a rather faded looking print on the Beeb. It looks somewhat clearer now. Will revisit this one shortly. The Curse Of Frankenstein (Terence Fisher) The cornerstone. What can I say here? As long as I don't say it's a remake cough cough ... Cushing casually wiping blood onto his lapel (that'll never come out ) must have been quite the thing back in the day, seeing as most of it reminds me of if Gainsborough had made more colour flicks ahem. " ...pass the marmalade". The Mummy (Terence Fisher) This one always bored me rigid as a callow yoof. Silly Demon. It looks so lavish now. Sigh. White men plunder another culture to stave off their base desires for cricket and high tea A cost is paid though ....
__________________ [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC] [B] "... the days ahead will be filled with struggle ... and coated in marzipan ... "[/B] |
#5579
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The Last Voyage Of The Demeter. 2023. A ship bound to London from Bulgaria with boxes of dirt and a small crew encounter something evil and sinister on board the 4 week jorney. Taken from Dracula's novel charting the Captain's Log and why the boat arrived derelict and empty, most Dracula movies have never really shown the voyage except the 1992 version that has a small scene with Anthony Hopkins doing the voice over as Captain Eliot. Liam Cunningham plays the old sea ferryman and planning on his retirement and hopefully of a peaceful journey but we know that will never happen. Completley set in, around and under the ship certainly draws in the no place is safe scenario. Javier Botet plays the Count and the makers look like they have used a darker tone of make up and re-created the same Max Schrek Nosferatu appearance, very nice homage. This was actually a decent entry into the Dracula tale and certainly best watched in the dark due to the tone of the film. rOq1oGOIt4Tq284M44XD6jxSidz.jpg
__________________ " I have seen trees that look like tortured souls" |
#5580
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I'm glad that's good, I have it lined up for this weekend with my friend
__________________ Triumphant sight on a northern sky |
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