Tropic Thunder was friggin awesome. You don't know what you're talking about. It resurrected the careers of Tom Cruise and Matthew McConaughey
Brent - Schindler's List isn't Requiem like depressing. It's very moving and powerful to be certain, but it's not going to crush your soul and at its core is a story of inspiration and hope.
Schindler's List is incredible, and your explanation is spot-on.
I don't shy away from the tough topics. I don't need a movie like it to remind me that something so terrible happened, but diving into those feelings willingly is good in my opinion. Any cause for some introspection is valuable. And of course,
Never again.
The "Why We Fight" episode of Band of Brothers. Dang.
Manchester by the Sea is a masterpiece. That it didn't win best picture is a travesty.
Affleck was great and worthy of Best Actor. The director was great and worthy of a win. But the movie was paint by numbers other than that. The very heavy impact was delivered by those two.
Very effective movie, but there must be 60 exactly like it in the 40s and early 50s (half of them starring Lana Turner and/or Kirk Douglas). It's a style that is out of fashion, which is why it is so striking today. It has none of the distancing Hollywood cleverness that the last 10 years of movies are sloshed over with. It has clean lines, which I love, but it's a fairly typical representative of that genre.
Know Your Enemy - Japan (1945)
Propaganda movie from back in the day. Wow. From subtle jabs to straight-forward uppercuts to the Japs (sorry, I mean "Japanese," this is what I'm talking about), amazing documentary of sorts. Highly recommend.
Listening to the radio plays on XM Sirius that were done during the war can be pretty nasty. Yes, the Japanese were a brutal regime, but there were many, many Japanese Americans who didn't need to hear that racist crap (I mean, if they had radios in the internment camps).
After watching a 60 Minutes story about the last surviving prosecutor from the Nuremberg trials and I got to wondering if there are movies or documentaries anyone might recommend about them.
After watching a 60 Minutes story about the last surviving prosecutor from the Nuremberg trials and I got to wondering if there are movies or documentaries anyone might recommend about them.
My thoughts watching this were "we make fun of, and condemn, these types of things, yet here we are doing the same thing...."
Watch "Five Came Back" on Netflix. It discusses the Capra war films.
Judgment at Nuremberg is the classic. Very good movie.
Go on Netflix and search for George Stevens. He did a film that was used as evidence in Nuremburg.
Judgment at Nuremberg is the classic. Very good movie.
AMC is running Thursday Night Horror movies this month.
One of my childhood favorites "The Giant Behemoth" is on the playbill for this Thursday.
And in a twist, it's London that gets trashed, not Tokyo or LA.