What's new
USCHO Fan Forum

This is a sample guest message. Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

  • The USCHO Fan Forum has migrated to a new plaform, xenForo. Most of the function of the forum should work in familiar ways. Please note that you can switch between light and dark modes by clicking on the gear icon in the upper right of the main menu bar. We are hoping that this new platform will prove to be faster and more reliable. Please feel free to explore its features.

Movies! The Last Jedi: Ragnarok

Status
Not open for further replies.
Re: Movies! The Last Jedi: Ragnarok

I remember not being terribly impressed with Blade Eunner in my film studies course back in college.
 
Re: Movies! The Last Jedi: Ragnarok

A whopping five of us showed up at the Dark Knight. I really don't understand. It's free, people!

Confession: I have never seen Blade Runner all the way through.
 
Re: Movies! The Last Jedi: Ragnarok

A whopping five of us showed up at the Dark Knight. I really don't understand. It's free, people!

Confession: I have never seen Blade Runner all the way through.

Eh, Wednesday night, and it is a longer movie. Plus, everyone in the civilized world has seen it at least once, and it's not old enough to be a "classic."

One that I would like to see on the big screen is Wizard Of Oz. Or The Godfather.
 
Re: Movies! The Last Jedi: Ragnarok

Eh, Wednesday night, and it is a longer movie. Plus, everyone in the civilized world has seen it at least once, and it's not old enough to be a "classic."

One that I would like to see on the big screen is Wizard Of Oz. Or The Godfather.

Haven't seen Wizard of Oz on the big screen. Godfather was excellent. I have been waiting all year to see Casablanca. I've seen it countless times, but I so want to watch the 75th anniversary print in a theater. Hands down it is the single greatest screenplay ever penned. Such outstanding dialogue and some of the most memorable lines in cinema history.
 
Re: Movies! The Last Jedi: Ragnarok

Haven't seen Wizard of Oz on the big screen. Godfather was excellent. I have been waiting all year to see Casablanca. I've seen it countless times, but I so want to watch the 75th anniversary print in a theater. Hands down it is the single greatest screenplay ever penned. Such outstanding dialogue and some of the most memorable lines in cinema history.

What would be REALLY cool is to see an old B&W movie, maybe a double feature, complete with the newsreels they played at the time. Public Enemy, Scarface, She Done Him Wrong, etc.
 
Re: Movies! The Last Jedi: Ragnarok

What would be REALLY cool is to see an old B&W movie, maybe a double feature, complete with the newsreels they played at the time. Public Enemy, Scarface, She Done Him Wrong, etc.

That would be great.
 
Re: Movies! The Last Jedi: Ragnarok

That would be great.

It was many years before I learned they even DID that. Once I learned, I was mesmerized. To relate it to now, it'd be like watching 5 minutes of CNN/FOX/MSNBC/whatever, before a movie.
 
Re: Movies! The Last Jedi: Ragnarok

Bladerunner is an overrated piece of dreck. I can only imagine how bad the book is...

I seriously never got why people liked it. Seeing as Ford helped make a sequel to it you can be sure that will suck too since Ford hasnt made a good movie since Air Force One.
 
Re: Movies! The Last Jedi: Ragnarok

Bladerunner is an overrated piece of dreck. I can only imagine how bad the book is...

I seriously never got why people liked it. Seeing as Ford helped make a sequel to it you can be sure that will suck too since Ford hasnt made a good movie since Air Force One.

Air Force One is a dressed up Con-Air in a slightly different format. And I love both. ;)

Never saw Bladerunner. I will admit, this 2049 looks kinda cool, but then saw the title, and thought: "Well, I won't understand any of it, so fuggit."
 
Air Force One is a dressed up Con-Air in a slightly different format. And I love both. ;)

Never saw Bladerunner. I will admit, this 2049 looks kinda cool, but then saw the title, and thought: "Well, I won't understand any of it, so fuggit."

Critic screenings have started but the embargo hasn't been lifted. Dan Murrel of Screen Junkies says you can follow the story even without seeing the original. He also said non-spoiler reviews will be a challenge because to even mention the plot gives away too much.
 
Re: Movies! The Last Jedi: Ragnarok

Bladerunner is, of course, fantastic.

The book is... well, the book sure isn't the movie, anyway. I don't like the book and it's rare that I don't like PKD.
 
Bladerunner is, of course, fantastic.

The book is... well, the book sure isn't the movie, anyway. I don't like the book and it's rare that I don't like PKD.

Agreed, Bladerunner is great. The fact Ford is in the sequel should end the argument as to whether Dekkard was a replicant obviously.

I enjoyed the book but the movie is better. Same with Minority Report.
 
Re: Movies! The Last Jedi: Ragnarok

Agreed, Bladerunner is great. The fact Ford is in the sequel should end the argument as to whether Dekkard was a replicant obviously.

I loved the ambiguity. But as a friend of mine remarked, "if he's not how can you explain the unicorn?" The only explanation is coincidence, which is weak.
 
Re: Movies! The Last Jedi: Ragnarok

What would be REALLY cool is to see an old B&W movie, maybe a double feature, complete with the newsreels they played at the time. Public Enemy, Scarface, She Done Him Wrong, etc.

Years ago, there was a traveling production of Napoleon (1927 French, both B&W and silent) that was shown on three screens at once that had a live orchestra with a score by Carmine Coppola. Amazing experience. I saw it at the Chicago Theater as mentioned below.

From Roger Ebert, 1981:

The story of "Napoleon" and Carmine Coppola has become one of the best movie stories in years. The movie originally had a running time of more than four hours, but after its 1927 premiere it was never shown in the original version. Its director, Abel Gance, supervised various reconstructions and shorter versions of the footage, but the myth of the original epic film never died.

Film historian Kevin Brownlow plundered the film archives of Europe for all the "Napoleon" footage he could find and made some lucky discoveries of scenes that were thought to be completely lost. Then he rebuilt "Napoleon" into a reasonable facsimile of its original version, complete with the famous three-screen, hand-tinted triptych that ended it - an effect that anticipated Cinerama.

This version played to great acclaim at various small film festivals, and then movie director Francis Ford Coppola got the idea of presenting it properly, with a full orchestral score. He commissioned his 71-year-old father, Carmine, to compose the score, and in January the Coppolas presented "Napoleon" in Radio City Music Hall with Carmine conducting the American Symphony Orchestra.

"We hoped to play one weekend and maybe break even and pay for printing the scores," Carmine Coppola remembered. "We had to extend for three weekends. We have been totally sold out. You're talking about a $25 top price."

The story is much the same here in Chicago, where "Napoleon" opens Thursday at the grand old Chicago Theater, a landmark movie palace that opened six years before "Napoleon" did. Carmine Coppola will be in the pit conducting a 60-piece orchestra and the theater's own restored original Mighty Wurlitzer organ.

The movie itself was really good, and in the setting described above, absolutely fantastic!
 
Last edited:
Re: Movies! The Last Jedi: Ragnarok

Agreed, Bladerunner is great. The fact Ford is in the sequel should end the argument as to whether Dekkard was a replicant obviously.

I enjoyed the book but the movie is better. Same with Minority Report.

I thought I read the director or writer said in an interview years ago that Dekkard was a replicant at least for the purposes of the story he was making.
 
Re: Movies! The Last Jedi: Ragnarok

Years ago, there was a traveling production of Napoleon (1927 French, both B&W and silent) that was shown on three screens at once that had a live orchestra with a score by Carmine Coppola. Amazing experience. I saw it at the Chicago Theater as mentioned below.

That is Abel Gance, right? That would be so wonderful.

The snowball fight is one of my favorite scenes in all movies. There are special effects in that movie the impact of which have still never been matched, all done with 20s tech.

Fun fact: the original intended runtime of the Napolean Cycle was 36 hours.
 
Last edited:
Re: Movies! The Last Jedi: Ragnarok

fwiw in an interview Ford said he believed he was human. He might have just been playing coy but he said sans smirk.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top