Movie Thread
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Jaysus, was just about to come on to recommend "Control".carney wrote:donny b - im keen to see that movie - probably best that i know itll be a bit of a whelming ending.
go see control - film of the year.
Saw it on Friday and spent most the "A" game in Belvo raving about it.
It's so well done, really captures the mood of the time and Sam Riley just plays Curtis so well, you almost forget you're watching an actor.
Toby Kebbell steals every scene as Rob Gretton and Samanta Morton is as always terrific.
Even though we all know the dark ending, I actually found it a strangely uplifting film. Highly recommended!!
- Slipper1
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Just back from "Eastern Promises" - get thee to a picture house and feast on some brilliant movie making.
I was wondering in the first 15 minutes if I should have gone to "Ratatouille" but it just went uphill from there.
Well worth your E10 or whatever you spend. Ratatouille is next on the menu.
I was wondering in the first 15 minutes if I should have gone to "Ratatouille" but it just went uphill from there.
Well worth your E10 or whatever you spend. Ratatouille is next on the menu.
Get in the f%~king bag.
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- Mullet
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Just seen "Eastern Promises".Slipper1 wrote:Just back from "Eastern Promises" - get thee to a picture house and feast on some brilliant movie making.
I was wondering in the first 15 minutes if I should have gone to "Ratatouille" but it just went uphill from there.
Well worth your E10 or whatever you spend. Ratatouille is next on the menu.
Very good, not sure I fancy a trip to a London bathouse though.......
- Munki
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Speaking of which (and I know it's a little off topic) but I'm looking for a recording (video or dvd) of the Toulouse away match from 2 seasons back (yes, the one with 'THE' ultimate Disco-Den try) and also the away Bath match from the group stage in the same season (final group game, needed to whup Bath to qualify - whupped them). Anyone willing to give me a copy? Tried to download via bittorrent, but lack of seeders made it nigh on impossible.olaf the fat wrote:Dont go to the movies - just stick the free leinster DVD on and watch Leinster Vs Toulose again, or try to get a copy of us Vs the scarlets for halloween
"Holy Crip, he's a Crapple!" - Peter Griffin
- Munki
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Speaking of which (and I know it's a little off topic) but I'm looking for a recording (video or dvd) of the Toulouse away match from 2 seasons back (yes, the one with 'THE' ultimate Disco-Den try) and also the away Bath match from the group stage in the same season (final group game, needed to whup Bath to qualify - whupped them). Anyone willing to give me a copy? Tried to download via bittorrent, but lack of seeders made it nigh on impossible.olaf the fat wrote:Dont go to the movies - just stick the free leinster DVD on and watch Leinster Vs Toulose again, or try to get a copy of us Vs the scarlets for halloween
"Holy Crip, he's a Crapple!" - Peter Griffin
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Yeah saw that over the weekend, those with weak stomachs may want to stay away though, a but graffic at times.Exile wrote:Just seen "Eastern Promises".Slipper1 wrote:Just back from "Eastern Promises" - get thee to a picture house and feast on some brilliant movie making.
I was wondering in the first 15 minutes if I should have gone to "Ratatouille" but it just went uphill from there.
Well worth your E10 or whatever you spend. Ratatouille is next on the menu.
Very good, not sure I fancy a trip to a London bathouse though.......
Also, saw Heartbreak Kid recently, actually quite funny.
"Munster could join the French League, or an expanded English / British league."
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- Shane Jennings
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- Hickiefan
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Really want to see this - was hoping it would be on on my transatlantic flights but no, we got the bleedin 'Mummy' and some similarly ancient film I've forgotten (didn't bother watching either) on the way out and something about a girl playing school soccer on a boys team in 1970s middle America on the way home.Exile wrote:Feast yourself on "Ratatouille"!
Its a cracker!!!
Qui me amat, amet et Leinsterum meum.
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- Shane Horgan
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A film that I would greatly recommend is Jacques Becker's "Le Trou" (1960). I first saw it about twenty years ago and never forgot it. Unfortunately it was not available on DVD until recently. This is what Amazon says about it:
I would also recomend another of Becker's films "Touchez Pas au Grisbi" (1954). It has to be said that the French certainly know how to make a good film.
If you like good films, get yourself a copy and watch it. However, do not try to find out anything else about it before you do. As it says on the sleeve notes - do not read them until you have seen the film.amazon.co.uk wrote:The story of five prisoners who meticulously plan their escape, only to learn that one of them is scheduled to be pardoned a few days before the jail-break. One of the prison genre's most unforgettable films.
I would also recomend another of Becker's films "Touchez Pas au Grisbi" (1954). It has to be said that the French certainly know how to make a good film.
"I don't think Edinburgh is the place it used to be"
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- Mullet
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Have you tried your local library?carney wrote:where is a good place to rent movies? xtra vision is just so pants, was looking for the crying game the other night, 3 xtra visions didnt carry it - have i any options?
Even down here in The Gulag they have an excellent election of forgein language films.
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- Mullet
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Exile wrote:Have you tried your local library?carney wrote:where is a good place to rent movies? xtra vision is just so pants, was looking for the crying game the other night, 3 xtra visions didnt carry it - have i any options?
Even down here in The Gulag they have an excellent selection of forgein language films.
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I saw Mouliere earlier in the year. Can't wait for it to come out on DVD. V. funny film.Uncle Mort wrote:A film that I would greatly recommend is Jacques Becker's "Le Trou" (1960). I first saw it about twenty years ago and never forgot it. Unfortunately it was not available on DVD until recently. This is what Amazon says about it:
If you like good films, get yourself a copy and watch it. However, do not try to find out anything else about it before you do. As it says on the sleeve notes - do not read them until you have seen the film.amazon.co.uk wrote:The story of five prisoners who meticulously plan their escape, only to learn that one of them is scheduled to be pardoned a few days before the jail-break. One of the prison genre's most unforgettable films.
I would also recomend another of Becker's films "Touchez Pas au Grisbi" (1954). It has to be said that the French certainly know how to make a good film.
I also love 8 femmes.
In fact I seem to prefer foreign films at the moment. Not that I go to the cinema, or anything interesting like that.
I'd actually really like to see that film about the Irish busker with the Eastern European girl. Must get round to it one day...
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- Shane Horgan
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Another very good french film is "Betty Fisher and Other Stories" and the original Scandinavian "Insomnia" is far better that the Hollywood remake. In the original the dog that gets shot is a live dog (until very, very shortly after it is shot), in the Hollywood sanitized remake the dog that is shot is already dead. It's actually quite important to demonstrate the desparation of the character that he's prepared to shoot a live dog as opposed to one that he finds that has died (mustn't offend people now). It misses the point.claire_m wrote:I saw Mouliere earlier in the year. Can't wait for it to come out on DVD. V. funny film.Uncle Mort wrote:A film that I would greatly recommend is Jacques Becker's "Le Trou" (1960). I first saw it about twenty years ago and never forgot it. Unfortunately it was not available on DVD until recently. This is what Amazon says about it:
If you like good films, get yourself a copy and watch it. However, do not try to find out anything else about it before you do. As it says on the sleeve notes - do not read them until you have seen the film.amazon.co.uk wrote:The story of five prisoners who meticulously plan their escape, only to learn that one of them is scheduled to be pardoned a few days before the jail-break. One of the prison genre's most unforgettable films.
I would also recomend another of Becker's films "Touchez Pas au Grisbi" (1954). It has to be said that the French certainly know how to make a good film.
I also love 8 femmes.
In fact I seem to prefer foreign films at the moment. Not that I go to the cinema, or anything interesting like that.
I'd actually really like to see that film about the Irish busker with the Eastern European girl. Must get round to it one day...
Foreign films are great - take Das Boot for example - a classic.
"I don't think Edinburgh is the place it used to be"