CPLforever
Winger
How did you find it?Tonight it is Mulholand Falls, I have always thought I'd have to get around to this one.
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How did you find it?Tonight it is Mulholand Falls, I have always thought I'd have to get around to this one.
How did you find it?
I didn't last ten minutesHow did you find it?
A classic example of the old with the new. Like it.R.E.M. x Buster Keaton (2025) - Omniplex
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Screening of Buster Keaton's 1924 silent classic Sherlock Jr, but with the soundtrack made up of songs taken from REM's Monster and New Adventures in Hi-Fi albums. I love REM. I love Buster Keaton movies. Basically I was guaranteed to enjoy this!
I hadn't seen this film since my student days, and this was the first time I'd ever actually seen a Buster Keaton movie on the big screen. Great experience, still hugely entertaining performances and ground breaking stunt work and effects, and the fact that it was backed by one of my all time favourite bands was just the icing on the cake.
Loses a couple of points due to the fact the initial short feature before the main event, Keaton's The Ballonatic, was soundtracked by a Brazilian techno composer called Amon Tobin - bloody dreadful music!
8/10
It was produced by a small, independent group from the US called 'Silents Synced'. Their first UK release was Radiohead x Nosferatu. Not really massive Radiohead fan, but I'm gonna give it a go anyway when my The Fire Station puts it on in a couple of months.
Meerkat offer so a tenner for two in.It was canny, but pretty pointless. He's a good actor the lad mind.
For a bargain £30 I bet too. Its scandalous, hence I don't bother. However, I do have a burger and chips if I go to the Everyman cinema.
Just been reading up on Safdie's reasoning for 80s music. Initially the film was going to end in the 80s, which would have justified the soundtrack on period grounds. But ultimately he decided that Marty is a man out of time - a 1980s, ambitious, greedy, wannabe Yuppie living in the homely 1950s. In that context it makes a lot more sense.
Dillinger (1945)
Cheap as chips (even down to reusing some footage from another film) effort starring Lawrence Tierney as the notorious gangster.
It’s a cracking B crime film, with Tierney playing the role he excels in. There’s some nicely lit scenes and weather shots, too. 70 minutes of tight bastardry.
7.5/10
Agree with that, very good.The Bone Temple: 9/10…….”HowZat”
Probably going to see a few Jimmy crystals at a few fancy dress parties now![]()
I am looking forward to that! It’s on my watchlist.IMHO the 1973 version is by far the best, and the best film about the 30s dust bowl criminals
I am looking forward to that! It’s on my watchlist.
I’ve got this on Bluray and didn’t even realise. I remember now that I got it last year as part of a deal at HMV online.Warren Oates is fantastic, and Milius just nails the period and mood. Seems a bit Peckinpah influenced
Some great supporting work from Richard Dreyfuss, Ben Johnson, Harry Dean Stanton, Michelle Phillips and Cloris Leachman
Went with my lady to watch The Housemaid,thoroughly enjoyable and some decent plot twists.Watched nobody and nobody 2, disengage brain and watch films, decent enough.
Then watched The Housemaid (2026) really enjoyed this and it was full of twists and turns. Very well acted and the seeming baddie turns out not to be. 8/10