My Top Ten Least Favorite Movies · 7:19pm Aug 29th, 2023
1). Chip ‘N Dale: Rescue Rangers (2022)
2). Cats (2019)
3). The Lion King (2019)
4). Open Season: Scared Silly
1). Chip ‘N Dale: Rescue Rangers (2022)
2). Cats (2019)
3). The Lion King (2019)
4). Open Season: Scared Silly
Had to leave a plug for this. This show is amazing, and easily the best modern Superman thing in the live-action department. I cannot believe I live in a world where we have a Superman show this good. Let's hope it stays soaring high.
Note: This review was written yesterday, but FIMFic has been giving me trouble on my phone, so I'm posting it today.
Okay, so my mom and dad were watching Lady and the Tramp (its the movie they saw on their first date), and so, being a romantic sap, I joined them.
And I swear this is one of the most beautifully romantic films ever made.
It's okay, I guess. It's no Rainbow Rocks, either in story or music, but like I say -- it's okay.
Though could people please learn about fitting words to music properly?
So, out of a rather straightforward desire to see what the fuss was about, I watched Braveheart because it was on Instant Watch, and really, I was bored.
So, let's see if it was deserving of Best Picture.
Rating Scale:
12/10—a complete masterpiece; flawless and outstanding
11/10—Excellent, near-perfect film
10/10—the standard rating; awesome film with a couple of flaws
9/10—a wonderful film with several flaws
8/10–a great film with numerous flaws but not enough to ruin it
Finding Dory stands as a rapturously moving, deeply heartfelt sequel to one of Pixar's best films, and, while building on the structure and characters of the previous film, manages to take itself in new directions, without ever loosing the endearing sense of heart and soul, and the message of family that defined Finding Nemo.
Often cited as the nadir of the Coen Brothers filmography, in many ways, while The Ladykillers is far from some world changing film, and obviously a rather slight entry in their filmography, it still, to me at least, amounts to a very funny and entertaining film, and probably the closest the Coens have come to being completely "mainstream".
The 2015 documentary detailing the horrifically tragic life of jazz/soul singer Amy Winehouse is a surprisingly emotionally dry film, yet, it's own subject matter provides enough of an entrancement to make this worth at least one viewing, if perhaps not it's Academy Award win.
...in (most of) the UK, My Little Pony: The Movie doesn't get a release until the 20th. As that's UK PonyCon weekend, I have to wait a further week. So, please, for the love of Celestia, don't spoil me by splurging the entire plot all over everywhere tomorrow! Thanks.
Yo!, what's up people on this awesome site. This is just going to be a quick update blog today, I haven't really got much to say so that's why. Anyway, I had a look at what films are out in the cinema for my day out on Wednesday and I realized something 'there is way too many films out that I want to see' I certainly can't go out and see them all (Although, I wish that I could.) So, at some point today or tomorrow, I'm going to have to make a choice!
Peppered throughout my stories are various references to films and movies, as I'm sure several of you guys noticed (A Dare's Truth has several ponified versions of movies, and Scootaloo and The Cabinet of Seers has a few references as well). I love movies - I go once, sometimes twice, a week to the local theater to see a new movie! It's gotten to the point where the Tuesday staffer recognizes me and knows exactly how I like my popcorn.
That's when Hasbro says The My Little Pony Movie, as it's thrillingly titled, will be released. (Tweet here.) Assuming the rumours of a long post-S5 hiatus prove to be true, that strongly suggests that S6 will be the final season of Friendship is Magic, at least in the form we know it today. Whether we go to G4.5 or a full-reboot G5 after that, who knows? But it's going to be interesting to find out.
What’s with me and watching movies so historically inaccurate that they offend me?
So I watched Don Bluth’s animated fantasy/musical/rape of history that is Anastasia.
And, as you can probably tell by the opening sentences…I hated it. A lot.
In what proved to be his last feature before his tragic death of pancreatic cancer at a mere 46 years old, Satoshi Kon's final film shows that he was still on a meteoric rise, and truly one of the singular talents in anime, and cinema in general.
On the Waterfront is director Elia Kazan's stellar answer to the wave of criticism he faced in the aftermath of his testfying in front of the HUAC, and in creating this film, Kazan gave us a timeless masterpiece, with a central message about the power of truth in the face of adversity that, more than sixty years later, still manages to speak truth.
Recently, Netflix added Moana to it's library, and this past monday, I finally found the time to watch it. Not surprisingly, it was a pretty good movie, but I found myself a bit baffled by the overall plot of it.
Spoilers below.