by mapache61 on 21 Jan 2013, 11:14
Tired of visiting this board and hearing crickets chirping. Everyone loves movies. Let me be the first to review a few flicks I've seen recently. In return, I ask you to recommend a new movie.
Mrs. Mapache and I got some movie theater gift cards for Christmas, and she's driving me nuts, wanting to know when I'll take her to see Les Miserables. She MUST be out of her mind. Or myabe not?
Mapache's recent home screenings:
Total Recall (2012).
A remake of the Schwarzanegger sci-fi/action flick from the early 90s. Both the original movie and this retread (starring the annoying, bushy-browed Colin Farrell) are based on a short story ("We Can Remember it for You, Wholesale") by the master of mind-bending sci-fi, Philip K. Dick. I haven't read this particular story, but have read a few of his excellent novels, and think it's safe to declare Total Recall utter sh*t. Too bad. Because early-on, set design and special effects are outstanding -- very cyberpunk, Blade Runner-esque. But very soon you're tortured with ridiculous, CGI hover-car chases, hyperactive editing (which renders the action senseless), endless fights, unbelievable escapes, and a villain (Farrell's wife, Kate Beckinsdale) who you may as well call "The Terminator." In other words, crap.
The Lives of Others (2006).
This German film is one of the finest, nuanced reels of the 2000s. Beats most Hollywood junk by a mile. Set in East Germany in 1984, you follow a playwright and the Stasi agent assigned to spy on him. Engaging, well written, and at times extremely tense, THIS is a flick that makes all the 2000s' Weinstien Company crap, and heavy-handed Eastwood pictures, and Hobbit movies look stupid. Put it in your Netflix queue.
My choices at the local theater:
The Hobbit 3-D: I'm a big Tolkein fan, but this looks ponderous.
Django Unchained: Though I LOVE the original "Django" spaghetti western, and Quentin is a serious movie buff that always entertains, he's also a rip-off artist who's beginning to wear on me. His best movie is "Jackie Brown," and I doubt one single Tarantino-lover would agree.
Les Miserables: I'd rather set myself on fire than see this. Please tell me that's a wise choice.