What Was the Last Movie You Watched?

Trouble With The Curve
Clint Eastwood
Amy Adam's

From Rotten Tomatoes site...

"Though predictable and somewhat dramatically underwhelming, Trouble with the Curve benefits from Clint Eastwood's grizzled charisma and his easy chemistry with a charming Amy Adams."

"For all its occasional tin ear, Dr Phil dialogue, its contrivances and shortcuts, this remains a fundamentally sound and solid entertainment with a deep-rooted conviction that how we treat each other matters."

I liked it in spite of its stupid script. I was more enthralled by the performers who are all likable actors.

Clint Eastwood was actually believable in scenes that in other movies he just isn't.
John Goodman is always good.

Amy Adams is cute and always good.

And it's a movie with baseball as it's setting.
 

Watched "The Fantastiks" last night for the first time ever. DVD borrowed from the library. Must admit I zipped through some of the early songs. Glad overall to have seen it, but it's not an experience I need to repeat.
 
I'm hoping folks will become more inclined to tell us WHY they liked a movie or a show. Insight into what impressed the viewer about a movie gives more information for readers to decide if the recommendation is worth pursuing. Saying that X movie is "really good" doesn't indicate what they liked about it.
OP's thread question was 'What was the last movie you watched', Period. Never asked for a review. But I agree it would be better to review it and did you enjoy it?
 
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I watched a strange one last night on Netflix. "Take Shelter".....it was really depressing but I wanted to see how it ended. Yep, depressing ending, too.
Started watching it a few days back, then realized he was having hallucinations, lost interest at that point & turned it off.
 
I'm hoping folks will become more inclined to tell us WHY they liked a movie or a show. Insight into what impressed the viewer about a movie gives more information for readers to decide if the recommendation is worth pursuing. Saying that X movie is "really good" doesn't indicate what they liked about it.
I always tell what the movies about and whether I liked it or not. There were some movies I watched that I didn’t like and I explained why I didn’t like them, like the movie ‘Mother.’ It’s horrifically and graphically violent
 
Watched "The Reader" (2008) last night via a DVD from my library - don't know if it's streaming anywhere.

I was quite surprised at where this movie went. Thought it was quite good. Kate Winslet sure earned her Best Actress Academy Award.
Tonight I watched ‘The Reader.’
I also found it a good movie. The acting was incredible. Kate Winslet certainly DID deserve the award she received. Like yourself, I was very surprised by the turn of the movie. It went places I never imagined.
 
Last night on Turner Classic Movies, I watched "Charade' directed by Stanley Donen starring Cary Grant&Audrey Hepburn, had not seen in yrs, a favorite. The story set& filmed in Paris about a widow{Hepburn} trying to find fortune her late husband stole from his war buddies,Grant helps her along the way The other cast members, George Kennedy, James Colburn, Ned Glass,Walter Matthau music by Henry Mancini
 
Bill Paxton and Bill Pullman in Brain Dead 1990. Critics didn't care for it, but I liked it for the actors and the quirky horror. It's not unique now because I've seen several later films that worked the same premise. Listed as mystery/horror in the descriptions, and it is that, but I'd put Dark Comedy above those two descriptors. The characters are not believable, but I think they are intentionally presented that way, which reduces the horror effect. It creates an underlying vibe that "this is not real, so just enjoy it that way."

I saw it in 1990, and it was my first introduction to Bill Pullman, who went on to much more "important" films.
 
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Last night on Turner Classic Movies, I watched "Charade' directed by Stanley Donen starring Cary Grant&Audrey Hepburn, had not seen in yrs, a favorite. The story set& filmed in Paris about a widow{Hepburn} trying to find fortune her late husband stole from his war buddies,Grant helps her along the way The other cast members, George Kennedy, James Colburn, Ned Glass,Walter Matthau music by Henry Mancini
I love that movie. Bought the DVD about 20 years ago.

Since I fairly reliably like movies featuring Cary Grant, Audrey Hepburn or Walter Matthau, it's no surprise that I dust this one off every 5 years or so and enjoy my way through.
 
Watched "Take Care", a predicable but cute rom-com on Amazon Prime last night. I had to suffer through commercials just before the movie started and then again around 30 minutes in. No matter. I took off my headphones and read during the first set. Went into the kitchen and sliced up an apple for a snack during the second set.
 
In recent days, I watched both The Paper (1994; Glenn Close & Michael Keaton) and The Post (2017; Meryl Streep & Tom Hans), both movies which portrayed what I'm afraid is a bygone era but also point out the importance of the 1st Amendment.
My primary source for news these days is The Guardian, which is privately owned by a British guy. Our government can't touch them.
 
Last night after YouTube searching with "full scifi movie", began watching in turn 3 low budget recent movies I'd never heard of and didn't get more than 15 minutes into any of them before aborting because they seemed stories and direction were from those that were schooled by reading comic books.
 
Picked up this collection because... sometimes nostalgia calls. Not really available streaming anyway unless you are willing to bow to the dark Disney Empire which has gobbled up so much competing culture. And here we have the original versions without redaction and injected indoctrination.

Peanuts holidays.jpg
 
In recent days, I watched both The Paper (1994; Glenn Close & Michael Keaton) and The Post (2017; Meryl Streep & Tom Hans), both movies which portrayed what I'm afraid is a bygone era but also point out the importance of the 1st Amendment.
Yeah, to my taste The Post was much overrated. My commentary after it came out (long):


The Post (2017)

This is a film which tries to be an important picture, but it suffers from several miscalculations. The first assumption was that if a heavyweight group of movie people are put together into a movie project, then the result would be terrific. The second miscalculation was that dredging up an anachronistic federal scandal, despite what we've witnessed in recent times of several equally shameful governmental scandals (exposed by Snowden, Assange), would be of interest to a younger generation.

Some of the biggest and most bankable names in cinema were on exhibit: Steven Spielberg, Tom Hanks, Meryl Streep, John Williams, 20th Century Fox, Universal Pictures, along with a first rate supporting cast of players and craft people.

But the result was workmanlike, almost tired: a very watchable film, but one that seemed to be overly impressed with its subject matter. And therein lies part of the problem. The story focused on The Washington Post's publisher, Katharine Graham, and to a lesser extent on its executive editor, Ben Bradlee. But yet Graham had only a minor part in the actual historical events. It was simply that it was she who had to make the final decision on whether or not The Washington Post would follow the New York Times' lead and publish more of the "Pentagon Papers".

But the real story was Daniel Ellsberg's theft of the volumes of damning evidence regarding the government's lies to the public about the Vietman war, and the exposure of its cold-blooded sacrifice of many thousands of our soldiers to a cause which the government knew it could not possibly win, but yet was too pig-headed to get out. The real story was the lying and cover-up by government, not Katharine Graham.

The secondary story was that Ellsberg then handed over this trove of damning evidence to the New York Times, who subsequently published it serially until a Federal court injunction caused them to cease. Later The Washington Post obtained a copy and ran with it, and was quickly followed in suit by other major newspapers. The film leaves the impression that it was The Washington Post who was forging ahead to expose the evil governmental corruption, but yet they were only following up to the rear of the New York Times.

However it's a reasonable bet that Meryl Streep and Tom Hanks would not commit to a project that would not heavily feature them. So in order to fill that accommodation the final script was presumably written with that in mind. Heroes were made of the wrong people. Therefore the story seemed hollow. How much time could be devoted to Graham fretting over, "Should I" or "Should I not" publish these documents? The answer: way too much.

The acting was first rate, and featured fine performances from the supporting cast, most notably Bob Odenkirk's.

The producers were eager to follow up with the success of All the President's Men. But with no mystery and intrigue the result was a film with minimal suspense and urgency. It not only did not present anything new, but it reduced a fascinating event in our history into a rather uneven and out of focus misrepresentation.

Spielberg's direction was competent, but boilerplate, almost as if he hadn't given the project his full attention. The opening and closing scenes seemed tacked on, as if to insure the film's relevancy. The opening Vietnam battlefield scenes were presumably intended to both show the horrors of war and also to introduce Ellsberg (Matthew Rhys), as he feverishly rattled away on his portable typewriter in the war zone.

The incongruous closing scene showed a view of the Watergate burglary looking from across the street at the 6th floor as the janitor discovered the crime in progress. The footage, which just as easily might have been taken from YouTube, was evidently intended to leave the movie goer with the impression that, although Truman, Kennedy, and Johnson were the major forces in the government's horrific decision to squander thousands of American lives, it was Nixon who was really bad, even though it was Nixon who finally got the U.S. out of Vietnam.

Doc's rating: 6/10, mostly for the acting and craft work
 

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