OT - Your Top Ten movies

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Postby Rhiannon » Sat Oct 04, 2008 2:25 am

Gunbot wrote:
Melissa wrote:Having kids of course we have been subjected to multiple viewings of Disney movies, lol. Lion King is awesome, still can't stand the part when Simba is walking around his dad though trying to wake him up. Finding Nemo, Monsters, Inc., and the Toy Stories are great. Our son was obsessed for a while with Treasure Planet, for some reason that's one Disney movie that wasn't so popular, but it's good and he loved it. Not Disney, but both Ice Age movies are great. One Disney movie that's not animated but is awesome is Eight Below.


This is based on a true story. If you are an animal lover the original film will have you bawling. I saw it on Japanese T.V. many years ago. You can get on DVD but it's a little bit expensive.

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The one Disney did made me bawl!! Makes me wish I had a huskie too. They're such good dogs.
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Postby Don » Sat Oct 04, 2008 2:27 am

Rhiannon wrote:
Gunbot wrote:
Melissa wrote:Having kids of course we have been subjected to multiple viewings of Disney movies, lol. Lion King is awesome, still can't stand the part when Simba is walking around his dad though trying to wake him up. Finding Nemo, Monsters, Inc., and the Toy Stories are great. Our son was obsessed for a while with Treasure Planet, for some reason that's one Disney movie that wasn't so popular, but it's good and he loved it. Not Disney, but both Ice Age movies are great. One Disney movie that's not animated but is awesome is Eight Below.


This is based on a true story. If you are an animal lover the original film will have you bawling. I saw it on Japanese T.V. many years ago. You can get on DVD but it's a little bit expensive.



The one Disney did made me bawl!! Makes me wish I had a huskie too. They're such good dogs.


The true story is very intense, Only two dogs made it.
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Postby CASue » Sat Oct 04, 2008 2:52 am

Journey/Survivor wrote:
Foolish Heart wrote:In no order:

Rebecca
The Way We Were
Pretty Woman
Overboard
In Name Only
Gone With the Wind
Fools Rush In
An Affair to Remember
Grease
While You Were Sleeping
The Notebook
Anything with Cary Grant and Robert Redford


Rebecca, now there's a Hitchcock film that I'm surprised to hear, simply because most or all of us were not even around when it came out in 1940. Of course it did win an Oscar for best picture at the time.

By the way, Cary Grant and Jimmy Stewart are my two favorite "old" movie actors.


I LOVE Rebecca and I have both the movie and the BBC TV series with Charles Dance. One of Hitchcock's finest, along with North by Northwest. Supposedly, he was in every movie he made in a small cameo and so far, I've only been able to find him in The Birds.

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Postby Melissa » Sat Oct 04, 2008 3:50 am

Gunbot wrote:
Melissa wrote:Having kids of course we have been subjected to multiple viewings of Disney movies, lol. Lion King is awesome, still can't stand the part when Simba is walking around his dad though trying to wake him up. Finding Nemo, Monsters, Inc., and the Toy Stories are great. Our son was obsessed for a while with Treasure Planet, for some reason that's one Disney movie that wasn't so popular, but it's good and he loved it. Not Disney, but both Ice Age movies are great. One Disney movie that's not animated but is awesome is Eight Below.


This is based on a true story. If you are an animal lover the original film will have you bawling. I saw it on Japanese T.V. many years ago. You can get on DVD but it's a little bit expensive.

Nankyoku_Monogatari

Image


Oh wow, I wondered what the story that inspired Eight Below was. I loved Eight Below, sad parts but great movie.
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Postby Melissa » Sat Oct 04, 2008 3:51 am

Rhiannon wrote:
Gunbot wrote:
Melissa wrote:Having kids of course we have been subjected to multiple viewings of Disney movies, lol. Lion King is awesome, still can't stand the part when Simba is walking around his dad though trying to wake him up. Finding Nemo, Monsters, Inc., and the Toy Stories are great. Our son was obsessed for a while with Treasure Planet, for some reason that's one Disney movie that wasn't so popular, but it's good and he loved it. Not Disney, but both Ice Age movies are great. One Disney movie that's not animated but is awesome is Eight Below.


This is based on a true story. If you are an animal lover the original film will have you bawling. I saw it on Japanese T.V. many years ago. You can get on DVD but it's a little bit expensive.

Nankyoku_Monogatari

Image


The one Disney did made me bawl!! Makes me wish I had a huskie too. They're such good dogs.


They are, so are Malamutes.
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Postby Rhiannon » Sat Oct 04, 2008 3:56 am

Melissa wrote:
Rhiannon wrote:The one Disney did made me bawl!! Makes me wish I had a huskie too. They're such good dogs.


They are, so are Malamutes.


Oh, right, Malamutes... I'm partial to bigger pups. Black or chocolate labs, golden retrievers, blue heelers, and huskies. <3

Homeward Bound was a good furry critter movie, too. :)
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Postby Melissa » Sat Oct 04, 2008 4:02 am

Rhiannon wrote:
Melissa wrote:
Rhiannon wrote:The one Disney did made me bawl!! Makes me wish I had a huskie too. They're such good dogs.


They are, so are Malamutes.


Oh, right, Malamutes... I'm partial to bigger pups. Black or chocolate labs, golden retrievers, blue heelers, and huskies. <3

Homeward Bound was a good furry critter movie, too. :)


My aunt & uncle had a Malamute and it got mistaken for a husky all the time, lol. Which is easy since they look like huskies, but are bigger dogs I believe, theirs was a male and was a large dog.
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Postby Don » Sat Oct 04, 2008 4:04 am

Rhiannon wrote:
Melissa wrote:
Rhiannon wrote:The one Disney did made me bawl!! Makes me wish I had a huskie too. They're such good dogs.


They are, so are Malamutes.


Oh, right, Malamutes... I'm partial to bigger pups. Black or chocolate labs, golden retrievers, blue heelers, and huskies. <3

Homeward Bound was a good furry critter movie, too. :)


The Japanese dogs were Sakhalin huskies, a spitz with a little akita i guess.

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Postby Triple S » Sat Oct 04, 2008 4:06 am

Forgot this one

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I find it hard to sit through Bruce Lee movies in their entirety (we have them all :wink: ) but his story fascinates me. And I like Jason Scott Lee - haven't seen or heard much of him lately.
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Postby Playitloudforme » Sat Oct 04, 2008 5:26 am

I have to break mine down by the categories.

Best musical: Moulin Rouge
Best comedy: Monty Python & the Holy Grail
Best drama: Godfather 2
Best action: Indiana Jones & the Temple of Doom
Best Sci/Fi: Aliens
Best horror: Nightmare on Elm Street
Best romance: Somewhere in Time
Best porno: they're all the same...who are we kidding...
Best Animated: Beauty & the Beast
Best Documentary: An Inconvenient Truth
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Postby X factor » Sat Oct 04, 2008 6:43 am

In no particular order, here's the list

- It's a Wonderful Life
- Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
- The Cowboys (my fave John Wayne flick)
- Fandango
- The Natural
- Rocky
- Star Wars / Empire Strikes Back
- The Deer Hunter
- Valley Girl (Don't laugh- it's a the best film about / from the 1980's)
- The Great Escape

HONORABLE MENTION
As Good as it Gets
Shawshank
Gross Point Blank
Fast Times
The Station Agent
The Great Escape

Wow- that's hard...axe me again tomorrow, and you'll get an entirely different list. ('cept WONDERFUL LIFE- best film ever made, imho. Fuck CITIZEN CAIN. THIS is the perfect movie!)
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Postby S2M » Sat Oct 04, 2008 7:58 am

Triple S wrote:Forgot this one

Image

I find it hard to sit through Bruce Lee movies in their entirety (we have them all :wink: ) but his story fascinates me. And I like Jason Scott Lee - haven't seen or heard much of him lately.



He was in Balls of Fury..... :lol:
Tom Brady IS the G.O.A.T.
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Postby peridactyl » Sat Oct 04, 2008 10:12 am

SusieP wrote:Only ten??????????
OK I'll try....
In no particular order

1 Godfather Trilogy - yes I even like the third one
2 Some Like It Hot
3 Monty Python's Life Of Brian
4 Adventures of Priscilla Queen of the Desert
5 And Justice For All
6 As Good As It Gets
7 Bell Book and Candle
8 Gypsy
9 The Usual Suspects
10 Withnail and I

and almost made the top ten...........Guns of Navarone, No Escape, Judge Dredd, Monty Python's Holy Grail, Scarface, What's Eating Gilbert Grape, Blues Brothers, Scarecrow, Blazing Saddles.

And I am still waiting for somebody to make a good version of Dune. :twisted:



OOH yeah! Withnail and I was BRILLIANT. Good choice!!

No one's mentioned Women in Love...another '60s masterpiece!!
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Postby Journey/Survivor » Sat Oct 04, 2008 11:40 am

Ehwmatt wrote:I just realized I left out Falling Down with Michael Douglas and Robert Duvall. Fucking classic.


Yes, Awesome movie. Even though Douglas character is doing a lot of bad things in certain ways, you still can't help but root him on.

I especially love the part where he pulls out the bat and starts beating the crap out of the gang members and then says "You forgot the brief case!" Classic. :D
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Postby Journey/Survivor » Sat Oct 04, 2008 11:47 am

kgdjpubs wrote:
Journey/Survivor wrote:
I like Tim Dalton as Bond. I rank License To Kill as one of my favorite Bond films. But I just hate Daniel Craig. To me CR just didn't feel like a Bond film.


Ironic, actually....since CR is the closest to the Fleming novels of any Bond film since the 60s. That being said, Bond novels and Bond films are two different entities for most people--thus causing much debate.


I'm more of a fan of the films. I used to post on a lot of Bond fan sites, and I am well aware of the arguing about the films VS the books.

I just can't accept Daniel Craig as Bond. And there were too many other elements of a Bond film missing from CR.

For me my favorite Bond actor is a 3-way tie between Connery, Moore and Brosnan. Then Dalton. Then Lazenby. And Daniel Craig dead last by far.
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Postby Journey/Survivor » Sat Oct 04, 2008 11:56 am

CASue wrote:
Journey/Survivor wrote:
Foolish Heart wrote:In no order:

Rebecca
The Way We Were
Pretty Woman
Overboard
In Name Only
Gone With the Wind
Fools Rush In
An Affair to Remember
Grease
While You Were Sleeping
The Notebook
Anything with Cary Grant and Robert Redford


Rebecca, now there's a Hitchcock film that I'm surprised to hear, simply because most or all of us were not even around when it came out in 1940. Of course it did win an Oscar for best picture at the time.

By the way, Cary Grant and Jimmy Stewart are my two favorite "old" movie actors.


I LOVE Rebecca and I have both the movie and the BBC TV series with Charles Dance. One of Hitchcock's finest, along with North by Northwest. Supposedly, he was in every movie he made in a small cameo and so far, I've only been able to find him in The Birds.

Sue


I like Joan Fontaine a lot.

Actually, it's pretty easy to find "Hitch" in most of his films. He usually liked to get the scene that he was in over pretty quickly because he didn't want people being distracted from the film because they were searching for him. In North By Northwest he's in it right away, he tries to get on the bus, but the door closes and it drives away.
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Postby (Crazy)Dulce Lady » Sat Oct 04, 2008 2:32 pm

Enigma869 wrote:1. Goodfellas
2. Goodfellas
3. Goodfellas

I can't seem to think of 7 more :shock:


John from Boston


i'm on that bus too.

1.Conan
2.Conan
3.Conan
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Postby Uno_up » Sat Oct 04, 2008 2:42 pm

I forgot to add the Dukes of Hazzard movie...
Right now Tony Romo is doing a swan dive cock-first into Jessica Simpson's ass. I'm jealous.
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Postby kgdjpubs » Sat Oct 04, 2008 3:09 pm

Journey/Survivor wrote:
kgdjpubs wrote:
Journey/Survivor wrote:
I like Tim Dalton as Bond. I rank License To Kill as one of my favorite Bond films. But I just hate Daniel Craig. To me CR just didn't feel like a Bond film.


Ironic, actually....since CR is the closest to the Fleming novels of any Bond film since the 60s. That being said, Bond novels and Bond films are two different entities for most people--thus causing much debate.


I'm more of a fan of the films. I used to post on a lot of Bond fan sites, and I am well aware of the arguing about the films VS the books.

I just can't accept Daniel Craig as Bond. And there were too many other elements of a Bond film missing from CR.

For me my favorite Bond actor is a 3-way tie between Connery, Moore and Brosnan. Then Dalton. Then Lazenby. And Daniel Craig dead last by far.


good enough answer. I tend to go for the serious spy film over the really unbelievable stuff that some of the films went into, but in the end, my criteria is whether or not it is a good film and then let the rest sort it out. And yes, there have been some bad films.

Just curious...it is Craig the actor, or the unrefined version of an "younger" Bond that they went with in CR that you have a problem with? I don't see Craig very far off from where Timothy Dalton went on Licence to Kill, which I love even though it's not what you would call a "Bond movie".
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Postby tammy » Sat Oct 04, 2008 3:27 pm

The Long, Long Trailer
Rear Window
The Clock ('40s movie)
Laura ('40s movie)
Christmas in Connecticut (Barbara Stanwyk one)
Meet Me in St. Louis
Back to the Future (the first one)
Lost in Translation
Garden State
Return to Me
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Postby tammy » Sat Oct 04, 2008 3:35 pm

CASue wrote:
Journey/Survivor wrote:
Foolish Heart wrote:In no order:

Rebecca
The Way We Were
Pretty Woman
Overboard
In Name Only
Gone With the Wind
Fools Rush In
An Affair to Remember
Grease
While You Were Sleeping
The Notebook
Anything with Cary Grant and Robert Redford


Rebecca, now there's a Hitchcock film that I'm surprised to hear, simply because most or all of us were not even around when it came out in 1940. Of course it did win an Oscar for best picture at the time.

By the way, Cary Grant and Jimmy Stewart are my two favorite "old" movie actors.


I LOVE Rebecca and I have both the movie and the BBC TV series with Charles Dance. One of Hitchcock's finest, along with North by Northwest. Supposedly, he was in every movie he made in a small cameo and so far, I've only been able to find him in The Birds.

Sue


"Rebecca" is my fave book! I didn't list the movie 'cuz I read the book before I saw the Hitchcock film and 'tho I like the film it didn't meet my expectations after the book. Would love to see that BBC series sometime, 'tho.
You can see Hitchcock in "Rear Window" in the piano player's apartment turning the clock on the mantle. I forget where he is in Rebecca & Vertigo.
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Postby Journey/Survivor » Sat Oct 04, 2008 7:07 pm

kgdjpubs wrote:
Journey/Survivor wrote:
kgdjpubs wrote:
Journey/Survivor wrote:
I like Tim Dalton as Bond. I rank License To Kill as one of my favorite Bond films. But I just hate Daniel Craig. To me CR just didn't feel like a Bond film.


Ironic, actually....since CR is the closest to the Fleming novels of any Bond film since the 60s. That being said, Bond novels and Bond films are two different entities for most people--thus causing much debate.


I'm more of a fan of the films. I used to post on a lot of Bond fan sites, and I am well aware of the arguing about the films VS the books.

I just can't accept Daniel Craig as Bond. And there were too many other elements of a Bond film missing from CR.

For me my favorite Bond actor is a 3-way tie between Connery, Moore and Brosnan. Then Dalton. Then Lazenby. And Daniel Craig dead last by far.


good enough answer. I tend to go for the serious spy film over the really unbelievable stuff that some of the films went into, but in the end, my criteria is whether or not it is a good film and then let the rest sort it out. And yes, there have been some bad films.

Just curious...it is Craig the actor, or the unrefined version of an "younger" Bond that they went with in CR that you have a problem with? I don't see Craig very far off from where Timothy Dalton went on Licence to Kill, which I love even though it's not what you would call a "Bond movie".


For starters, I really liked Brosnan's Bond a lot, and I thought he easily had 1 or even 2 more Bond films left in him. So I'm pissed at EON Productions for replacing him.

I don't like Daniel Craig the man. He is disrespectful of Bond fans with his comments, and he acted like he didn't even want the role in the first place.

The biggest majority of fans still wanted Brosnan back, or at least preferred someone like Hugh Jackman, Clive Owen or Christina Bale over Craig. But Barbara Broccoli just had to have her way regardless of what the fans wanted.

I don't like that they re-wrote Bond's history with the "re-boot" of the franchise. It's as if they erased Dr. No and all of the films that came after it, and James Bond just became 007 in 2006. All of the shit with Judy Dench's M. She just meets Bond for the first time in Goldeneye well after Bond has long since been a double-0, now she's the current M when Bond has just become a double-0, which is also trying to forget about Bernard Lee and Robert Brown who had both played M in the past. No Miss Moneypenny, no Q. I know that Q wasn't in Dr. No either, but I still miss the Q character, and I was hoping that John Cleese would be back. I could go on for hours actually, about what I hated about CR.

I do love a lot of the more serious Bond films too, like License To Kill, On Her Majesty's Secret Service, For Your Eye's Only etc, etc. But I also like for Bond to be fun too.
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Postby AJ » Sat Oct 04, 2008 11:24 pm

In no particular order:

All Star Trek (especially Khan, Voyage Home and First Contact)
All Star Wars (especially Empire, Jedi, and Sith)
Titanic
Hoosiers (I'm a basketball coach...LOVE THIS!!!)
Shawshank Redemption
Father of the Bride
Mr. Holland's Opus (I'm also a teacher...AWESOME!)
Caddyshack- NOONAN! :-)
All Back to the Future (original rocks!)
All Rocky (especially 3)
Jerry Maguire (Will never forget the scene at the beginning..."Don't EVER stop FUCKING me!" Kelly Preston!! YUM!
Beaches- (Sorry to admit it, but when Wind Beneath My Wings starts...NIAGARA FALLS!)
Major League
Tin Cup

I know this is more than 1,bu Icouldn;t leave any of these off. And I know I'm missing some.
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Postby AJ » Sat Oct 04, 2008 11:31 pm

[quote="Journey/Survivor"][b]Rocky
Rocky II
Rocky III
Rocky IV
Rocky V
Rocky Balboa
First Blood
Rambo First Blood Part II
Rambo III
Rambo (also known as Rambo IV)[/b]

I'll give a shiny new nickle to the first person who can name my favorite actor. :lol:[/quote]

I'd either guess Burgess Meredith or Richard Crenna.
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Postby kgdjpubs » Sun Oct 05, 2008 1:13 am

Journey/Survivor wrote:
kgdjpubs wrote:
Just curious...it is Craig the actor, or the unrefined version of an "younger" Bond that they went with in CR that you have a problem with? I don't see Craig very far off from where Timothy Dalton went on Licence to Kill, which I love even though it's not what you would call a "Bond movie".


For starters, I really liked Brosnan's Bond a lot, and I thought he easily had 1 or even 2 more Bond films left in him. So I'm pissed at EON Productions for replacing him.

I don't like Daniel Craig the man. He is disrespectful of Bond fans with his comments, and he acted like he didn't even want the role in the first place.

The biggest majority of fans still wanted Brosnan back, or at least preferred someone like Hugh Jackman, Clive Owen or Christina Bale over Craig. But Barbara Broccoli just had to have her way regardless of what the fans wanted.


funny thing is that CR is exactly the type of film that Brosnan wanted to make, but never got the chance to. He might have gotten away with one more film, but he did start noticably aging a lot in the last few years.

I've never read much of Craig's comments...but to an actor, the role (as fun as it might be) is an albatross and typecasting--and probably only Sean Connery ever got away from it. I can easily see why many actors would NOT want the role.

It's a hard role to cast. Jackman, I could see working, but he's already rather overexposed--as is Christian Bale. I believe Clive Owen turned it down also. I get the impression that they are trying to cast someone who is NOT an A-list Hollywood star in the role. Nobody, so far was an A-list actor when they took on the role. Moore and Brosnan were known for TV series, and the others were obscure or literally unknown. Frankly, there just aren't many guys around that are currently at the age to pull it off effectively.



Journey/Survivor wrote:I don't like that they re-wrote Bond's history with the "re-boot" of the franchise. It's as if they erased Dr. No and all of the films that came after it, and James Bond just became 007 in 2006. All of the shit with Judy Dench's M. She just meets Bond for the first time in Goldeneye well after Bond has long since been a double-0, now she's the current M when Bond has just become a double-0, which is also trying to forget about Bernard Lee and Robert Brown who had both played M in the past. No Miss Moneypenny, no Q. I know that Q wasn't in Dr. No either, but I still miss the Q character, and I was hoping that John Cleese would be back. I could go on for hours actually, about what I hated about CR.


I can sorta agree with you here. The one weird thing that throws me here is not re-casting M. I think they could have found some dignified aged man to play the role and it would have fit in well. Nothing against Dench as she plays the character very well...but it DOES create a discontinuity. I got the impression that the Moneypenny and Q characters would be re-introduced at some point in the future.




Journey/Survivor wrote:I do love a lot of the more serious Bond films too, like License To Kill, On Her Majesty's Secret Service, For Your Eye's Only etc, etc. But I also like for Bond to be fun too.


Oh, good...you don't get shot then.

Overall, sounds to me that you are more dissappointed with the direction of the franchise (re-booting) as opposed to Craig's interpretation of the role, discounting a few comments by the actor re: Bond.
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