Post /vip/ films, movies, flicks, etc.
A short review of the film is encouraged but not mandatory.
/tv/ is so contrarian that i can no longer tell if people who post that they like popular movies are trolling or not regardless if the movie was good.
i liked american psycho. couldnt figure out what was real and just a crazy hallucination. kinda like the shinning.
ghost world is another good movie. and american mary.
>>17507
>Craig got fired, Smokey high as fuck, 'n shit finsta go down in the hood.
I'm watching the Planet of the Apes series the second time around. I watched Escape from the Planet of the Apes yesterday and I'll probably watch Conquest of the Planet of the Apes tomorrow.
TAKE YER STINKIN' PAWS OFF ME, YOU DAMN DIRTY APE
>>17507
this is a great movie, tons of laughs, not for the sane or serious
I'm currently going through all the Friday the 13th movies. Just watched Part 2 last night. Not the best movies but they're good fun.
>>17507
>>17540
i've always been partial to the interpretation that this movie/book IS NOT all in his head.
i read somewhere that the movie is supposed to be a critique of late 80s/early 90s yuppie culture where everybody was encouraged to act a certain way making everyone basically become indistinguishable from one another. this is why people keep calling people the wrong names and shit in the movie, because everyone is so similar and can't be differentiated. that also explains why that guy at the end says he talked to paul allen just yesterday or whatever even though bateman killed him. that's like the joke of the whole movie, yuppies are so conformist that you could kill one and nobody would notice.
also, "it was all a dream/in his head" is so fucking lame that i'll look for any excuse to ignore this interpretation in any movie
>>17577
Yeah, it's definitely satirizing the 80s. I think Bateman did it. It's right in everybody's face but they're too consumed by their own lives to even notice
>>17540
>>17577
Some of it just had to be in his head (car blowing up from a small bullet) but I feel most of it was real with a select few of the situations being in his head. (i.e. FEED ME A STRAY CAT)
>>17622
paul allen's place being totally clean was a big one for me
Us in the mansion
>>17641
this has been in my netflix queue for a while but my friend said it was long, boring, and incomprehensible. is it worth my time?
Skyfall is the definition of a /vip/ movie.
>>17649
The problem for most people is that it is very slow. I think it works for this movie.
>>17650
just look at it.
>>17649
wasnt incomprehensible at all.
kind lame theme tho. bunch of rich people get together for an orgy and kill or intimidate anyone to keep people from finding out.
>>17507
Please don't make generals. I love a nice important thread about films, but it's also important to maintain VIP QUALITY.
The first Bourne movie is /vip/.
It's cinematography, editing, and camerawork isn't terrible like the sequels. It's also got some semblance of humor and a interesting mystery surrounding Bourne.
>>17660
I have to admit I liked skyfall more than the other two bond films with Daniel Craig.
Also post your favorite 007 James Bond film, mine was Goldeneye
>>17694
One of the best
>>17694
Royale is my favorite, followed by GoldenEye.
Martin Campbell directed both. That dude knows his stuff.
>>17712
Quantum is a pretty decent movie.
https://youtu.be/tvYB5Z7PWTk
The editing is easier to grasp on repeated viewings. I like watching it after Royale because it takes place literally one hour after CR ends.
can Nolan be discussed here without intense shitposting?
>>17781
Interstellar's ending - love transcends time and space - feels like something out of an anime. I would've thought 4chan would love it like I did, but it seems like it drove the aspies wild.
>>17875
The /r9k/ self-sabotaging crowd doesn't have a good relationship with that emotion.
But yeah, Nolan is one of Our Guys. Intense shitposting is how we show our love.
>>17875
Love never literally trancends space and time though.
You see, Anne Hathaway's line was just trailer bait. In a literal sense this is what happened:
Coop sends himself into the black hole to reduce weight and gave Anne Hathaway the best chance for survival.
The black hole contains a tessaract, which Coop assumes was made by futuristic multidimensional humans. The ascended humans needed a method to read the gravity data from inside the black hole so they could exist in the first place, and the method of this transferal would be the love between Coop and Murph.
The tesseract is basically a 3-dimensional representation of the entire timeline of the library. Coop is able to manipulate things in the library such as the orientation of objects, etc, and the whole plan hinges on him using the room to send himself into the future so he can deliver the data to Murph, which requires Murph figuring out that the 'ghost' is her dad through the connection established in things like "STAY" and tugging on the watch's hands.
He completed his task of transmitting the data before being shunted through the wormhole in time to see he daughter die.
Love didn't literally trancend space and time, Gravity did (because it's the only thing that actually can)
Love was simply Cooper's motivation to do so. Figuratively, love trancended space and time, but not literally.
>>18013
Love transcends time and space because it's the force harnessed by the futuristic multidimensional humans that connects two people together enough for Coop to reach across time and space and pass the information to Murph. It's obviously intended to be interpreted that way - Coop's love for his daughter saves the world. It's also an important point when Anne Hathaway wants to go to the other planet because of the man she loves and Matthew Mahogany tells her no - which results in disaster.