The wife liked it.
If I told you the "if only" I'd be giving the plot away.
I presume you're referring to the moronic finale...
See it when you can.
Tarantino and the cast will present the movie over here next friday. I won't go.
It's well done and pretty restrained, it's closest to Jackie Brown than any of his other films, it has references to American TV Westerns and Italian Westerns, Dean Martin, I liked it a lot.
P.S. Did you watch Gunn (1967)?
Not yet. Have you seen American Made?
Midsommar (2019) - 4 and 9The story and characters are irredeemably bad / weak.The technical merits are astounding, especially: pacing, cinematography, sound design. Some very good performances, some very weak ones.It's also quite funny.Taking the best parts of Hereditary and merging them with the best parts of Midsommar = one of the best horror films ever made.There's so much I want to really, really love about Midsommar but I can't get past the basic flaws.I really just wanna know what n_l has to say
CONTAINS MILD SPOILERSOnce Upon a Time . . . in Hollywood (2019). 35mm projection. 5/10. I found this hugely disappointing. The writing is flaccid and lazy and the directing is not much better. Most of the acting is awful—Lenny 3CpO is almost never good and here he is doing an awful accent (but maybe the character he’s playing doesn’t want to break character and this is a way of showing that Rick Dalton isn’t much of an actor). That broad from The Wolf of Wall Street is embarrassing. The one good performance is Brad Pitt’s. The highlight of the film is the scene where his character goes to Spahn Ranch and has the initial confrontation with the Mansons. But the rest is pointless and the ending is QT just rehearsing a trick he’s done better before. The biggest problem with the film is that it relies on viewers’ knowledge of 1969 for basic things like motivation and suspense, things that should be supplied by the film itself. And for all the vaunted authenticity—“Tarantino recreates 1969!”—there’s a shot where Brad Pitt turns on to the freeway and we see sound reduction walls on the side of the road. Needless to say, such things did not exist in 1969, and QT could have had them digitally removed but didn’t bother to. Why? I’m sure it was because he was in a hurry to get the thing done and assumed no one would notice. There’s a general cheapness to the production: when a character smokes an acid cigarette we never see things from his point of view while he’s tripping. No love for SFX, Quentin? Another thing adding to the film’s cheapjack quality: the voice-over is badly recorded, and the narration is supplied by Kurt Russell, who is playing a character in the film but that character is NOT narrating I don’t think, or if he is the point is confusing. And why does there have to be narration anyway? Answer: it covers the gaps in the plot QT couldn’t be bothered to fill in other better ways. The man making films these days who goes by the name Tarantino is not at all the creative force he was in the 90s. It’s very sad.