Even without having seen Top Gun Maverick, that was some stereotypically snobby and flat out shallow criticism from you guys. Top Gun is phenomenal from a technical standpoint, certainly worlds better than The Departed in every way.
Never seen the original. Never want to. Saw TG: M twice in the theater in IMAX. 10/10 both times.
From a technical standpoint Top Gun was "clean", maybe in a way blockbusters (which were still being invented) weren't at the time. But nothing that impresses me today, nothing THAT out of reach for your regular Martin Campbell. Nothing to do with The Departed which, whatever you think of the movie, pushed the art of filmmaking (not just the art of the blockbuster) forward. Hey, don't take anything from it if you don't want to. I'll for sure take things from Top Gun, which, of course, had a more difficult topic at hand on a technical standpoint: filming planes and huge boats in an exciting and clear way presents big challenges that I'm not downplaying at all. But it's a very dumb, corny movie filled with dumb, corny characters who have dumb, corny relationships and dumb, corny arcs and they (the characters, their relationships and arcs) are filmed in a professional, pretty, but also dumb and corny way. The film has the right to go for the dumb and corny and try to do it right, but there is nothing snob at all at thinking this is ridiculous. Anyway, I do love my share of dumb, corny movies, just not this one, this one makes me laugh when I shouldn't laugh and it feels like a high end commercial (a commercial for Tom Cruise, for the army, for planes, for motorcycles...) and almost never like a movie.That being said, yes, it is very stereotypical from us... but you didn't comment on the interesting and not stereotypical part: people criticizing Top Gun like we just did are an endangered specie. A huge chunck of those who laughed at that movie or just didn't care at all back in the days are nowadays convinced that they always loved it.
The Fabelmans (2022) -7/10. The fable man's very own coming-of-age story, as told by Spielberg himself. I wasn't planning on seeing this, but the wife wanted to go to Women Talking. Now, there's no way in hell I'm going to watch something called Women Talking, so I had to find something else at the cineplex to occupy my time while Mrs. J did her thing. The film with the most compatible showtime was The Fabelmans. Hey, I actually enjoyed it a lot. I'm not much of a Spielberg fan--there are maybe 3 of his films I like--but I'll certainly be getting this on blu. Not the best film of last year, by any means (and a bit too close to Wildlife in places), but I found it very entertaining. And it sure smells like an Oscar winner.When I asked the wife about her film she told me she no longer identifies as a pacifist. WTF?
I meant stereotypical in terms of general online snobbery, it wasn't a shot at you and Stanton. I just found your criticisms meritless. Of course Top Gun (1986) is campy and silly, but it's way better directed than a 90's Bond film, especially when it comes to action. In spite of its cheese, camp, or anything else, it's a well executed film with solid characters, a good enough story (at worst) that's very well shot and edited. Do you think All That Heaven Allows doesn't have value because it's campy as well?
The best part was the end with John Ford (David Lynch) that gets a 10/10 the rest yea I'd go with a 7/10.
Dude, major SPOILER!!!That was something I was glad I didn't know about before I saw it. Just sayin'.
Cardinale, 84, was in Rome last month for the Italian presentation of a newly restored version of Luigi Comencini?s 1963 film "La ragazza di Bube" (?Bebo?s Girl?), about a small-town girl who stands by her man, even after he is convicted of a crime and goes to jail.?Bebo?s Girl,? which earned Cardinale her first prestigious acting award, Italy?s Nastro d?Argento for best actress, will be shown on Friday at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the first in a 23-film retrospective honoring the Tunisian-born Italian actress that runs through Feb. 21. It is one of a handful of times that the museum has presented a tribute to a living actor in its more than 90-year history.