I have lost my wallet fourteen times this week. Not exaggerating. It’s always turned out to be in a pocket or the bottom of a bag, but when I’m stressed I cannot keep anything in my head for more than thirty seconds.
Yesterday I stopped on the way out the door to water a plant and somehow left my lunch behind.
It's like that time you took that home wine making course and forgot how to drive.
hello fellow teens I hear the coolest place for teens to hang out is T H E C O L O S S A L P I L L A R O F M I T O C H O N D R I A let's go don't bring weapons
Top 5 that I feel actually, legitimately comfortable with, in order:
1. Annihilation
2. Midsommar
3. Happy Death Day
4. Suspiria 2018
5. Climax
Everything else I feel not right if I don't mention/recommend, in no particular order:
A Simple Favor
The Favourite
Ready Or Not
Let Me In
Under The Skin
The Forest Of Love
Dolemite Is My Name
Parasite
The Lighthouse
Bliss
Us
Booksmart
Captain Marvel
The Last Black Man In San Francisco
The Perfection
Halloween 2018
Knife+Heart
Teen Titans GO to the Movies
Game Night
Miseducation of Cameron Post
Assassination Nation
Won't You Be My Neighbor?
The Babysitter
mother!
Dunkirk
The Florida Project
Thoroughbreds
Moonlight
La La Land
Shin Godzilla
Colossal
The Shallows
The Neon Demon
Raw
Southbound
When Marnie Was There
The Witch
Frozen
Why Don't You Play In Hell?
Evil Dead 2013
I Saw The Devil
Black Swan
Call Me By Your Name
Mad Max Fury Road
No way I could narrow it down/forget about even half of those. I know there's stuff I'm forgetting, but this feels like all my must-haves
I have lost my wallet fourteen times this week. Not exaggerating. It’s always turned out to be in a pocket or the bottom of a bag, but when I’m stressed I cannot keep anything in my head for more than thirty seconds.
Yesterday I stopped on the way out the door to water a plant and somehow left my lunch behind.
I have hung up on people because I lost my phone.
+4
Options
KetarCome on upstairswe're having a partyRegistered Userregular
I just watched Paradise Hills. Gonna be thinking about this one for a while.
Shame it didn't get into more theaters, it would have been great to see on a big screen.
1) not very Tarantino.
2) its not accurate to say it is bad, but it is very silly and not good in parts. Theres a good movie in there somewhere though.
I did the thing. This took way longer than expected! And I have a ton of repeating directors, but I guess that’s honest.
Also, there’s a couple times I couldn’t pick just one, but like, whatever dude.
1990: Life Is Sweet
1991: Barton Fink
1992: Police Story 3: Super Cop
1993: Sonatine
1994: Pom Poko
1995: Maborosi
1996: Goodbye South, Goodbye
1997: Boogie Nights
1998: After Life
1999: Eyes Wide Shut
2000: Yi Yi; In The Mood For Love
2001: Millennium Mambo
2002: Punch Drunk Love
2003: Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter... and Spring; Old Boy; Memories of Murder (good year for South Korea!)
2004: Nobody Knows
2005: Brokeback Mountain; Three Times
2006: Syndromes and a Century
2007: Unrelated; The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford
2008: Still Walking
2009: A Serious Man
2010: Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives
2011: The Tree of Life
2012: The Master
2013: The Tale of Princess Kaguya
2014: The Grand Budapest Hotel
2015: Kaili Blues; Mad Max: Fury Road
2016: Certain Women
2017: Blade Runner 2049
2018: Burning
2019: Peterloo (but I haven’t seen nearly enough to call it yet)
astrobstrdSo full of mercy...Registered Userregular
I think putting together a full list for me is too anxiety inducing, since knowing myself I would be excessively scrolling for some weirdo cult movie I missed, but I think gunpoint 2019 decision would probably be Hagazussa. That is the first film in a long time that I rented and watched immediately again the next week after purchase.
I think I posted this last time around, but whatever.
My favorite movie that came out for every year I was alive (other than 2019).
1980 - Airplane!
1981 - The Fox and the Hound
1982 - E.T.
1983 - WarGames
1984 - Ghostbusters
1985 - Back to the Future
1986 - Top Gun
1987 - Spaceballs
1988 - The Land Before Time
1989 - Batman
1990 - Quigley Down Under
1991 - Hot Shots!
1992 - El Mariachi
1993 - Posse
1994 - Leon: The Professional
1995 - Friday
1996 - Independence Day
1997 - The Devil's Advocate
1998 - The Faculty
1999 - The Matrix
2000 - The Replacements
2001 - Formula 51
2002 - Ice Age
2003 - The Italian Job
2004 - The Incredibles
2005 - Mr. and Mrs. Smith
2006 - DOA: Dead or Alive
2007 - 300
2008 - Iron Man
2009 - Dragonball Evolution
2010 - How to Train Your Dragon
2011 - Fast Five
2012 - 21 Jump Street
2013 - The Wolf of Wall Street
2014 - Captain America: The Winter Soldier
2015 - Mad Max: Fury Road
2016 - Central Intelligence
2017 - Wonder Woman
2018 - Bumblebee
I would like to use Letterboxd for that, but they list release years as the first time it was shown anywhere, so a lotta movies getting put in the year before they came out because they showed at a festival
I would like to use Letterboxd for that, but they list release years as the first time it was shown anywhere, so a lotta movies getting put in the year before they came out because they showed at a festival
That's the way it should be, though. If the film is completed, and the paying public can see it (no matter where they're from), then that's the year it should be considered from. Because otherwise you get into a whole bunch of weird stuff with films that play one region but not another. Or how about films that play a film festival and never get distribution? There are a lot, and I don't think it's right to say they don't have a year of release, you know?
I get that it's more in the line of considering when you're able to see a film, and I don't begrudge someone considering a film from the year it was released in their region, but websites and film communities are international, and it simply makes more sense to catalogue by year of public premiere.
I would like to use Letterboxd for that, but they list release years as the first time it was shown anywhere, so a lotta movies getting put in the year before they came out because they showed at a festival
Wikipedia does this too a lot
I'll generally still use it to do a basic set, and then wander over to my DVD shelf and see what feels wrong or what I missed
Here's my favorites of every year i've been alive. The first couple decades were (mostly) easy since I honestly haven't seen many movies from those years. Like, Platoon is only my choice for 1986 because it is literally the only movie from that year that i've seen. Later years are harder because most have at least three really good movies i've seen in them. Except 2013, weirdly, which was difficult because most of the movies I saw from that year are kinda crap.
1983- Return of the Jedi
1984- Ghostbusters
1985- Clue
1986- Platoon
1987- Spaceballs
1988- Die Hard
1989- Ghostbusters II
1990- Back to the Future Part III
1991- Terminator 2: Judgement Day
1992- Aladdin
1993- Jurassic Park
1994- The Shawshank Redemption
1995- Die Hard With A Vengeance
1996- Muppet Treasure Island
1997- Starship Troopers
1998- The Truman Show
1999- The Matrix
2000- O Brother, Where Art Thou?
2001- Spirited Away
2002- The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
2003- Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World
2004- Shaun of the Dead
2005- March of the Penguins
2006- V for Vendetta
2007- Hot Fuzz
2008- The Dark Knight
2009- District 9
2010- Toy Story 3
2011- Drive
2012- Dredd
2013- Iron Man 3
2014- Captain America: The Winter Soldier
2015- Mad Max: Fury Road
2016- Arrival
2017- Dunkirk
2018- Thoroughbreds
2019 so far- Avengers: Endgame
I would like to use Letterboxd for that, but they list release years as the first time it was shown anywhere, so a lotta movies getting put in the year before they came out because they showed at a festival
That's the way it should be, though. If the film is completed, and the paying public can see it (no matter where they're from), then that's the year it should be considered from. Because otherwise you get into a whole bunch of weird stuff with films that play one region but not another. Or how about films that play a film festival and never get distribution? There are a lot, and I don't think it's right to say they don't have a year of release, you know?
I get that it's more in the line of considering when you're able to see a film, and I don't begrudge someone considering a film from the year it was released in their region, but websites and film communities are international, and it simply makes more sense to catalogue by year of public premiere.
I definitely agree with this. The only exception I have is for personal annual best of lists. Like, Long Day’s Journey Into Night just was released on VOD and didn’t get any kind of theatrical release in my region, so for me, it’s a favourite from 2019. But talking historically, or in any bigger context than my silly, unimportant list, I go year of initial release.
Rebecca Ferguson's entire show-stealing/star-making performance
Flanagan expertly paying tribute to both King's original book and Kubrick's film in satisfying manners throughout (especially with every part of the final act), while maneuvering through the bad blood to find common ground in both their attempts at telling Danny's story (which gets an emotional end)
Character-focused scenes - whether between Rebecca's cult and her, Danny and the new girl with the shining, or Danny and his own mind/recollections that he's desperately trying to suppress because he still can't cope with what happened in The Shining - that kept me captivated for a 2.5 hour long film, which...certainly ain't an easy task these days
A horror film that's undoubtedly a great horror film, and a very unsettling one, despite being so long and mostly lacking blood and jumpscares? It's possible!
Flanagan using the entire runtime to talk in some way about trauma: about how you can't find the answers at the bottom of a bottle, about how the aftermath of abuse can be just as fatal to bystanders, about how you can't truly escape your past without confronting it (even when that's the hardest thing in the world to do). And it wasn't always evident in only the hero's part of the story; sometimes the villain has her own passages and fears locked away deep and tight. Sometimes the worst you can do is lie to those beside you, saying things will be alright when you know that's questionable
Non-spoilery thoughts:
My gut tells me I'm being overly charitable to this thinking it's one of the best films I've seen all year and deserves to belong on my best-of lists. My heart tells me this is an extraordinary effort on so many levels that the few cons I can come up with are minuscule in comparison
"Is this better than Stephen King's The Shining?" "Is this better than Stanley Kubrick's The Shining?" Both questions asked ad nauseam since production on this project began, let alone since release hype started with the first trailer. For my answer to both: I don't really know, and I don't really care. Because Doctor Sleep does a well enough job standing out and on its own two feet, walking the fine line between both
Two things I do know: 1) I'm done doubting Mike Flanagan. One of the finer modern directors in the genre, I do know I'll be one of the first in a seat for whatever he makes next
While we're at it, 2) the next project Rebecca Ferguson has a role in will immediately have my attention. Oh, it's Dune? Fuck yeah
AtomicTofuShe's a straight-up supervillain, yoRegistered Userregular
Alright, I didn't think about this too heavily but I feel pretty good about this list
1988: My Neighbor Totoro
1989: Kiki's Delivery Service
1990: Total Recall
1991: Terminator 2
1992: Hard Boiled
1993: Patlabor 2
1994: Drunken Master 2
1995: Ghost in the Shell
1996: Fargo
1997: L.A. Confidential
1998: Rushmore
1999: The Iron Giant
2000: In The Mood For Love
2001: Spirited Away
2002: Minority Report
2003: Memories of Murder
2004: Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
2005: Lady Vengeance
2006: The Prestige
2007: Hot Rod
2008: Still Walking
2009: Fantastic Mr. Fox
2010: Inception
2011: Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
2012: Django Unchained
2013: The Tale of the Princess Kaguya
2014: Ex Machina
2015: Mad Max: Fury Road
2016: The Handmaiden
2017: Blade Runner 2049
2018: Burning
2019: Parasite
I would like to use Letterboxd for that, but they list release years as the first time it was shown anywhere, so a lotta movies getting put in the year before they came out because they showed at a festival
That's the way it should be, though. If the film is completed, and the paying public can see it (no matter where they're from), then that's the year it should be considered from. Because otherwise you get into a whole bunch of weird stuff with films that play one region but not another. Or how about films that play a film festival and never get distribution? There are a lot, and I don't think it's right to say they don't have a year of release, you know?
I get that it's more in the line of considering when you're able to see a film, and I don't begrudge someone considering a film from the year it was released in their region, but websites and film communities are international, and it simply makes more sense to catalogue by year of public premiere.
I definitely agree with this. The only exception I have is for personal annual best of lists. Like, Long Day’s Journey Into Night just was released on VOD and didn’t get any kind of theatrical release in my region, so for me, it’s a favourite from 2019. But talking historically, or in any bigger context than my silly, unimportant list, I go year of initial release.
One of the problems with this is that festival showings aren't always final cut, so can be quite different from the finished theatrical release, especially if it showed almost a year before general wide release. I don't apply hard-and-fast rules, but figure it's my list, so long as I'm happy with it, I'm good.
Man, all the talk about the movie; "Parasite", my dumb, lizard brain automatically wanted to add the, "Eve" , part to it.
Fuck y'all a person can dream alright !
I thought they had made the magna into a live action as it was rumored but when I looked it up it answered that question
Still when I see it talked about I fall back to this problem even though I know the answer
+1
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Forever Zefirocloaked in the midnight glory of an event horizonRegistered Userregular
The Lighthouse is a fucking trip
I'm pretty sure there are scenes that even when I am a grizzled old man will flash into my brain unbidden
XBL - Foreverender | 3DS FC - 1418 6696 1012 | Steam ID | LoL
+4
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Shortytouching the meatIntergalactic Cool CourtRegistered Userregular
Rebecca Ferguson's entire show-stealing/star-making performance
Flanagan expertly paying tribute to both King's original book and Kubrick's film in satisfying manners throughout (especially with every part of the final act), while maneuvering through the bad blood to find common ground in both their attempts at telling Danny's story (which gets an emotional end)
Character-focused scenes - whether between Rebecca's cult and her, Danny and the new girl with the shining, or Danny and his own mind/recollections that he's desperately trying to suppress because he still can't cope with what happened in The Shining - that kept me captivated for a 2.5 hour long film, which...certainly ain't an easy task these days
A horror film that's undoubtedly a great horror film, and a very unsettling one, despite being so long and mostly lacking blood and jumpscares? It's possible!
Flanagan using the entire runtime to talk in some way about trauma: about how you can't find the answers at the bottom of a bottle, about how the aftermath of abuse can be just as fatal to bystanders, about how you can't truly escape your past without confronting it (even when that's the hardest thing in the world to do). And it wasn't always evident in only the hero's part of the story; sometimes the villain has her own passages and fears locked away deep and tight. Sometimes the worst you can do is lie to those beside you, saying things will be alright when you know that's questionable
Non-spoilery thoughts:
My gut tells me I'm being overly charitable to this thinking it's one of the best films I've seen all year and deserves to belong on my best-of lists. My heart tells me this is an extraordinary effort on so many levels that the few cons I can come up with are minuscule in comparison
"Is this better than Stephen King's The Shining?" "Is this better than Stanley Kubrick's The Shining?" Both questions asked ad nauseam since production on this project began, let alone since release hype started with the first trailer. For my answer to both: I don't really know, and I don't really care. Because Doctor Sleep does a well enough job standing out and on its own two feet, walking the fine line between both
Two things I do know: 1) I'm done doubting Mike Flanagan. One of the finer modern directors in the genre, I do know I'll be one of the first in a seat for whatever he makes next
While we're at it, 2) the next project Rebecca Ferguson has a role in will immediately have my attention. Oh, it's Dune? Fuck yeah
hey we're past this but I did the movies list thing
1993: Groundhog Day
1994: Shawshank Redemption
1995: Toy Story
1996: Fargo
1997: Titanic
1998: Rushmore
1999: The Insider
2000: Memento
2001: Wet Hot American Summer
2002: Punch-Drunk Love
2003: Memories of Murder
2004: Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
2005: The 40 Year-Old Virgin (this one, admittedly, woof, does not hold up)
2006: The Prestige
2007: Michael Clayton
2008: Speed Racer
2009: A Serious Man
2010: The Social Network
2011: Moneyball
2012: Cloud Atlas
2013: The Wind Rises
2014: Whiplash
2015: Star Wars: The Force Awakens
2016: Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping
2017: Lady Bird
2018: Sorry to Bother You
2019: Parasite
I had part of it written up but It comes down to at times I did not see a lot of movies and some years there were several l liked and could not pick a overall winner
Posts
that was the botulism and alcohol poisoning
Fuck y'all a person can dream alright !
lemme get some uhhhhhhhhh
M I T O C H O N D R I A
Oh hey would you look at that
PSA: if you're looking for a great holiday gift for yourself and/or others, the DVD of Annihilation is currently $5 on Amazon https://www.amazon.com/Annihilation-Natalie-Portman/dp/B079ZV7BVB $10 for DVD+BluRay+Digital combo pack
Steam
Origin ID: Discgolfer27
Untappd ID: Discgolfer1981
I mean it's extremely dumb, it's Howl's Moving Barter Towns having themselves a Hunger Game
But it's still fun
I have hung up on people because I lost my phone.
Shame it didn't get into more theaters, it would have been great to see on a big screen.
1) not very Tarantino.
2) its not accurate to say it is bad, but it is very silly and not good in parts. Theres a good movie in there somewhere though.
I knew he did a lot of serious roles earlier in his career, but I didn't realize he was movie like Forbidden Planet.
Also, there’s a couple times I couldn’t pick just one, but like, whatever dude.
1990: Life Is Sweet
1991: Barton Fink
1992: Police Story 3: Super Cop
1993: Sonatine
1994: Pom Poko
1995: Maborosi
1996: Goodbye South, Goodbye
1997: Boogie Nights
1998: After Life
1999: Eyes Wide Shut
2000: Yi Yi; In The Mood For Love
2001: Millennium Mambo
2002: Punch Drunk Love
2003: Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter... and Spring; Old Boy; Memories of Murder (good year for South Korea!)
2004: Nobody Knows
2005: Brokeback Mountain; Three Times
2006: Syndromes and a Century
2007: Unrelated; The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford
2008: Still Walking
2009: A Serious Man
2010: Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives
2011: The Tree of Life
2012: The Master
2013: The Tale of Princess Kaguya
2014: The Grand Budapest Hotel
2015: Kaili Blues; Mad Max: Fury Road
2016: Certain Women
2017: Blade Runner 2049
2018: Burning
2019: Peterloo (but I haven’t seen nearly enough to call it yet)
My favorite movie that came out for every year I was alive (other than 2019).
1981 - The Fox and the Hound
1982 - E.T.
1983 - WarGames
1984 - Ghostbusters
1985 - Back to the Future
1986 - Top Gun
1987 - Spaceballs
1988 - The Land Before Time
1989 - Batman
1990 - Quigley Down Under
1991 - Hot Shots!
1992 - El Mariachi
1993 - Posse
1994 - Leon: The Professional
1995 - Friday
1996 - Independence Day
1997 - The Devil's Advocate
1998 - The Faculty
1999 - The Matrix
2000 - The Replacements
2001 - Formula 51
2002 - Ice Age
2003 - The Italian Job
2004 - The Incredibles
2005 - Mr. and Mrs. Smith
2006 - DOA: Dead or Alive
2007 - 300
2008 - Iron Man
2009 - Dragonball Evolution
2010 - How to Train Your Dragon
2011 - Fast Five
2012 - 21 Jump Street
2013 - The Wolf of Wall Street
2014 - Captain America: The Winter Soldier
2015 - Mad Max: Fury Road
2016 - Central Intelligence
2017 - Wonder Woman
2018 - Bumblebee
a lot of flicks i may think are better than some in my list, but i may never want to rewatch them/watch them as much
The coast looking like a face better be part of the plot
wikipedia ia pretty good
just look up ____ in film, with the blank being the year you want
That's the way it should be, though. If the film is completed, and the paying public can see it (no matter where they're from), then that's the year it should be considered from. Because otherwise you get into a whole bunch of weird stuff with films that play one region but not another. Or how about films that play a film festival and never get distribution? There are a lot, and I don't think it's right to say they don't have a year of release, you know?
I get that it's more in the line of considering when you're able to see a film, and I don't begrudge someone considering a film from the year it was released in their region, but websites and film communities are international, and it simply makes more sense to catalogue by year of public premiere.
I usually use BoxOfficeMojo
1985 - Back to the Future, Real Genius, Clue
1986 - Flight of the Navigator
Ok that's it I'm done, this shit's too hard
XBL - Foreverender | 3DS FC - 1418 6696 1012 | Steam ID | LoL
Wikipedia does this too a lot
I'll generally still use it to do a basic set, and then wander over to my DVD shelf and see what feels wrong or what I missed
1984- Ghostbusters
1985- Clue
1986- Platoon
1987- Spaceballs
1988- Die Hard
1989- Ghostbusters II
1990- Back to the Future Part III
1991- Terminator 2: Judgement Day
1992- Aladdin
1993- Jurassic Park
1994- The Shawshank Redemption
1995- Die Hard With A Vengeance
1996- Muppet Treasure Island
1997- Starship Troopers
1998- The Truman Show
1999- The Matrix
2000- O Brother, Where Art Thou?
2001- Spirited Away
2002- The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
2003- Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World
2004- Shaun of the Dead
2005- March of the Penguins
2006- V for Vendetta
2007- Hot Fuzz
2008- The Dark Knight
2009- District 9
2010- Toy Story 3
2011- Drive
2012- Dredd
2013- Iron Man 3
2014- Captain America: The Winter Soldier
2015- Mad Max: Fury Road
2016- Arrival
2017- Dunkirk
2018- Thoroughbreds
2019 so far- Avengers: Endgame
I definitely agree with this. The only exception I have is for personal annual best of lists. Like, Long Day’s Journey Into Night just was released on VOD and didn’t get any kind of theatrical release in my region, so for me, it’s a favourite from 2019. But talking historically, or in any bigger context than my silly, unimportant list, I go year of initial release.
Spoilery thoughts:
Rebecca Ferguson's entire show-stealing/star-making performance
Flanagan expertly paying tribute to both King's original book and Kubrick's film in satisfying manners throughout (especially with every part of the final act), while maneuvering through the bad blood to find common ground in both their attempts at telling Danny's story (which gets an emotional end)
Character-focused scenes - whether between Rebecca's cult and her, Danny and the new girl with the shining, or Danny and his own mind/recollections that he's desperately trying to suppress because he still can't cope with what happened in The Shining - that kept me captivated for a 2.5 hour long film, which...certainly ain't an easy task these days
A horror film that's undoubtedly a great horror film, and a very unsettling one, despite being so long and mostly lacking blood and jumpscares? It's possible!
Flanagan using the entire runtime to talk in some way about trauma: about how you can't find the answers at the bottom of a bottle, about how the aftermath of abuse can be just as fatal to bystanders, about how you can't truly escape your past without confronting it (even when that's the hardest thing in the world to do). And it wasn't always evident in only the hero's part of the story; sometimes the villain has her own passages and fears locked away deep and tight. Sometimes the worst you can do is lie to those beside you, saying things will be alright when you know that's questionable
Non-spoilery thoughts:
My gut tells me I'm being overly charitable to this thinking it's one of the best films I've seen all year and deserves to belong on my best-of lists. My heart tells me this is an extraordinary effort on so many levels that the few cons I can come up with are minuscule in comparison
"Is this better than Stephen King's The Shining?" "Is this better than Stanley Kubrick's The Shining?" Both questions asked ad nauseam since production on this project began, let alone since release hype started with the first trailer. For my answer to both: I don't really know, and I don't really care. Because Doctor Sleep does a well enough job standing out and on its own two feet, walking the fine line between both
Two things I do know: 1) I'm done doubting Mike Flanagan. One of the finer modern directors in the genre, I do know I'll be one of the first in a seat for whatever he makes next
While we're at it, 2) the next project Rebecca Ferguson has a role in will immediately have my attention. Oh, it's Dune? Fuck yeah
Steam
1988: My Neighbor Totoro
1989: Kiki's Delivery Service
1990: Total Recall
1991: Terminator 2
1992: Hard Boiled
1993: Patlabor 2
1994: Drunken Master 2
1995: Ghost in the Shell
1996: Fargo
1997: L.A. Confidential
1998: Rushmore
1999: The Iron Giant
2000: In The Mood For Love
2001: Spirited Away
2002: Minority Report
2003: Memories of Murder
2004: Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
2005: Lady Vengeance
2006: The Prestige
2007: Hot Rod
2008: Still Walking
2009: Fantastic Mr. Fox
2010: Inception
2011: Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
2012: Django Unchained
2013: The Tale of the Princess Kaguya
2014: Ex Machina
2015: Mad Max: Fury Road
2016: The Handmaiden
2017: Blade Runner 2049
2018: Burning
2019: Parasite
Steam
One of the problems with this is that festival showings aren't always final cut, so can be quite different from the finished theatrical release, especially if it showed almost a year before general wide release. I don't apply hard-and-fast rules, but figure it's my list, so long as I'm happy with it, I'm good.
Right? People born when I was in high school
It's not right!
I thought they had made the magna into a live action as it was rumored but when I looked it up it answered that question
Still when I see it talked about I fall back to this problem even though I know the answer
I'm pretty sure there are scenes that even when I am a grizzled old man will flash into my brain unbidden
XBL - Foreverender | 3DS FC - 1418 6696 1012 | Steam ID | LoL
what
Give mike Flanagan the dark tower series
She's fucking with you. Right?
1994: Shawshank Redemption
1995: Toy Story
1996: Fargo
1997: Titanic
1998: Rushmore
1999: The Insider
2000: Memento
2001: Wet Hot American Summer
2002: Punch-Drunk Love
2003: Memories of Murder
2004: Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
2005: The 40 Year-Old Virgin (this one, admittedly, woof, does not hold up)
2006: The Prestige
2007: Michael Clayton
2008: Speed Racer
2009: A Serious Man
2010: The Social Network
2011: Moneyball
2012: Cloud Atlas
2013: The Wind Rises
2014: Whiplash
2015: Star Wars: The Force Awakens
2016: Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping
2017: Lady Bird
2018: Sorry to Bother You
2019: Parasite