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Kill Bill
Disturbing the first time. Rewatched it to see what all the hub bub was about. People like gratuitous violence. Still just as disturbing as the first time. I have made it through a few QT movies. Enjoyed The Hateful Eight.
Reign Over Me (2007) Adam Sandler, Don Cheadle, Jada Pinkett Smith, Liv Tyler, & Donald Sutherland. Adam Sandler being serious and out of sorts is a rarity and I enjoyed the film.
A man who lost his family in the September 11 attack on New York City runs into his old college roommate. Rekindling the friendship is the one thing that appears able to help the man recover from his grief.
A suburban kid in 1984 suspects that his neighbor is a serial killer..
Some good tense moments, very good recreation of mid 8os' suburbia. Pretty good movie, with good ambient music reinforcing the ominous mood. (More suspense than gore.)
We-ll......it hit me with the feeling of what passes now for the current production values. Let's take the beautiful people who are Star Trek:The Next Generation extras and make a movie about them! This flick has beautiful people, great photography, wonderful backgrounds, two great scenes of terrific dialogue that go on far, far too long but it comes down to that you don't know where the movie is going and when it finally gets there, you don't know why.
Triple Cross is a 1966 Anglo-French co-produced film directed by Terence Young and produced by Jacques-Paul Bertrand. It was released in France in December 1966 as La Fantastique histoire vraie d'Eddie Chapman, but elsewhere in Europe and the United States in 1967 as Terence Young's Triple Cross. It was filmed in Eastman Color, print by Technicolor.
Triple Cross was based loosely on the real-life story of Eddie Chapman, believed by the Nazis to be their top spy in Great Britain, although he was actually an MI5 double agent known as "Zigzag". The title of the film comes from Chapman's signature to mark he was freely transmitting by radio, a Morse code XXX. Another meaning of the title "Triple Cross" becomes clear in the final scene of the film. Chapman, sitting at a bar, is asked who he was really working for. In reply, he raises his glass in salute to his reflection in the mirror.
Saw it in the 80s, of course, but recently, I was thinking about sections of it, so decided to have it as the Friday Night Horror Flick. Came to find out that my copy, bought how many years ago at 1/2 Price, had never been opened.
Still pretty good, went through the entire flick without too many breaks, even writing my own fantasy into it (of a super S-67 that just had to make an emergency landing there).
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