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I believe the David Lynch movie that Nic Cage plays Sailor in is Wild at Heart with Laura Dern. I could be wrong, it's been years since I've seen it, but I remember loving that movie.
This interviewer is so young & completely unlearned or naive . Nicholas Cage is a very good actor. People who love to watch movies & I mean film buffs that have collections of 100s if not thousands of movies know a Great Actor from a terrible actor. The fact is that he is asking if Cage was a good actor or a bad actor. That tells me he is not a good movie critic or was born in the mid-2000s & hasn't seen any movies that Cage has been in since the late early 90s. I hope he improves his profession because that question, not knowing if Nicholas Cage is a good actor or terrible actor ? I can't take views from the interviewer seriously.
Unity of faith and morals. Very interesting. This channel proves to be an invaluable sociological mine. I wonder why it is promoted so much on my yt feed.
Watched it 2 days ago. Didnt think it was scary, and the "plot twists" are all done before. This movie tries to be the seven lambs of a 8mm pedo joker and it fails. Couldnt take it seriously.
We don't slam a spice cake for not being steak! I give Christine 8.5/10: fine effort with surprising integrity. Biggest error: windshields shatterproof since '37 so the shards wouldn't kill Arnie.
I really like this movie. Especially as a sequel to Last Evolution Kizuna. I feel that they handle similar themes in vastly different ways. With Kizuna being about growing up and 02: the beginning being about recovering from your inner child’s past trauma; it feels like the next step in that story. Even the lack of action feels complimentary to me. In Kizuna they had some of the best fights in the whole series and the Beginning feels like it’s avoiding actual fights. I’m hoping for this to become a trilogy so the themes can come together more and be resolved. I enjoyed this movie because of the fairly specific lense I’m viewing it through.
In Harm's Way is a Fan made sequel to The Doomsday Machine , you have to find the original cut , like 4 episodes long , with some original cast guest stars and great special effects
Skinny old man cares 0% what others think! To dress would be to show courtesy - foreign to his nature. And his 'creating' Laura is the parallel of Pygmalion-My Fair Lady. 1-track-mind begone!
It's TOO EASY to stuff old movies into modern viewpoints. I certainly DID NOT pick up overtly gay readings, apart from Waldo being generally effeminate (again a modern take.)
The movie is one of my favorites. Love, own it, seen it many times. First of all, let me establish, here, that I'm closer to Fred's generation; I'm not a millennial. Is the movie racist? 'll get back to that. The two leads are horrible people and should not be celebrated. They went to a virtually untouched land and interfered with their society, bringing death and imperialism in their wake, not to mention attempting to steal wealth that the Kafiri patriarchs had preserved for millennia. They were liars and criminals and cared nothing for how they disrupted the lives of the Kafiris. They represented the terrors of European imperialism. The best you could say about them is they were affably evil. In my interpretation, the original story was meant to be a critique on British imperialism and did not portray these two to be heroes. The movie makes this less clear, and I think people today would be rightfully offended if they felt that the movie was making heroes out of the leads. Unfortunately, any criticism imbedded in Huston's version would likely be lost on the younger generations that were brought up on films that have lost much of the subtlety of the past, subtexts that maybe people of my generation might pick up better. That said, the Kafiris are mostly presented as stupid, ignorant, often foolish, dogmatic, near-savages with "5 1/2 hat size[s]". They don't appear as mature, kindly, wise, generous elders, parents, and children with arts, celebrations, craftsmanship, talents, delightful play, and humor. The two British, and to a small degree the Gurkha, are presented as people full of character and unique traits. In this regard, perhaps (I hope) the millennials are more advanced than Fred's generation and would see the patronizing elements. I would like to have heard more of what BJ (Shane) had to say. Fred often dismissively cut him off, not being much of a listener, more of a talker.