What are we watching now?

We just saw Safehouse from 2012. Total ripoff in every superficial way of the Bourne series, but better than any of the Bourne sequels. Story wise it was standard espionage faire, but it has a great cast, and I felt like Denzel Washington still cared somewhat doing this film. The hilarious thing was, instead of saying Jason Bourne with gravity a million times in one movie, they just replaced that with Tobin Frost. If we were doing shots on his name, I'd be in bad shape right now.
 
I’ve been watching this brilliant Australian series over the last few weeks .
I’m halfway through series 5 streaming free on channel 4 in the UK.
It’s had me pissing myself laughing 🤣😂
Rake

Acclaimed Aussie comedy-drama. Brilliant barrister Cleaver Greene defends the biggest crooks. Sharp-witted and self-destructive, he loves boozing, betting, women and the law. As for justice? No drama.
 
As my, "watching in the background during work" show, I just started streaming the old classic Boston Legal.

I hadn't seen it since it aired, and it still holds up, Funny AF. Also, Julie Bowen :love

Boston Legal seems to be a forgotten show in the pantheon of great comedies of the last 20 years or so, but it was a ridiculously funny show.
 
Mo Amer Vagabond from 2018. This guy had me in tears. He's so damn good. I see he has a TV show on Netflix, and I'm going to have to see that at some point, but I see they also have another special of his, so I'll have to see that first. This guy is fucking amazing.
 
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I am not into distortion pedals but like the way he presents it.

Hope he demos the Tu-3S sometime. It helps people "chug" after tuning to drop D :)
 
New season of Last of Us is upon us but it will probably take a few episodes to get going...so the weekly drip of episodes will be a drag.
 
Rush from 1991. I had seen it once a while ago and remembered correctly that Jason Patric is fantastic in it. This is him working his hardest, and it's so good. His father is Jason Miller, the guy who played the younger priest in The Exorcist, and I always lament that Jason Miller didn't have a career in great films after that. At least there are some really cool and interesting performances with his son doing serious and cool work, and this is one of those. The soundtrack is by Eric Clapton, and to me it just doesn't have any real intelligence to it; it's just a white dude playing blues to me, not nearly playing off the emotional complexity of the actors and the story; that's a real waste and a detraction from the power of the story. But Jason Patric is so goddamn hard of a worker in this film that he totally carries it. I highly recommend it for his performance alone. A very cool and related double feature would be to watch his two great undercover films with four letter titles back to back: Rush then Narc!
 
Started watching LUCY on netflix last night. Not bad...

"A woman, accidentally caught in a dark deal, turns the tables on her captors and transforms into a merciless warrior evolved beyond human logic."
I hate that movie so much. It's as if the filmmakers thought that everyone watching it was dumb as bricks. It's not even the fun kind of dumb.
 
Finished up new season of Daredevil. Solid ending but def a cliffhanger. I think like a lot of shows right now they could have boiled it down a few episodes but overall pretty good.
 
We just watched G20 that was just released on Amazon Prime. It was just cathartic as hell in so many ways, but I'll leave that aside and just talk about the movie itself, which makes me think of several aspects of modern filmmaking and how much worse it is than what directors have created in the past en masse.

I was expecting it to be hammy because of the premise of The President becoming John McLane from Die Hard, but that's completely what it was. What was surprising was that they also really tried to make it a serious action film with real acting and writing with commentary.

I don't like modern films for many reasons, and I don't know if this is a modern trend, but parts felt a little like a poorly written family dramedy. And the subplots in general were half baked, which just felt overall like shitty writing.

Aside from Viola Davis and Ramón Rodríguez, and Sabrina Impacciatore, the car took away from the movie rather than adding to it. Modern films to me tend to have actors that look like such a completely perfect version of their purpose that they, paradoxically, have no character, like they were cast completely from head shots then were all put through some stylist who makes them look like a model on the cover of a soap opera magazine only sold at supermarket checkout stands. And modern acting to me is mostly people looking so stereotypically perfect for the part it's like a caricature of what you would expect that role to be. Which is to say, for many characters there is no acting.

To a lot of actors, they truly think acting is memorizing lines and reciting them like a child summarizing a war in front of class. It's like watching children who think the primary goal here is just to remember every bullet point in the recitation, but not at all to internalize anything that the lines or the themes or the plot lines imply, or, God forbid, to go the extra step to invent anything at all about a character and internalize that. You could, for many modern actors, substitute AI and have the same quality of acting. I see this in actors of every age and ethnicity. They're just casting bad actors, and directors seem to have no interaction with them at all. I'm not sure at all what these directors think they're doing these days.

The action was cool, I think, but it definitely followed a trend of what few modern era action films (outside the Mission: Impossible) series in which the camera movements become so violent that it is hard to tell what's going on with the hand to hand combat, whatever cool moves are happening are obscuring by the jerking motion and disorienting camera angles. There were definitely very cool combat moves, but they had no impact because I would have to sit with a blu-ray and go frame by frame to be able to tell for sure what just happened. The rest of the film was filmed traditionally, so it wasn't like that at all. They really hid the most important element of the film, the action.

I like the very few performances I've seen from Viola Davis; I think she's a serious actor, and she made the overly modern in a bad way movie way better, along with her equality earnest supporting actor Ramón Rodríguez, playing her lead Secret Service agent. Davis plays the film as well as she can with the poor writing, and she's able still to create a character I'm interested to follow. It really makes me want to see her in something that isn't written so poorly. I remember her in Blackhat, the first film that made me lose hope for Michael Mann, and it was a similar situation, in which I was just left shaking my head that a good actor was going to waste under a crap movie.
 
We just watched G20 that was just released on Amazon Prime. It was just cathartic as hell in so many ways, but I'll leave that aside and just talk about the movie itself, which makes me think of several aspects of modern filmmaking and how much worse it is than what directors have created in the past en masse.

I was expecting it to be hammy because of the premise of The President becoming John McLane from Die Hard, but that's completely what it was. What was surprising was that they also really tried to make it a serious action film with real acting and writing with commentary.

I don't like modern films for many reasons, and I don't know if this is a modern trend, but parts felt a little like a poorly written family dramedy. And the subplots in general were half baked, which just felt overall like shitty writing.

Aside from Viola Davis and Ramón Rodríguez, and Sabrina Impacciatore, the car took away from the movie rather than adding to it. Modern films to me tend to have actors that look like such a completely perfect version of their purpose that they, paradoxically, have no character, like they were cast completely from head shots then were all put through some stylist who makes them look like a model on the cover of a soap opera magazine only sold at supermarket checkout stands. And modern acting to me is mostly people looking so stereotypically perfect for the part it's like a caricature of what you would expect that role to be. Which is to say, for many characters there is no acting.

To a lot of actors, they truly think acting is memorizing lines and reciting them like a child summarizing a war in front of class. It's like watching children who think the primary goal here is just to remember every bullet point in the recitation, but not at all to internalize anything that the lines or the themes or the plot lines imply, or, God forbid, to go the extra step to invent anything at all about a character and internalize that. You could, for many modern actors, substitute AI and have the same quality of acting. I see this in actors of every age and ethnicity. They're just casting bad actors, and directors seem to have no interaction with them at all. I'm not sure at all what these directors think they're doing these days.

The action was cool, I think, but it definitely followed a trend of what few modern era action films (outside the Mission: Impossible) series in which the camera movements become so violent that it is hard to tell what's going on with the hand to hand combat, whatever cool moves are happening are obscuring by the jerking motion and disorienting camera angles. There were definitely very cool combat moves, but they had no impact because I would have to sit with a blu-ray and go frame by frame to be able to tell for sure what just happened. The rest of the film was filmed traditionally, so it wasn't like that at all. They really hid the most important element of the film, the action.

I like the very few performances I've seen from Viola Davis; I think she's a serious actor, and she made the overly modern in a bad way movie way better, along with her equality earnest supporting actor Ramón Rodríguez, playing her lead Secret Service agent. Davis plays the film as well as she can with the poor writing, and she's able still to create a character I'm interested to follow. It really makes me want to see her in something that isn't written so poorly. I remember her in Blackhat, the first film that made me lose hope for Michael Mann, and it was a similar situation, in which I was just left shaking my head that a good actor was going to waste under a crap movie.
It's supposed to be terrible but I want to watch it.


:facepalm:brick:rofl
 
It's supposed to be terrible but I want to watch it.


:facepalm:brick:rofl

I was totally expecting that! Kara Swisher said it's so bad but so good, which made me want to see it, but I disagree with her on this. To me what makes it bad is not that it has a hilariously inept charm like Miami Connection, it's just that it's bad modern acting from the supporting cast, and no directing at all. It's like most of the actors are in some forgettable TV show, and the three I listed are doing something else.

I just wanted to see a black woman president fight a bunch of money hungry South Africans, and that symbolism was enough for me.
 
Watched first episode of Last of Us much to my own chagrin. Ellie is a godawful character (not sure how she is in the game but she is insufferable in the show) and Pedro Pascal should really stop being in everything. Ugh. Also; the Walking Dead Zombie Horror Starter Kit is fucking such a snoozefest route to take.
 
Watched first episode of Last of Us much to my own chagrin. Ellie is a godawful character (not sure how she is in the game but she is insufferable in the show) and Pedro Pascal should really stop being in everything. Ugh. Also; the Walking Dead Zombie Horror Starter Kit is fucking such a snoozefest route to take.
I couldn’t do it. I don’t remotely get the appeal of it.
 
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