Movies in General

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
It's junk food, like McDonald's. Sure, you get some fries and a burger once in a while because it's the most convenient and cheapest thing to do at the moment, but that doesn't mean it's good food. McDonald's also make a lot of money, a LOT more than Michael Bay, but that still doesn't mean it's good food.

And so what if there's a lot of work that goes into the sfx? Doesn't mean I need to appreciate the effort if the movie itself sucks, and it certainly doesn't mean it's better than the original cartoons.

Huh?? You guys crack me up..you haven't lived a hot minute but you are experts on everything..jeez..And I'm no expert. as for films I do like old movies...as I pointed out. I do not like todays modern dramas because they are to graphic. Too much foul language, nudity etc...etc...

The reason I pointed out the amount of work in SiFi and in all films is because I worked that industry for a short 16 months. Trust me those folks work hard. It is typical for many young people today to have no respect for someone else job. Typical. Just my opinion.

And still the bottom line is those type of films action/adventure/sf-fi/fansaty make the producers a lot of money.
 

AssassinsMace

Lieutenant General
Art house movies don't reign in any market in the world. The reason why I want China to dump their filmmaking rules is because its stifles imagination. You ask the majority of scientists and engineers in the US what aspired them and it was watching many of the movies and TV shows as children which China prevents being made domestically. Take a look at one of the reasons why 2012 was such a big hit in China. It was because it showed China in a positive role helping to save the world. I'm no fan of Roland Emmerich movies but he hit a cord in China and he was simply playing on the sign of the times and not some political message. Soon after 2012 Avatar beat them all including Confucius at the box office. There's a market for those types of movies and why should it be dominated in China by foreign media companies.
 

bladerunner

Banned Idiot
Got to say I'm pretty excited for the new Tron movie, mainly because the soundtrack is entirely made by Daft Punk

OMG For some reason I missed Tron1 and was looking forward to this remake? So I took myself off to listen to some of their music.

I cant stand it. and not only that I cant stand films and TV series that have music continually thumping away in the background. THats why I couldnt stand "Miami Vice"
 

Finn McCool

Captain
Registered Member
OMG For some reason I missed Tron1 and was looking forward to this remake? So I took myself off to listen to some of their music.

I cant stand it. and not only that I cant stand films and TV series that have music continually thumping away in the background. THats why I couldnt stand "Miami Vice"

Haha :rofl: I would imagine that old guys like you and Popeye wouldn't be terribly into the whole electronica thing.
 

bladerunner

Banned Idiot
Haha :rofl: I would imagine that old guys like you and Popeye wouldn't be terribly into the whole electronica thing.

If its a remake of the original release, ill wait to it comes out on video/or pirated download , he he, and then in the same room Ill watch Tron2 with the dialog of Tron1, problem solved.

P/S: My wife just told me that Tron1 is too geeky for me and i will get bored with it, because of all the talking, so i guess i wont bother.
 
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bladerunner

Banned Idiot
So, anybody watched Repo! The Genetic Opera?

It's definitely a different film, lots of singing, lots of dancing, lots of murder, lots of gore, it's, omg :D

One of the search links described it as below. Now I gotta to see it to view my namesake

Repo! The Genetic Opera, a Rocky-Horror meets Bladerunner rock opera / movie musical
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Spartan95

Junior Member
Another Zhang Yimou blockbuster in the works:

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Christian Bale to Star in Zhang Yimou's Nanjing Heroes
Source: The Associated Press, Edward Douglas December 22, 2010

The Associated Press is reporting that award-winning Chinese filmmaker Zhang Yimou (Hero, Raise the Red Lantern) is starting his next project with the working title Nanjing Heroes in January with actor Christian Bale starring as a priest caught up in the brutal 1937 invasion and pillaging of the Chinese capitol by Japanese troops.

The film is based on Chinese author Yan Geling's novel "The 13 Women of Nanjing," about 13 prostitutes who stepped in for female university students who were to be taken as "escorts" for the troops during the period when nearly 20,000 women and girls were raped and killed by the Japanese troops.

The horrifying wartime atrocities known as the "Rape of Nanking" has previously been covered in recent films like the documentary Nanking, Florian Gallenberger's drama John Rabe and the controversial Chinese blockbuster City of Life and Death.

Bale's character is a Catholic priest who shelters a group of prostitutes and female students in his church during the invasion. Zhang said that he picked Bale for his versatility and dedication to his roles with the actor doing an impressive amount of research into the history of the massacre, something that greatly moved the filmmaker.

Director Zhang's $90 million production, which will mix Chinese and English, is slated for a global release in December 2011.

I think this is going to be another tear-jerker.

It will also probably result in anti-Japanese sentiments when it hits the cinemas.
 

Spartan95

Junior Member
Sounds like yet another lame attempt to pander to the Hollywood audience.

Not surprising since that is where part of the big bucks are from. And adding Christian Bale to the cast will help with marketing it to western audiences.

Nonetheless, if Zhang Yimou is returning to his artistic movie roots, than this is likely to be a classic. Personally, I think it will be a big hit in China along the lines of the Tangshan quake movie this year.

Incidentally, there is another Chinese block buster movie that will be released in 2011 directed by Feng Xiaogang that is also set in the Sino-Japanese War.
 

Spartan95

Junior Member
This movie sounds interesting. Will probably be checking it out:

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"Let the Bullets Fly" scores big at box office
Posted: 30 December 2010 1252 hrs

BEIJING - A new film from one of the bad boys of Chinese cinema, Jiang Wen -- a scathing satire on power, greed and corruption -- has critics cheering and movie-goers queuing up to make it a box office hit.

"Let the Bullets Fly", directed by and starring Jiang, raked in a total of 400 million yuan (60 million dollars) in its first 11 days of release, putting it on course to smash the ticket sales record for a domestically-made film.

The success of the film comes at the end of a banner year for Chinese cinema, with total annual box office revenues expected to surpass 10 billion yuan for the first time, according to state media.

The fast-paced movie, which also stars Hong Kong star Chow Yun-Fat and local favourite Ge You, has won acclaim from critics for its satirical treatment of the corruption and graft plaguing contemporary China.

It revolves around a bloody battle in a remote 1920s Chinese town to monopolise local riches between a bandit played by Jiang, who masquerades as the newly appointed county head, and a local warlord played by Chow.

The leading Southern Daily newspaper praised Jiang and said the film's message would not be lost in a society increasingly divided by a gaping rich-poor income gap.

"Without political corruption in the upper classes... the blatant plundering of the people by the corrupt gentry would never take place," the paper said in an opinion piece on the film.

"Without the weakness and stupidity of the lower classes, they (the corrupt gentry) would not be able to build their fortresses founded on social injustice."

One review posted on a blog on the popular portal Netease said the film fully embodied a slogan made famous by Communist revolutionary leader Mao Zedong -- "political power comes from the barrel of a gun".

Jiang had "exposed and satirised the weaknesses and shortcomings of Chinese society and its people", it went on. "Dressed up in commercial wrappings, he has packaged a work greatly steeped in political meaning."

Jiang, 47, reportedly had little if any trouble with China's strict film censors in releasing the film -- a welcome change from a decade ago, when his war-time black comedy "Devils on the Doorstep," was banned in China in 2000.

That film won the Grand Prix at the Cannes Film Festival, but was apparently barred from the domestic market for portraying the invading Japanese army as too sympathetic, and the Chinese peasantry as too simple-minded.

At the time, Jiang -- also one of the country's top actors -- was reportedly prohibited from directing films in China for seven years. It was only in 2007 that his art house film "The Sun Also Rises" was released in his own country.

A critic on the movie website twitchfilm.com praised its broad appeal: "Murder, molestation, dismemberment and even ritual suicide are all handled with a surprising degree of levity that will induce laughter and wincing in equal measure.

"The script does take a few broad satirical swipes at government corruption and unscrupulous behaviour of civil servants, but nothing likely to cause a commotion in Beijing, unlike some of Jiang's previous efforts."

At the box office, "Let The Bullets Fly" has easily bested the offerings from other noted Chinese directors, such as Feng Xiaogang's "If You are the One 2" and Chen Kaige's "Sacrifice", as the key New Year's period gets under way.

Feng's "Aftershock," based on an earthquake that devastated a Chinese city more than 30 years ago, is the highest-grossing domestic film to date, raking in 532 million yuan after a three-week run earlier this year.

Its takings are so far however dwarfed by James Cameron's "Avatar" which became China's all-time box office champion, grossing 1.3 billion yuan, state media said previously.

- AFP/ir
 
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