Originally posted by Pcdunn
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Well, if we're talking horror movies with vehicles...
Originally posted by sdreid View PostHow about Killdozer!?
I saw it again recently on TV, and it holds up very well.
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Originally posted by kensei View PostAnyway, all in all I thought (Godzilla) was well worth two hours of one's time for any lover of giant Japanese monsters.
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Originally posted by Scorpio View PostI like Alien, The Thing, The Fly, and the Mothman prophecies; but otherwise find monster movies unengaging. King Kong is also good film but i dont find it scary.
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I like Alien, The Thing, The Fly, and the Mothman prophecies; but otherwise find monster movies unengaging. King Kong is also good film but i dont find it scary.
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I was bringing up the latest "Godzilla" reboot a few posts back and I never came back to it once I'd seen it, so better late than never I guess.
The focus was supposed to be on modern FX giving us a realistic looking Godzilla but still remaining true to the upright stance that fans are loyal to from the days of the guy in the rubber suit, and it definitely delivered! This Godzilla looked and sounded amazing, commanding instant respect and awe from the moment his mere act of emerging from the ocean caused a tsunami that drowned a city. My only complaint would be that for a movie called "Godzilla," one would think that the title character would actually be on screen a bit more than he actually was. Don't get me wrong, what you see of him you will never forget, but there should've been at least a little more. The two other monsters that he fought- which are called MUTOs and have been described as looking like a cross between a preying mantis and a staple remover- were given more attention.
Also, I'll avoid spoilers here for anyone who hasn't seen it but Brian Cranston turned out not to be the actual star of the movie as he was kind of implied to be. That distinction goes to Aaron Taylor Johnson who played his son. Anyway, all in all I thought it was well worth two hours of one's time for any lover of giant Japanese monsters.
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To Scorpio
I've seen the Descent. I don't rate it, it takes far too long to get going.
Cheers John
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Has anyone scene a horror film called descent ?
Its about some women who encounter a homicidal subterranean species on a climbing trip.
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Not sure where the horror heroine originated.
Perhaps it was 'Texas chainsaw massacre', but it quickly became a cliche.
Only ' The Evil dead' stands out in memory as bucking the trend.
Bruce Campbell was Sam Raimi's pal, so it figures.
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Originally posted by Scorpio View PostIs misogyny a real problem in horror movies?.
Off the top of my head, two of my favorite films, The evil dead, and Friday the 13th seem to have fallen onto this trap, excuse the phrase.
Its not just a fault of the Z graders, either;Even great directors working in the genre offend sometimes. Kubric's The shining, and Peckinpah's Straw dogs both earned loud criticism for the portrayal of violence against women.
Human foibles are the soul of good horror and i suppose misogyny needs to be included under that banner, but we have all seen horror movies where female directed violence is used to titillate the audience.
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Misogyny
Is misogyny a real problem in horror movies?.
Off the top of my head, two of my favorite films, The evil dead, and Friday the 13th seem to have fallen onto this trap, excuse the phrase.
Its not just a fault of the Z graders, either;Even great directors working in the genre offend sometimes. Kubric's The shining, and Peckinpah's Straw dogs both earned loud criticism for the portrayal of violence against women.
Human foibles are the soul of good horror and i suppose misogyny needs to be included under that banner, but we have all seen horror movies where female directed violence is used to titillate the audience.
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I think one of the few things the Matthew Broderick Godzilla of a few years back got right was the pointing out of how the monster was actually called Gojira originally, but when the western press aired footage of a frightened Japanese sailor who'd seen the beast saying that name his thick accent sounded to western ears like he was saying "Godzilla," so that's what it got called in America.
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