erialc 2 Posted January 6, 2008 Share Posted January 6, 2008 I've been rebuilding my DVD collection so have a few more to add that get watched a lot! Arrgh I don't even know if I should add them here ....but anyways I have watched them more than a few times so for me they are there with my favorites The Fooball factory It's just to me a good film but yeah very violent film about a group of footie thugs, with Danny Dyer, ahh he's a good actor and cute to boot It's not the greatest film in the world and it probably won't fill you with happiness but it does have some extremely funny one liners in it. It's violent and explicit but I like it despite it really not being a fantastic film. It made me laugh, shudder, cringe and sigh. if you don't like to watch films containing any of these things then it's not for you. Trainspotting I read the book when it first came out years ago and was chilled to the bone by it. I have pretty much read everything by Irvine Welsh I can get my hands on. hehe my copy of Trainspotting is so well read and borrowed that it's now in a bag replaced by a newer copy for rereading, it's literally falling apart. This for me is undoubtably one of THE best Brit films to have come out in a very very long time! This film will have you wide eyed, laughing one moment, shuddering the next, crying and laughing together. It's a real rollercoaster of emotions film and it pulls no punches. if you know any of Irvine Welsh's stuff you will know how his books and thankfully this film works. Be warned though it's about Heroin use and is very graphic. Still reading the book from time to time and watching the film when the kids aren't around Everything I watched 'Everything' whilst sitting by the pc and chatting on and off in irc to Dredd, lol all I kept saying to him was that Ray Winstone was sooo utterly compelling and yet out of character with the lack of violence his character displayed. that for me just made him even more menacing. I think by the end of the film I was so tense, waiting for that massive explosion of violence. This is an incredibly low budget film, with very very little other cast than Ray Winstone and Jan Graveson. It really is a must see brit film, funny, Dark, intriguing and yet very moving. ahh I am going to watch it again tonight Nil by Mouth Again Ray Winstone and Kathy Burke. Written and Directed by Gary Oldman. This is an incredibly believable and shocking film about domestic violence. It had be gripping the arm of the sofa and for about half an hour I couldn't even get up to turn the dvd off when it had finished. This film will make you cry and it will make you feel numb angry and shocked it has warmth but it's not about making you feel good. It's dark but once you start watching it you can't turn it off. A harsh portrayal of domestic violence but if anyone has experienced it they will know how damningly accurate this film is. The acting, writing and directing is superb. Gary Oldman has a couple of his family members in this film hehe can you spot them? It was awarded 8 iirc awards and I can see why. Not one for the family to gather round and watch but I have watched it a few times.....alone Yeah there is a sort of writer/actor/Director theme going on there lol, they are pretty dark but also I have to include them in my all time favorite films. Link to comment
Ike 1 Posted January 6, 2008 Share Posted January 6, 2008 Hmmm, hmmm, hmmmm. Tough, tough, tough. I think for me that this depends on the period in my life. In college I watched Monty Python's Life of Brian and Holy Grail a lot. For a while I was watching Four Weddings and a Funeral about every weekend . . . along with A Fish Called Wanda and When Harry Met Sally on a frequent basis. Lately I have been wathcing Love Actually, Notting Hill, and Groundhog Day a lot. I've also seen the Lord of the Rings, the original Star Wars Trilogy, and Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom quite a few times. However, in keeping with the spirit of the question, I would have to say that I have probably seen Groundhog Day more than any other movie. I just watch it again and again and it never changes. Link to comment
FrostElfGuard 9 Posted January 9, 2008 Share Posted January 9, 2008 My favourite movie of all time remains "Star Wars" Episode IV. Possibly subtitled "A New Hope" even at first release time. I saw this 7 times in the theatres between 1977 and 1978. 7 times. The film was held over for an unbelievable 6 months at the theatre in the small town where I lived in the middle of no where. Full houses almost every screening! The theatre owners probably could retire on what they made that year alone! Apparently Lucas made this film with the 15 minute climax formula based on the old serial films. He was young and worked up the Western and serials together to make a Science Fiction masterpiece. My fav of all time: Star Wars Episode IV. Link to comment
Timotheus 416 Posted January 9, 2008 Share Posted January 9, 2008 (edited) I've watched Ghost Rider so many times since I got it, it's scary. No not the movie, it's the 10 times I've watched it in a month that scare me I like the movie. Only bad thing there is that the end scene really sucks. Edited January 9, 2008 by Timotheus Link to comment
gogoblender 3,071 Posted January 10, 2008 Share Posted January 10, 2008 Ghost rider? I don't get it..how come? I saw the movie...actually I enjoyed it...is it the effects? Was GhostRider one of your favorites from early comic book readings? Cage's acting? gogo p.s. hmmm, I really like your post Ike. I'm kind of that same way as well. It seems like...a times, there are elements or "things" from a movie that I need to discover or travel at periods of my life. Yes, I had a ground hog day phase too...that one lasted a year, lol! A comic reinvention of The Myth of Sisyphus...who woulda thunk it p.s. khannnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn... *sigh* ... yeah that was really good huh. Link to comment
Timotheus 416 Posted January 17, 2008 Share Posted January 17, 2008 Well could be the effects I guess. And well Cage isn't spectacular (quite a few stupid things he does in the movie anyway, at some stages he really lacks character) but I really like the whole storyline. But that ending. Jeez. It should've ended with "Legion"s death. Not with the whole "you don't scare me and if you hurt anyone else I will drive by your house and steal your socks" sounding speech... Link to comment
Silearth 6 Posted January 18, 2008 Share Posted January 18, 2008 I would have to say the Fellowship of the Ring. I have watched it more than 30 times to date and actually watched it 3 times on one day. Link to comment
EvilSanta 0 Posted January 28, 2008 Share Posted January 28, 2008 "The Good, The Bad and the Ugly", a defining Western made by Sergio Leone, and the last of his "dollar" trilogy, in 1966. It's a masterful reworking of a genre most had considered to be finished into a three hour spectacle that never wastes a scene or a line of dialogue. Which is saying something when you consider that there's not a single spoken line in the first 10 minutes of the film. The principle leads were never better, although Eastwood largely just goes through the motions. Eli Wallach (as the Ugly) was born for the role as the grubby mexican bandit, Tuco, with much of his work improvised - although with Wallach not speaking Italian and Leone not speaking English, direction was given in French, which probably accounts for some of that. For me though, seeing Van Cleef as the sneering villain, Angel Eyes was an inspired piece of casting and a theme which has stuck with me - playing against type. It was a theme Leone would use again in what is in my opinion the much better "Once Upon A Time in America" with Peter Fonda as the murderous "Frank" - Van Cleef was good, but there's only once reaction to seeing a clean cut, blue eyed Peter Fonda shoot a 12 year old boy: "Omg that's Peter Fonda" Referred to as "spaghetti westerns" in a way that was hoped to denegrate them, I think of this (and Once Upon A Time) as cowboy opera's which is probably appropriate given Leon's italian roots. Everyone has a theme, the film has a palpable beat and often you can't imagine a scene without Morricone's haunting music running through it. This is particularly true of the scene at the end of the desert trek with Blondie close to death and hallucinating (he thinks) the horse drawn wagon pounding toward him. And the Betterville prisoner of war camp... the torture scene of Tuco with the confederate band playing to hide the sound of his screaming... genius. And I've not even mentioned the gunfight at the end. But speaking of scenes for me it's the battle at the bridge that steals the show. Shot with 1500 extra's it's easy to see why the battle seems so real - and visceral. Famously the Spanish army built the bridge and then blew it up before Leone had his camera's running. They then rebuilt it and blew it up, again. Favourite line? Tuco's "When you gotta shoot, shoot, don't talk." A man like him would definately take a bath with a gun. I don't know how many times I've watched it - whenever I can't sleep, or feel ill, or just have "a spare 3 hours" it goes on. Link to comment
TelariTurunen 0 Posted May 11, 2008 Share Posted May 11, 2008 My favourite film all the time is Japanese "Ringu". I watched it... lol, I don't know... about 50 times and still I don't get bored Link to comment
toret 0 Posted May 11, 2008 Share Posted May 11, 2008 The movie I've seen the most is probably Airplane!. Haven't seen it in ages, but I loved it when I was a kid. Saw it many many times back then. Really made me laugh. Link to comment
kunstler 0 Posted June 3, 2008 Share Posted June 3, 2008 I like Quentin Tarantino's movies a lot ... so it would have to be a Pulp Fiction Link to comment
stubbie 21 Posted June 4, 2008 Share Posted June 4, 2008 Oh gosh.......This is kinda embarrassing, but in all honesty the movie I have watched the most is.......................... The Sound of Music Every time it is shown on tv I have to watch it. I admit I am pathetic, but I love the story and the songs. I have always been interested in anything to do with WW2 so I guess that was the initial drawing factor for me. But I also love the songs, and that's coming from someone who's taste in music lies along the lines of Pink Floyd and Led Zeppelin. So while I wouldn't say its my all out best fav movie, it has to take the title of most watched stubbs Link to comment
Arafinwe 0 Posted September 11, 2008 Share Posted September 11, 2008 (edited) The movie I have seen the most is Dune from 1984. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0087182/ I saw that movie the first time when I was 15 and it just became my most favorite movie ever. It's an oldy but the movie has a tremendous story, great actors and actresses..the entire mood is just awesome to me. I have watch that movie so many times now that I actualy lost count, but everytime it is still awesome. Edited September 11, 2008 by Arafinwe Link to comment
jibjab 0 Posted September 11, 2008 Share Posted September 11, 2008 This is the movie that I have seen the most times War Games Love it Link to comment
gogoblender 3,071 Posted September 11, 2008 Share Posted September 11, 2008 This is the movie that I have seen the most times War Games Love it Loved the first one Jib Just saw Wargames 2 and wrote about it. Yuck gogo Link to comment
jibjab 0 Posted September 11, 2008 Share Posted September 11, 2008 Glad that I havent see it yet then if its so bad. Link to comment
fRACTAL 0 Posted September 11, 2008 Share Posted September 11, 2008 The movie I have seen the most is Dune from 1984. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0087182/ I saw that movie the first time when I was 15 and it just became my most favorite movie ever. It's an oldy but the movie has a tremendous story, great actors and actresses..the entire mood is just awesome to me. I have watch that movie so many times now that I actualy lost count, but everytime it is still awesome. Meh I thought that film had issues, it was a bit lopsided, like half the film was spent on the books first 2 chapters, and the rest of the plot was heavily condensed in the film It is good though ~Doom Oh, and I've probably watched LOTR most... Link to comment
Arafinwe 0 Posted September 11, 2008 Share Posted September 11, 2008 Meh I thought that film had issues, it was a bit lopsided, like half the film was spent on the books first 2 chapters, and the rest of the plot was heavily condensed in the filmIt is good though ~Doom Oh, and I've probably watched LOTR most... Well I never read the book untill about 6 months after the movie, so it was all new to me when I saw it. As for LoTR...yeah those are also very good indeed. I have all 3 on DVD, and the last 2 are Directors cut's. Link to comment
trd 0 Posted September 13, 2008 Share Posted September 13, 2008 clerks, as I have had many friends that had not seen it during college and they needed to see it. then later in life it is to show folks that dogma is not just a great standalone movie, they have to see at least the first movie, arg! I can do without ben, but him being a near complete tool is best shown in mallrats. go stink palm! Link to comment
Jrmoore2 0 Posted June 28, 2009 Share Posted June 28, 2009 Reviving This! I Would Have To Say A Tie Between Shaun Of The Dead And Pink Floyd's The Wall. Both Are Great Movies. Shaun Of the Dead Is A Bust Out Laughing Comedy, While The Wall Is A Psychological Thriller, Tied In With Great Music! -Jamie. Link to comment
tekken179 1 Posted June 28, 2009 Share Posted June 28, 2009 definently batman im a complete batman fanatic got all movies and all cartoon episodes on dvd t-shirts figures up in attic rotting away now to old for them :L Link to comment
Viper007 0 Posted June 29, 2009 Share Posted June 29, 2009 Equilibrium Best movie EVER! Link to comment
Grillgrim 0 Posted June 29, 2009 Share Posted June 29, 2009 A toss up between Tombstone, Big Trouble in Little China, and Army of Darkness. They are all on such regular rotation it is hard to know for sure. Link to comment
Kaia 0 Posted June 29, 2009 Share Posted June 29, 2009 My single most watched movie would have to be From Dusk til Dawn Link to comment
hsedai 0 Posted September 12, 2009 Share Posted September 12, 2009 Blue Brothers although my copy of "Gogo-Blender sings the Blues" is a bit worn out too. His canadian accented angst really gets me Link to comment
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