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Stonepony 04-24-2016 06:27 PM

10 movies i love that you've ( probably) never heard of
 
" I welcome you to Crackerbox Palace, we've been expecting you" ( George Harrison)


I love movies...classics to goofy. I wanted to list a few movies i love that are not on the obvious list ( Casablanca, Butch Cassidy..., Young Frankenstein etc). You've likely not heard of them...but they are soo good!

1) We're No Angels ( Comedy,1955). Put me on a desert island island and I can
only have 1 movie...this may be it. Humphrey Bogart, Peter Ustinov and Aldo
Ray as 3 19th century escape convicts from "Devil's Island" take refuge in the
shop of a bumbling storekeeper and his family on Xmas Eve. I can't say
enough about how much I love this one
2) The last of Sheila ( Thriller,1973) . All star cast ( including Raquel Welch( serious crush), Dyan
Cannon ( serious crush!) and Richard Benjamin ) are invited by host James Coburn to his yacht
where a thrilling scavenger hunt takes place to reveal his wife's killer. Creepy
suspense
3) Ensign Pulver ( comedy, 1964). Twice a year I'd feign illness to stay home from
school to catch this on TV. Campy sequel to " Mr. Roberts" starring Robert
Walker Jr. ,Walter Mathau and Burl Ives and Millie Perkins ( serious crush) I'm the only person on Earth who
owned this on Blue Ray. It doesn't hold up to when I was a kid, but still love it.
4) The Great Race ( Comedy,1965) Tony Curtis, Jack Lemon, Natalie Wood ( serious crush!). This
movie was introduced to me by my dad. My kids love it as will my grandkids.
This movie is just great fun. Also contains, without question, the greatest pie
fight scene in cinematic history. Google " Great Race pie fight"- hilarious!
5) The Getaway (action,1972) Steve McQueen, Ali Macgraw ( serious crush). Bank robbers on the
run with tons of gunfire, sexual tension. If you don't think Steve McQueen is
the coolest due on the big screen, you're either a Paul Newman fan or
delusional
6) Man's Favorite Sport (comedy,1964) Rock Hudson, Paula Prentiss( serious crush!). A sporting
goods and fishing author is forced by his publisher to represent them in a large
fishing contest....but he's never even fished. Campy, 60's movie. I love this
one....and did I mention Paula Prentiss...huge crush
7) Phantasm ( horror,1979) "BOY!!!!!!"
8) Shakiest Gun in the West ( comedy,1968) Don knots and a nervous old West
dentist turned gunfighter. Barbara Rhoades ( serious crush) is great! Childhood fav still funny as hell.
9) The Vanishing ( thriller,1988) Dutch film!!! ( Not the crappy remake). About
disappearance of young Dutch woman at a Hwy rest stop and her lover's
obsessive search fro her. Heart wrenching film...I haven't seen it in 20 years
but it still haunts me. Don't mistake this with the Kieffer Sutherland remake.
10) Return of the Living Dead ( comedy,1985) Black comedy in Living Dead
setting. Hilarious movie.Even funnier than it tries to be.

I know a lot of these are 60s-70s...but they are fantastic movies, at least I think
so. I'd like to see some of your obscure, or off the radar movies that you think are classics but we've likely not seen.

irv 04-24-2016 06:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Stonepony (Post 1531406)
I love movies...classics to goofy. I wanted to list a few movies i love that are not on the obvious list ( Casablanca, Butch Cassidy..., Young Frankenstein etc). You've likely not heard of them...but they are soo good!

1) We're No Angels ( Comedy,1955). Put me on a desert island island and I can
only have 1 movie...this may be it. Humphrey Bogart, Peter Ustinov and Aldo
Ray as 3 19th century escape convicts from "Devil's Island" take refuge in the
shop of a bumbling storekeeper and his family on Xmas Eve. I can't say
enough about how much I love this one
2) The last of Sheila ( Thriller,1973) . All star cast ( including Raquel Welch, Dyan
Cannon and Richard Benjamin ) are invited by host James Coburn to his yacht
where a thrilling scavenger hunt takes place to reveal his wife's killer. Creepy
suspense
3) Ensign Pulver ( comedy, 1964). Twice a year I'd feign illness to stay home from
school to catch this on TV. Campy sequel to " Mr. Roberts" starring Robert
Walker Jr. ,Walter Mathau and Burl Ives. I'm the only person on Earth who
owned this on Blue Ray. It doesn't hold up to when I was a kid, but still love it.
4) The Great Race ( Comedy,1965) Tony Curtis, Jack Lemon, Natalie Wood. This
movie was introduced to me by my dad. My kids love it as will my grandkids.
This movie is just great fun. Also contains, without question, the greatest pie
fight scene in cinematic history. Google " Great Race pie fight"- hilarious!
5) The Getaway (action,1972) Steve McQueen, Ali Macgraw. Bank robbers on the
run with tons of gunfire, sexual tension. If you don't think Steve McQueen is
the coolest due on the big screen, you're either a Paul Newman fan or
delusional
6) Man's Favorite Sport (comedy,1964) Rock Hudson, Paula Prentiss. A sporting
goods and fishing author is forced by his publisher to represent them in a large
fishing contest....but he's never even fished. Campy, 60's movie. I love this
one....and did I mention Paula Prentiss...huge crush
7) Phantasm ( horror,1979) "BOY!!!!!!"
8) Shakiest Gun in the West ( comedy,1968) Don knots and a nervous old West
dentist turned gunfighter. Childhood fav still funny as hell.
9) The Vanishing ( thriller,1988) Dutch film!!! ( Not the crappy remake). About
disappearance of young Dutch woman at a Hwy rest stop and her lover's
obsessive search fro her. Heart wrenching film...I haven't seen it in 20 years
but it still haunts me. Don't mistake this with the Kieffer Sutherland remake.
10) Return of the Living Dead ( comedy,1985) Black comedy in Living Dead
setting. Hilarious movie.Even funnier than it tries to be.

I know a lot of these are 60s-70s...but they are fantastic movies, at least I think
so. I'd like to see some of your obscure, or off the radar movies that you think are classics but we've likely not seen.

#4, 5, 8 and 9.

Don Knotts movie I remember the best and also loved "The Ghost and Mr Chicken" Lots of laughs as a kid. "attaboy Luther"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LzZ0XO4ly1g

I remember "The Vanishing" too and it still creeps me out as well. Also watched the Keiffer version with my wife and told her the original Dutch version was much better.

clydepepper 04-24-2016 08:32 PM

Well, I came up with Seventeen:
 
I really enjoyed all of these and they are in my permanent DVD collection:

Clay Pigeons
Leon: The Professional
Prince of the City
The Lost Battalion
Zulu Dawn
Reign of Fire
Ravenous
Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow
Dead Man
The Jack Bull
Tom Horn
First Men in the Moon
Nobody's Fool
Zelig
The World's Fastest Indian
Talent for the Game
Bingo Long and the Traveling All-Stars and Motor Kings

drcy 04-25-2016 01:04 AM

Panic in the Streets (1950) -- Elia Kazan film about the hunt for a man with the plague in New Orleans. Jack Palance's first film

Odd Man Out (1948) Carol Reed Irish thriller about a mortally wounded IRA rebel (James Mason) trying to evade the police in winter Belfast

Who Done It (1941) One of Abbot and Costello best films, as script writers pretending to be detectives in a murder mystery. They think if they can solve the murder, it will help sell their script. Tightly written and with their best gags.

the 'stache 04-25-2016 04:15 AM

Hmm. Ten might be a tall task, but here goes. All of these are highly recommended.

Charade (1963). dir. Stanley Donen, starring Cary Grant, Audrey Hepburn, Walter Mathau, George Kennedy and James Coburn. A lively homage to the Hitchcock suspense-thriller. One of my favorite movies of the early 60s.

Der Untergang (2004). Downfall in English. dir. Oliver Hirschbiegel, starring the great Bruno Ganz, Ulrich Matthes, Alexandra Maria Lara, and Corinna Harfouch. The final days of Adolf Hitler in the Wolf's Den, from the perspective of his secretary Traudl Junge. Ganz deserved an Oscar nomination for his performance.

The Night of the Hunter (1955). dir. Charles Laughton, starring Robert Mitchum, Shelley Winters, Lillian Gish and Peter Graves. Initially, this film was panned by critics, and the negative press was so injurious to Charles Laughton that he never directed again. Now it's consider a classic. One of Mitchum's greatest, most unnerving performances.

The Asphalt Jungle (1950). dir. John Huston, starring Sterling Hayden, Jean Hagen, Louis Calhern, James Whitmore, Sam Jaffe, and the one of the first credited performances by Marilyn Monroe. Classic noir film. I've been petitioning Warner Brothers to release this film on Blu-ray through their Warner Archives Collection. It deserves to be in any classic film enthusiast's library.

The Public Enemy (1931). dir. William A. Wellman, starring James Cagney and Jean Harlow. Initially cast in the lesser role of Matt Doyle, director Wellman saw one of Cagney's stage performances, and knew he was better fit for the Tom Power lead role; it served as a career breakthrough for Cagney. Silent film star Louise Brooks was cast to play the lead female part of Gwen Allen, but she refused. It fell to a then 20 year old Jean Harlow. While she'd not yet perfected her craft as an actress, "Baby's" screen presence was already undeniable. Together with Edward G. Robinson's Little Caesar, The Public Enemy set the blueprint for prohibition era gangster movies.

Paths of Glory (1957). dir. Stanley Kubrick, starring Kirk Douglas, Ralph Meeker and Adolphe Menjou. Kubrick's fourth feature is an unnerving anti-war film set in the trenches of World War I. Douglas, a French army colonel, is forced to defend his men against charges of cowardice, and refusal to obey orders, when they retreat rather than attempt a suicidal rush of a German fortification.

Trois couleurs: Bleu (1993). dir. Krzysztof Kieślowski, starring Juliette Binoche, Benoît Régent, Emmanuelle Riva, Julie Delpy. The first film in Polish auteur Kieślowski's Three Colors trilogy, Blue is a powerful drama about a woman who is forced to go on after surviving a car crash that takes the life of her husband, a world renowned composer, and her young daughter. For anybody who has never experienced Kieślowski's work before, this is a great starting point. His work of light, and color, is incredibly poetic. Watching a Kieślowski film makes you shake your head when contemplating the crap coming out of Hollywood now.

I'll think up three more for later today. Right now, I need some sleep. :p

egri 04-25-2016 07:18 AM

In no particular order:

Twelve O'clock High (1949) about US Army Air Force bomber crews in England during World War II.

Zulu (1964) set after the aforementioned Zulu Dawn (but made 15 years earlier) covers the Battle of Rourke's Drift.

61* (2001) one of the best baseball movies ever, IMHO, it is about the race between Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris to break Babe Ruth's single season home run record.

clydepepper 04-25-2016 08:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by egri (Post 1531547)
In no particular order:

Twelve O'clock High (1949) about US Army Air Force bomber crews in England during World War II.

Zulu (1964) set after the aforementioned Zulu Dawn (but made 15 years earlier) covers the Battle of Rourke's Drift.

61* (2001) one of the best baseball movies ever, IMHO, it is about the race between Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris to break Babe Ruth's single season home run record.


Scott - I really love Twelve O'clock High & 61*, but prefer Zulu Dawn to a very good Zulu.

TheNightmanCometh 04-26-2016 10:54 PM

10 I know you've never heard of, but I love...

#10 2 LDK
#9 Irreversible
#8 Hell Ride
#7 Battle Royale
#6 Thirst
#5 El Topo
#4 Coffee & Cigarettes
#3 Waking Life
#2 Down By Law
#1 The Good, The Bad, and The Weird

steve B 04-27-2016 09:46 AM

The Wraith - Story about a guy killed in a street racing accident caused by the local rejects. Who then comes back as a sort of ghost/spirit of vengeance who's either partly a car that when it's hit or blown up basically vaporizes and recondenses back into a car. The car is the Dodge Viper prototype.

Shogun assassin - The shoguns head executioner gets too powerful and ninjas are sent to kill him but all they manage is to kill his wife. The shogun orders him to submit or kill himself, but he decides to become an assassin, bringing his small child with him. He gets more and more unkempt as the movie goes on, and the best acting is from the kid who never even blinks during the fight scenes which is most of the movie.
It's actually cut down from a series of six Japanese movies.

Deathrace 2000 - the original one from the 70's Probably not in the category of ones you've never heard of, but fairly far outside the mainstream. And an interesting commentary about violence in sports. Complete with a Cosellish character.

Steve B

Stonepony 04-27-2016 11:52 AM

[QUOTE=irv;1531416]#4, 5, 8 and 9.

Don Knotts movie I remember the best and also loved "The Ghost and Mr Chicken" Lots of laughs as a kid. "attaboy Luther"

" And they even used Bon Ami"

EvilKing00 04-28-2016 09:41 AM

Heres a movie many people never heard of that i liked


Swimming with sharks, is a dark comedy kevin spacey

darwinbulldog 04-28-2016 12:09 PM

The Professional and Zelig are two of my favorites. Everybody likes Annie Hall so much, and I do too, but there are about 15 or 20 other Woody Allen movies that I think are even better. Take the Money and Run is maybe the funniest movie I've ever seen.


Quote:

Originally Posted by clydepepper (Post 1531470)
I really enjoyed all of these and they are in my permanent DVD collection:

Clay Pigeons
Leon: The Professional
Prince of the City
The Lost Battalion
Zulu Dawn
Reign of Fire
Ravenous
Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow
Dead Man
The Jack Bull
Tom Horn
First Men in the Moon
Nobody's Fool
Zelig
The World's Fastest Indian
Talent for the Game
Bingo Long and the Traveling All-Stars and Motor Kings


darwinbulldog 04-28-2016 12:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by the 'stache (Post 1531531)
Hmm. Ten might be a tall task, but here goes. All of these are highly recommended.

Charade (1963). dir. Stanley Donen, starring Cary Grant, Audrey Hepburn, Walter Mathau, George Kennedy and James Coburn. A lively homage to the Hitchcock suspense-thriller. One of my favorite movies of the early 60s.

Der Untergang (2004). Downfall in English. dir. Oliver Hirschbiegel, starring the great Bruno Ganz, Ulrich Matthes, Alexandra Maria Lara, and Corinna Harfouch. The final days of Adolf Hitler in the Wolf's Den, from the perspective of his secretary Traudl Junge. Ganz deserved an Oscar nomination for his performance.

The Night of the Hunter (1955). dir. Charles Laughton, starring Robert Mitchum, Shelley Winters, Lillian Gish and Peter Graves. Initially, this film was panned by critics, and the negative press was so injurious to Charles Laughton that he never directed again. Now it's consider a classic. One of Mitchum's greatest, most unnerving performances.

The Asphalt Jungle (1950). dir. John Huston, starring Sterling Hayden, Jean Hagen, Louis Calhern, James Whitmore, Sam Jaffe, and the one of the first credited performances by Marilyn Monroe. Classic noir film. I've been petitioning Warner Brothers to release this film on Blu-ray through their Warner Archives Collection. It deserves to be in any classic film enthusiast's library.

The Public Enemy (1931). dir. William A. Wellman, starring James Cagney and Jean Harlow. Initially cast in the lesser role of Matt Doyle, director Wellman saw one of Cagney's stage performances, and knew he was better fit for the Tom Power lead role; it served as a career breakthrough for Cagney. Silent film star Louise Brooks was cast to play the lead female part of Gwen Allen, but she refused. It fell to a then 20 year old Jean Harlow. While she'd not yet perfected her craft as an actress, "Baby's" screen presence was already undeniable. Together with Edward G. Robinson's Little Caesar, The Public Enemy set the blueprint for prohibition era gangster movies.

Paths of Glory (1957). dir. Stanley Kubrick, starring Kirk Douglas, Ralph Meeker and Adolphe Menjou. Kubrick's fourth feature is an unnerving anti-war film set in the trenches of World War I. Douglas, a French army colonel, is forced to defend his men against charges of cowardice, and refusal to obey orders, when they retreat rather than attempt a suicidal rush of a German fortification.

Trois couleurs: Bleu (1993). dir. Krzysztof Kieślowski, starring Juliette Binoche, Benoît Régent, Emmanuelle Riva, Julie Delpy. The first film in Polish auteur Kieślowski's Three Colors trilogy, Blue is a powerful drama about a woman who is forced to go on after surviving a car crash that takes the life of her husband, a world renowned composer, and her young daughter. For anybody who has never experienced Kieślowski's work before, this is a great starting point. His work of light, and color, is incredibly poetic. Watching a Kieślowski film makes you shake your head when contemplating the crap coming out of Hollywood now.

I'll think up three more for later today. Right now, I need some sleep. :p

I've seen every one of these. Charade is a damn masterpiece, as is Paths of Glory and pretty much everything else by Stanley Kubrick. I'm amazed by how few people who have seen the Trois Couleurs films seem to think Blanc is the best. It's not even close for me.

brian1961 04-28-2016 12:22 PM

Bill, I adore CHARADE as well. In particular, I love the scene when Audrey Hepburn, her friend and little son rush to visit Monsieur Felix, the honest stamp dealer, who knew there must have been some mistake when he was able to trade a jumbo packet of stamps worth 10 francs to the little boy for "only three" stamps. I can watch that scene a dozen times, as Monsieur Felix lovingly describes those rare priceless stamps in words that mirror how I feel about the elite of my own baseball card and coin collection.:D

I sincerely hope and pray you're able to get away from "the knife", and back on with your life, my friend.

Best wishes and regards, Brian Powell

darwinbulldog 04-28-2016 12:22 PM

My own top 10 list of at least moderately obscure films:

1. 4 Months, 3 Weeks, and 2 Days (Romania)
2. Raise the Red Lantern (China)
3. The Hudsucker Proxy (USA)
4. Wages of Fear (France)
5. Cinema Paradiso (Italy)
6. The Conversation (USA)
7. Y Tu Mama Tambien (Mexico)
8. Cyrano de Bergerac (1990 version) (France)
9. Take the Money and Run (USA)
10. Happiness (USA)

This stuff will change your life.

the 'stache 04-29-2016 10:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by darwinbulldog (Post 1532810)
I've seen every one of these. Charade is a damn masterpiece, as is Paths of Glory and pretty much everything else by Stanley Kubrick. I'm amazed by how few people who have seen the Trois Couleurs films seem to think Blanc is the best. It's not even close for me.

Glenn, I guess, for me, Bleu is my favorite because of Juliette Binoche. I absolutely adore her. Fantastic actress, and when she was younger, few women in the world were more beautiful. I'll watch anything she's in. She could fart "La Marseillaise" and I would be riveted. :p

https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com...6e44f74af7.jpg
I have a real thing for French women. Catherine Deneuve was just jaw droppingly beautiful. Laetitia Casta still has "it". And now, it's Léa Seydoux, Melanie Laurent and Eva Green doing France proud. But Juliette's face was drawn by the finger of God. And he gave her a pair of legs to die for. Juliette and Sophie Marceau are my favorites.

Wages of Fear is high on my to-watch list. I've been on a singular mission to build my collection, and the movies have been coming in so fast, there's no way I could keep up. Henri-Georges Clouzot did Diabolique, too. Both classics, imo.

Quote:

Originally Posted by brian1961 (Post 1532816)
Bill, I adore CHARADE as well. In particular, I love the scene when Audrey Hepburn, her friend and little son rush to visit Monsieur Felix, the honest stamp dealer, who knew there must have been some mistake when he was able to trade a jumbo packet of stamps worth 10 francs to the little boy for "only three" stamps. I can watch that scene a dozen times, as Monsieur Felix lovingly describes those rare priceless stamps in words that mirror how I feel about the elite of my own baseball card and coin collection.:D

I sincerely hope and pray you're able to get away from "the knife", and back on with your life, my friend.

Best wishes and regards, Brian Powell

Brian, I love the scene with the guignol. It immediately took me back to high school French class. I love everything about that film. Stanley Donen did a masterful job. And, I will like anything Cary Grant or Audrey Hepburn are in. They were so good together.

Thank you for the well wishes. I'm hanging in there. Going a tad stir crazy, perhaps, but still breathing! :)

tschock 05-06-2016 04:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by steve B (Post 1532340)
Deathrace 2000 - the original one from the 70's Probably not in the category of ones you've never heard of, but fairly far outside the mainstream. And an interesting commentary about violence in sports. Complete with a Cosellish character.
Steve B

Ah yes...euthanasia day at the geriatrics ward.

frankbmd 05-06-2016 08:57 PM

What About Bob?

TUM301 05-09-2016 12:41 PM

Movies
 
Spy Who Came In from the Cold ( Richard Burton)
Hard Times (Bronson)
10 Little Indians
Battle Of the Bulge
American Crime (talk about a WILD flick)
American Werewolf In London
Requiem for A heavyweight
The Cinncinnatii Kid (McQueen)
Brian`s Song
Roman Holiday
These are just a few of the movies I`ll stop at every time while sifting through the listings. Couple others ,love the black and white, Billy Bud, One Eyed Jacks, Christmas Carol, and THE Drive In King------ Billy Jack !

Stonepony 05-09-2016 07:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TUM301 (Post 1536960)
Spy Who Came In from the Cold ( Richard Burton)
Hard Times (Bronson)
10 Little Indians
Battle Of the Bulge
American Crime (talk about a WILD flick)
American Werewolf In London
Requiem for A heavyweight
The Cinncinnatii Kid (McQueen)
Brian`s Song
Roman Holiday
These are just a few of the movies I`ll stop at every time while sifting through the listings. Couple others ,love the black and white, Billy Bud, One Eyed Jacks, Christmas Carol, and THE Drive In King------ Billy Jack !

Yeah, Billy Jack was intense when I was 10. Unfortunately it doesn't hold up now and for me its brutal to watch. Still love Coven's " One Tine Soldier" though

Tom S. 05-09-2016 09:25 PM

Here's my list of ten lesser-known favorites (in no particular order, since I like 'em all) :):

Gallipoli
Memento
Breaker Morant
Quiz Show
Dominick and Eugene
Thirteen Days
Blow Out
Rounders
Papillon
The Elephant Man

the 'stache 05-10-2016 10:05 PM

Ok, so my last three:

The Big Sleep (1946). dir. Howard Hawks, starring Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall. Warner Brothers just released a fabulous blu-ray of this film through their Warner Archive Collection. This is the second of four films that Bogie and Bacall did together; great noir with an equally interesting back story. The film was shot in 1944/part of 1945, and then shelved for the better part of a year. The Great War had just ended, and Jack Warner made the decision that the studio needed to push all their war-centric films to the theater while interest in the subject matter was still high. Based on some input received by Lauren Bacall's agent, several scenes were re-shot, giving Bacall more up close shots, and capturing the same acerbic wit she demonstrated in her first film (and first pairing with Bogart, To Have and Have Not). While her first film had been a major success, and critics had lauded her as a great actress, her followup, Confidential Agent (with Charles Boyer) was a box office bomb; the same critics that gushed about her ability, and screen presence, openly questioned if Bacall could act at all. Fortunately for the studio, and Bacall, the redone scenes improved upon an already good film, and created a cinematic classic.

Au revoir les enfants (1987). dir. Louis Malle, starring Gaspard Manesse, and Raphael Fejtö. This is a story focusing on two young boys living in a Catholic boarding school in Nazi-occupied France towards the end of World War II. Beautifully directed, and deeply personal, it would be one of the final films directed by the French master. Highly recommended!

Niagara (1953). dir. Henry Hathaway, starring Joseph Cotten and Marilyn Monroe. An atypical noir film, shot in glorious three-strip technicolor. Marilyn Monroe shines here as the archetypal femme fatale, flourishing with the opportunity to play something other than the stereotypical dumb blonde. Though critics at the time were not impressed with the acting in the film, focusing instead on the beauty of the falls, and Monroe's ample curves, I think both leads are quite convincing. Cotten, known for his performances in such heavyweight films as The Third Man, Citizen Kane and The Magnificent Ambersons, is electric as the paranoid husband. And Monroe, demonstrating subtle nuances to her acting at times, wields her sexuality with deadly precision. I've always found it sad that she was so limited, early in her career, in the kinds of roles she was given. That was Twentieth Century Fox, and the media, telling her what her "place" was in the grand scheme of things. This is a big reason why she fought to create her own production company. Niagara hinted at what she was capable of. Of course, it would be a few more years until Marilyn hit her stride as an actress, perfecting her comedic timing in Some Like it Hot.

clydepepper 05-11-2016 11:05 AM

Here's a few more (that have not be mentioned yet):

The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962)
Robin and Marian (1976)
Cannery Row (1982)
Empire of the Sun (1987)
Quigley Down Under (1990)
Se7en (1995)
The Life of David Gale (2003)
Collateral (2004)
Man on Fire (2004)
Untraceable (2008)


These are all G-R-E-A-T - worth spending your time on IMO - check them out!


.

clydepepper 05-11-2016 11:30 AM

Well, Would you Believe Eighteen?
 
I tried to get it down to only 10 movies I thought were mostly unknown, but could not get lower than eighteen...all of which I love and highly recommend.

Leon: The Professional
Prince of the City
The Lost Battalion
Zulu Dawn
Reign of Fire
Ravenous
Dead Man
Tom Horn
Zelig
Bingo Long and the Traveling All-Stars and Motor Kings
61*
The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance
Robin and Marian
Cannery Row
The Life of David Gale
Being There
The Prestige
Cool Hand Luke






There are others, of course, that I also cherish, but they are much more well known.

TheBig6 05-12-2016 12:36 AM

Being an old Sailor, I thought I would mention a few Navy flicks I like.
In no Particular order.

1. The Last Detail (underrated Jack Nicholson Movie.

2. In Harms way (John Wayne)

3. The Enemy Below (Robert Mitchum)

4. Corvette K-225 (Randolph Scott)

5. They were Expendable (Another John Wayne)

dgo71 05-12-2016 07:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by egri (Post 1531547)
61* (2001) one of the best baseball movies ever, IMHO, it is about the race between Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris to break Babe Ruth's single season home run record.

It is a great "movie" but unfortunately nowhere close to historically accurate. That bothers me when something is portrayed as historical and is almost completely fictional. I talked to Paul Blair and Clete Boyer about the movie and both guys thought it was terrible because it was so far off of reality. In fact, Boyer was downright mad by the time he got done telling me all the things he didn't like about it.

irv 05-13-2016 07:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by clydepepper (Post 1537684)
Here's a few more (that have not be mentioned yet):

The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962)
Robin and Marian (1976)
Cannery Row (1982)
Empire of the Sun (1987)
Quigley Down Under (1990)
Se7en (1995)
The Life of David Gale (2003)
Collateral (2004)
Man on Fire (2004)
Untraceable (2008)


These are all G-R-E-A-T - worth spending your time on IMO - check them out!


.

One of my favorite movies of all time. I like when justice is served. :D

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g4kLizDXLY0

clydepepper 05-13-2016 07:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dgo71 (Post 1538296)
It is a great "movie" but unfortunately nowhere close to historically accurate. That bothers me when something is portrayed as historical and is almost completely fictional. I talked to Paul Blair and Clete Boyer about the movie and both guys thought it was terrible because it was so far off of reality. In fact, Boyer was downright mad by the time he got done telling me all the things he didn't like about it.


As a big fan of both the movie and of Boyer, I would be interested if you could share specifically what Clete was mad about.

tschock 05-13-2016 08:11 AM

Some great lists so far. Not sure about the "probably never heard of aspect", as I've heard (or seen) many of the movies from many of the lists, but I'm a movie junkie so there's that. Also the 10-ish list below contains some I'm sure many have heard of, but 1 or 2 obscure ones. Hey, they're just off the top of my head. BUT, none of the ones below have been mentioned yet. :) We might need to start breaking these down by decade. :eek:

Snatch - Ya like daags?
The Commitments - I'm black and I'm proud.
Fight Club - Mischief. Mayhem. Soap.
It Happened One Night - Lessons on how to hitchhike.
King of Hearts - Which crazy world would you rather live in?
King of Comedy - Robert DeNiro and Jerry Lewis?
It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World / Rat Race (a remake that's not a remake) - Zany slapstick anyone?
Life is Beautiful - Buon giorno, Principessa! ("No spiders and Visigoths allowed.")
Barry Lyndon, Lolita, or almost anything by Kubrick
Tapeheads - "But first, I'm going to need to you do something for me... on spec."
Repo Man - "let's go do some crimes. Yeah. Let's go get sushi and not pay."

tschock 05-13-2016 08:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by the 'stache (Post 1537528)
Niagara (1953). dir. Henry Hathaway, starring Joseph Cotten and Marilyn Monroe. An atypical noir film, shot in glorious three-strip technicolor. Marilyn Monroe shines here as the archetypal femme fatale, flourishing with the opportunity to play something other than the stereotypical dumb blonde. Though critics at the time were not impressed with the acting in the film, focusing instead on the beauty of the falls, and Monroe's ample curves, I think both leads are quite convincing. Cotten, known for his performances in such heavyweight films as The Third Man, Citizen Kane and The Magnificent Ambersons, is electric as the paranoid husband. And Monroe, demonstrating subtle nuances to her acting at times, wields her sexuality with deadly precision. I've always found it sad that she was so limited, early in her career, in the kinds of roles she was given. That was Twentieth Century Fox, and the media, telling her what her "place" was in the grand scheme of things. This is a big reason why she fought to create her own production company. Niagara hinted at what she was capable of. Of course, it would be a few more years until Marilyn hit her stride as an actress, perfecting her comedic timing in Some Like it Hot.

Great movie, IMO. Monroe was VERY underrated and Cotten is one of the greats. I think it was only recently that this movie became available (last 4-5 years?).

Joshchisox08 05-13-2016 08:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by clydepepper (Post 1537693)
I tried to get it down to only 10 movies I thought were mostly unknown, but could not get lower than eighteen...all of which I love and highly recommend.

Leon: The Professional
Prince of the City
The Lost Battalion
Zulu Dawn
Reign of Fire
Ravenous
Dead Man
Tom Horn
Zelig
Bingo Long and the Traveling All-Stars and Motor Kings
61*
The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance
Robin and Marian
Cannery Row
The Life of David Gale
Being There
The Prestige
Cool Hand Luke






There are others, of course, that I also cherish, but they are much more well known.

Cool Hand Luke ??? How is that an unknown? That's a CLASSIC.

TUM301 05-13-2016 05:43 PM

Sleeper Movies
 
Just came across another "somewhat" hidden gem last nite, Glen Gary Glen Ross. Excellent cast, always been an Ed Harris fan, with a classic Baldwin pep talk scene. The entire movie is shot in only 3 or 4 different places and just seems to touch a nerve about the working man and being under the gun. Give it a chance if you can !

clydepepper 05-13-2016 08:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Joshchisox08 (Post 1538430)
Cool Hand Luke ??? How is that an unknown? That's a CLASSIC.


True - but I'd bet a lot of you youngsters never saw it.

VoodooChild 05-13-2016 09:00 PM

I'm not into the old B&W movies or foreign films. My go-to timeframe is the late 90's/early 2000's. Here's 10 of my favorites from then that I consider somewhat obscure:

1. Grosse Pointe Blank
2. Zero Effect
3. Falling Down
4. Mumford
5. Permanent Midnight
6. Bulworth
7. Go
8. Stigmata
9. The Thirteenth Floor
10. Standing in the Shadows of Motown

Sean 05-13-2016 11:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Joshchisox08 (Post 1538430)
Cool Hand Luke ??? How is that an unknown? That's a CLASSIC.

Sweatiest movie of all time. :D

Stonepony 05-14-2016 06:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sean (Post 1538835)
Sweatiest movie of all time. :D

"Just shakin' the bush, boss"

irv 05-14-2016 07:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by VoodooChild (Post 1538800)
I'm not into the old B&W movies or foreign films. My go-to timeframe is the late 90's/early 2000's. Here's 10 of my favorites from then that I consider somewhat obscure:

1. Grosse Pointe Blank
2. Zero Effect
3. Falling Down
4. Mumford
5. Permanent Midnight
6. Bulworth
7. Go
8. Stigmata
9. The Thirteenth Floor
10. Standing in the Shadows of Motown

Stigmata is a great movie! Forgot I lent that to someone?

Another movie I just watched the other night, which I forgot about, was Stir of Echos. Seen that years ago and forgot how good it was.

Sean 05-14-2016 02:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tschock (Post 1538406)
Some great lists so far. Not sure about the "probably never heard of aspect", as I've heard (or seen) many of the movies from many of the lists, but I'm a movie junkie so there's that. Also the 10-ish list below contains some I'm sure many have heard of, but 1 or 2 obscure ones. Hey, they're just off the top of my head. BUT, none of the ones below have been mentioned yet. :) We might need to start breaking these down by decade. :eek:

Snatch - Ya like daags?
The Commitments - I'm black and I'm proud.
Fight Club - Mischief. Mayhem. Soap.
It Happened One Night - Lessons on how to hitchhike.
King of Hearts - Which crazy world would you rather live in?
King of Comedy - Robert DeNiro and Jerry Lewis?
It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World / Rat Race (a remake that's not a remake) - Zany slapstick anyone?
Life is Beautiful - Buon giorno, Principessa! ("No spiders and Visigoths allowed.")
Barry Lyndon, Lolita, or almost anything by Kubrick
Tapeheads - "But first, I'm going to need to you do something for me... on spec."
Repo Man - "let's go do some crimes. Yeah. Let's go get sushi and not pay."

Taylor, you beat me to most of my favorites:
Fight Club
Snatch
King of Hearts
Repo Man

Great thread. Brings back some great memories. I saw The Ghost and Mr Chicken in the theater when I was a kid. And I watched Charade with my mom. It was one of her favorites, along with Rear Window.

Speaking of mom, I remember watching a really bad '50s horror movie with her. I think it was called "The Thing That Couldn't Die." It scarred the hell out of me (I was seven or eight). Years later I saw the movie being ridiculed on Mystery Science Theater. Now that was a great show....but that's a topic for another thread.

PS- When you say almost anything by Kubrick, I have to mention Clockwork Orange, though it is hardly obscure.

clydepepper 05-14-2016 06:21 PM

Prisoners is a movie that will affect your life if you let it.

VERY disturbing!


.

Prof_Plum 05-15-2016 07:37 AM

Have watched a lot of movies so have seen many on these lists. Hard to come up with 'never heard of' stuff...

A couple already listed...
1) The World's Fastest Indian
2) Grosse Pointe Blank

A few unlisted...
3) Croupier
4) The Warriors
5) Run Silent, Run Deep
6) Streets of Fire
7) The Professionals - B Lancaster (not to be confused with the also excellent movie Leon: The Professional)

A couple most have probably heard of...
8) Silverado
9) Tombstone

Lastly...
10) just about any movie by the Coen brothers (e.g. Blood Simple, Fargo, Raising Arizona, The Big Lebowski, etc)

JustCollectVP 05-15-2016 12:07 PM

Prince of the City was a great flick that never seemed to get the due that it deserved.

Ex Machina is a film from 2015 that I found compelling and one that should've made a few lists and not one person that I've ever mentioned it to has heard of it, let alone seen it. Oh, and Alicia Vikander has a significant role in it, too...

the 'stache 05-15-2016 12:17 PM

Another superlative film, Jeanne Dielman, 23 Commerce Quay, 1080 Brussels (1975). dir. Chantal Ackerman. Starring Delphine Seyrig.

I found this film enthralling, but I'm betting 99.9% of today's movie goers would walk out on the film before it finished. It requires an extraordinary level of patience.

Paul S 05-15-2016 09:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by the 'stache (Post 1539444)
Another superlative film, Jeanne Dielman, 23 Commerce Quay, 1080 Brussels (1975). dir. Chantal Ackerman. Starring Delphine Seyrig.

I found this film enthralling, but I'm betting 99.9% of today's movie goers would walk out on the film before it finished. It requires an extraordinary level of patience

Try watching Last Year At Marienbad, although it does have a nifty card trick that gets repeated a few times. (Yes, I made it through it all).

RollieFingers 05-16-2016 05:48 PM

http://www.madmind.de/wp-content/upl...ollerball2.jpg

http://www.cinefamily.org/images/ema...ky_600_415.jpg

the 'stache 05-18-2016 10:15 AM

I will eventually. It's on my to watch list. But I need to get a hold of a Criterion blu-ray of it, and it's OOP. So, it will cost me about a C Note to get it. That will come after the Barnes & Noble sale in July.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul S (Post 1539718)
Try watching Last Year At Marienbad, although it does have a nifty card trick that gets repeated a few times. (Yes, I made it through it all).


Sean 05-19-2016 03:45 PM

Should we consider "To Kill a Mockingbird" unknown?

Probably not, but I think it deserves a mention.

Joshchisox08 05-20-2016 08:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by clydepepper (Post 1538796)
True - but I'd bet a lot of you youngsters never saw it.

Well we sure did. Our dad had us watch that when we were young(er). I to this day still watch it every once in a while :)

Stonepony 06-03-2016 07:23 PM

Good luck

herbc 06-03-2016 09:20 PM

Ten from my library
 
How many have you seen?

Breaking the Waves
Henry Portrait of a Serial Killer
Spanking the Monkey
Caught (1996)
Bound(1996)
Mister Foe
The Paperboy
Secretary(2002)
Monsieur Hire
Ghost Dog

the 'stache 06-03-2016 11:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sean (Post 1540964)
Should we consider "To Kill a Mockingbird" unknown?

Probably not, but I think it deserves a mention.

Sean, if To Kill a Mockingbird (the novel, or the film) are "unknown", then I weep for society.

ALR-bishop 06-07-2016 02:57 PM

Movie
 
Life With Father....Downton Abby NY style ..1947 --William Powell, Irene Dunne, Martin Milner, Edmund Gwenn and Elizabeth Taylor. Every father who thinks himself the head of the household should see it.

Sean 06-09-2016 09:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ALR-bishop (Post 1547785)
Life With Father....Downton Abby NY style ..1947 --William Powell, Irene Dunne, Martin Milner, Edmund Gwenn and Elizabeth Taylor. Every father who thinks himself the head of the household should see it.

I've heard of it, but never seen it. Was the TV show " Father Knows Best" taken from this movie?

Stonepony 06-09-2016 07:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sean (Post 1548446)
I've heard of it, but never seen it. Was the TV show " Father Knows Best" taken from this movie?

"Father knows best " was a radio program that Robert Young transitioned to TV.
NO IM NOT THAT OLD...I just listen to Radio Classics on SiriusFM.

Stonepony 06-09-2016 07:28 PM

Ahhhh " Rollerball"- saw it in the theater when it came out

Jantz 06-09-2016 08:24 PM

Since no one has mentioned them yet, I'll throw in these two movies.

Frailty

Valhalla Rising

Both have interesting storylines.

FourStrikes 06-10-2016 01:59 AM

...
 
http://www.cinefamily.org/images/ema...ky_600_415.jpg[/QUOTE]

one of the most f***ed up "shock value" movies I recall renting from Tower Records in the early 1980's.

packs 06-10-2016 07:26 AM

This one is an obscure one and may be hard to find, but if you can track it down do yourself a favor and watch WAKE IN FRIGHT. 70s Australian movie set in the outback. A school teacher on his way to the big city for vacation gets stranded in the "Yabba" when his train breaks down. From there he gets into it with locals and eventually is nearly driven mad by how harsh the people and land is in the outback. There is a classic and controversial scene where the director films an actual Kangaroo hunt to demonstrate how barbaric the pastime was.

TUM301 06-11-2016 08:49 AM

weekend viewing
 
A couple more flix worth a shot, Lock Stock and Both Smoking Barrels, The Boondock Saints, House of Games.

ALR-bishop 06-11-2016 09:19 AM

Movie
 
A Boy and His Dog

http://r.search.yahoo.com/_ylt=A0LEV...usieoIv2JraQQ-

bbcard1 06-11-2016 02:26 PM

A couple of under appreciated Netflix gems are:

1) Odd Thomas. A lawsuit twarted its wide release, but it has big stars and big effects. You are possibly familiar with the book by Dean Koontz

2) Dale and Tucker vs. Evil. Just your typical buddy movie love story slasher film adventure comedy.

dabigyankeeman 06-13-2016 06:31 AM

You guys want some good horror, real horror with great gore? Try:

Inside
Frontiers
Martyrs
Grotesque
Captivity

RichardSimon 06-13-2016 05:09 PM

Paths of Glory - great anti-war movie
The Mouse That Roared - classic satire with the great Peter Sellers
Man On The Moon - bio pic of Andy Kaufman with a fantastic Jim Carrey
Radio Days - one of Woody Allen's best
Parenthood - Steve Martin and Jason Robards one of the best father/son duos in film

AgonyandIvy 06-13-2016 07:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dgo71 (Post 1538296)
It is a great "movie" but unfortunately nowhere close to historically accurate. That bothers me when something is portrayed as historical and is almost completely fictional. I talked to Paul Blair and Clete Boyer about the movie and both guys thought it was terrible because it was so far off of reality. In fact, Boyer was downright mad by the time he got done telling me all the things he didn't like about it.

Thank you, thank you, thank you! I've always said that *61 was not very accurate. In fact even the title is inaccurate. There was NEVER an asterisk, and I would like to know how this myth ever started.

But anywho, here is my list of ten movies that, while not completely obscure and maybe only shown one time, are not widely known or frequently shown:

Water (From India directed by Deepa Mehta)
One-Two-Three
Above Suspicion
The Boys in Company C
Head
The Swimmer
Stage Door
The Palm Beach Story
You Can't Take it With You
Hell's Angels

the 'stache 06-14-2016 03:32 AM

Firstly, I don't think the movie was implying that there had, indeed, been an asterisk in the record books. More, I think the title is a nod to the debate that raged about how the record should be handled. For nearly fifty years, there were two entries in the official Major League record book for home runs in a single season: one listing Babe Ruth's 60 in 154 games in 1927, and a second entry listing Roger Maris' 61 in 162 games in 1961.

As to the genesis of the myth, you can thank the Commissioner of Baseball at the time, Ford Frick:

Quote:

'Any player who has hit more than 60 home runs during his club's first 154 games would be recognized as having established a new record. However, if the player does not hit more than 60 until after this club has played 154 games, there would have to be some distinctive mark on the record books to show that Babe Ruth's record was set under a 154-game schedule.'"
This was a statement of opinion. The "distinctive mark" never appeared in the record books, but it's easy to understand why people might assume it had. This happens all the time. Popular culture would have you believe the line, "play it again, Sam" came from Casablanca, that the correct line from All About Eve was "buckle up, its going to be a bumpy ride", or that Cary Grant famously quipped "Judy, Judy, Judy".

Once something is entered into the popular lexicon, accurate, completely made up, or not, there it will stay. ;)


Quote:

Originally Posted by AgonyandIvy (Post 1550297)
Thank you, thank you, thank you! I've always said that *61 was not very accurate. In fact even the title is inaccurate. There was NEVER an asterisk, and I would like to know how this myth ever started.


MikeGarcia 08-20-2016 02:29 PM

Sorry I'm late to the party....--
 
.."The Bad Lieutenant;Port Of Call "-Cage should be dipped in bronze for his performance

..."Breaking Away"---brilliant 'little' movie

..."Oh, What A lovely War" -so overlooked on this side of the pond; shame , that.

.."Hard Candy"--ummm---maybe not for everyone but a good flick

.."The Boy With Green Hair"---will stay with you

.."The Sergeant"---- Whew , Rod Steiger...whew

.."The Kiss Of The Spider Woman"--best cast EVER

..''The Dogs Of War"----Walken --wow,just "wow"

.."Topper"--the old original black and white one; look at Cary Grant's car....

bravos4evr 08-20-2016 05:31 PM

ten movies I love many of you have never seen?



Dead Man - incredible black and white photography and philosophical storyline

Ikiru- everyone knows seven samurai and yojimbo, but this might be Kurosawa's best film

Ex-Machina- maybe the best film of last year and one of the most original scifi films in a long time

Juggernaut- 1970's Richard Harris stars in this great thriller about bombs aboard an ocean liner

Time Bandits- Terry Gilliam at the top of his game making odd, yet fun films

Spacehunter: Adventures in the Forbidden Zone- total 80's space movie cheese, yet strangely delicious and satisfying cheese

Bubba Ho-Tep-an old Elvis and JFK fight an ancient mummy sucking the souls of the members of their retirement home. yep (see it for Bruce Campbell as Elvis and Ossie Davis as JFK)

Beyond the Black Rainbow- it takes me back to those weird psychedelic films of the late 60's early 70's where you don't really know what's going on but the mix of film and music are hypnotic

Colossus: The Forbin Project- The first "computer takes over the world" movie, really great hard sci-fi that obviously influenced The Terminator

Session 9 - very spooky movie from around 20 years back that somehow pulls off creepy without slamming weird visuals or gore at you every 5 seconds

clydepepper 08-20-2016 06:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bravos4evr (Post 1574792)
ten movies I love many of you have never seen?



Dead Man - incredible black and white photography and philosophical storyline

Ikiru- everyone knows seven samurai and yojimbo, but this might be Kurosawa's best film

Ex-Machina- maybe the best film of last year and one of the most original scifi films in a long time

Juggernaut- 1970's Richard Harris stars in this great thriller about bombs aboard an ocean liner

Time Bandits- Terry Gilliam at the top of his game making odd, yet fun films

Spacehunter: Adventures in the Forbidden Zone- total 80's space movie cheese, yet strangely delicious and satisfying cheese

Bubba Ho-Tep-an old Elvis and JFK fight an ancient mummy sucking the souls of the members of their retirement home. yep (see it for Bruce Campbell as Elvis and Ossie Davis as JFK)

Beyond the Black Rainbow- it takes me back to those weird psychedelic films of the late 60's early 70's where you don't really know what's going on but the mix of film and music are hypnotic

Colossus: The Forbin Project- The first "computer takes over the world" movie, really great hard sci-fi that obviously influenced The Terminator

Session 9 - very spooky movie from around 20 years back that somehow pulls off creepy without slamming weird visuals or gore at you every 5 seconds



I marked the three I have seen in BOLD:

Dead Man is awesome (Iggy Pop in a dress!)

Colossus: The Forbin Project - I saw it again a few years ago...and it was still effective and enjoyable - truly before it's time.

Time Bandits - I loved it, but have not seen it in years...sometimes when I wait too long, my individual taste has changed and I don't enjoy it as much...but, this IS Terry Gilliam - so I'll try.

the 'stache 08-20-2016 11:12 PM

Some other favorites:

On the Waterfront-Kazan and Brando. Nothing more need be said.
Rififi-the twenty + minute heist is one of the greatest scenes in cinematic history.
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof-Newman, Taylor and Ives are as formidable a threesome as you'll see in the 50s.
Brooklyn-Saoirse Ronan is a revelation, a fantastic actress with a bright future; the story is simple, yet gripping.
Persona-another masterwork from Ingmar Bergman, and one of my personal favorites.
Libeled Lady-by this point in her career, Jean Harlow's comedic sense is virtually unparalleled (save for Carole Lombard). A wonderful screwball comedy with a great cast, and Harlow is absolutely magnetic.
Double Indemnity-if somebody held a gun to my head, and asked me to pick a favorite noir film, I'd have a hard time not picking this gem. MacMurray and Robinson are great, but this is Barbara Stanwyck's film. She is the quintessence of the femme fatale. Maybe the greatest performance of, perhaps, Hollywood's most versatile actresses.
Tokyo Story-the film that served as my introduction to Yasujirô Ozu. Some sixty years after it was shot, Ozu's wonderful drama about the post WWII family dynamic still casts a huge shadow. A must see for every film enthusiast. Just beautifully done.

And, my favorite two films of the new millennium...

Mulholland Drive-David Lynch's magnum opus. A veritable textbook on how non-linear timelines can be handled in film. See it once, and you'll think about it for weeks. Naomi Watts and Laura Harring are wonderful together. Silencio! No hay banda!
Lost in Translation-Sofia Coppola hits every note perfectly. Part love story, part homage to Tokyo. I never get tired of this film, no matter how many times I watch it. Bill Murray and Scarlett Johansson have great chemistry together.

clydepepper 08-21-2016 01:27 AM

Mulholland Drive-David Lynch's magnum opus. A veritable textbook on how non-linear timelines can be handled in film. See it once, and you'll think about it for weeks. Naomi Watts and Laura Harring are wonderful together.

Silencio! No hay banda!


Bill- I never got the 'threesome' bug or even understood how entertaining witnessing something like 'them' together...until I saw that!

I'm quite sure I looked like Marty Feldman when I watched.

MikeGarcia 08-21-2016 09:12 AM

Yeah...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by clydepepper (Post 1574917)
Mulholland Drive-David Lynch's magnum opus. A veritable textbook on how non-linear timelines can be handled in film. See it once, and you'll think about it for weeks. Naomi Watts and Laura Harring are wonderful together.

Silencio! No hay banda!


Bill- I never got the 'threesome' bug or even understood how entertaining witnessing something like 'them' together...until I saw that!

I'm quite sure I looked like Marty Feldman when I watched.

..
..yeah , there are parts of Mulholland Drive and Reservoir Dogs that are forever burned into my brain...

...does anyone remember the name of the movie about a counterfeiter in Los Angeles ...it was in color...it was as odd as most of us are...

..??

.

bravos4evr 08-21-2016 02:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MikeGarcia (Post 1574986)
..
..yeah , there are parts of Mulholland Drive and Reservoir Dogs that are forever burned into my brain...

...does anyone remember the name of the movie about a counterfeiter in Los Angeles ...it was in color...it was as odd as most of us are...

..??

.

could it be Michael Mann's To Live and Die in LA starring Willem Defoe and William Peterson?

jerrys 08-22-2016 09:02 AM

Glen Gary, Glen Ross A, B, C Always Be Closing

Bicycle Thief

Little Wars

MikeGarcia 08-22-2016 09:08 AM

Thanks
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by bravos4evr (Post 1575130)
could it be Michael Mann's To Live and Die in LA starring Willem Defoe and William Peterson?


yeah . that's it......some scenes and dialogue are stuck in a strange part of my memory bank....good flick I think

..

the 'stache 08-23-2016 08:50 PM

Well, I was really referring to them acting together, but their racier scenes certainly made for a couple minutes of compelling cinema. :D Naomi Watts is incredible, a great actress, and easy on the eyes. I've always liked her. Liev Schreiber is a lucky guy. And Laura Harring? Well, she was Miss USA for a reason. Just a beautiful woman.

And, I lol'd at the Marty Feldman reference.

Quote:

Originally Posted by clydepepper (Post 1574917)
Bill- I never got the 'threesome' bug or even understood how entertaining witnessing something like 'them' together...until I saw that!

I'm quite sure I looked like Marty Feldman when I watched.


EvilKing00 08-24-2016 09:52 AM

I guess its documentry but imo a great one and suggest it to anyone who wants to know who killed jfk. Im not kidding

" jfk the smoking gun"

Imo lays out with evedence who killed JFK, how it happened with photos, and why it was covered up. A must see. Was on netflix a while ago, may still be there.

Its not some far fetched BS crap, but rather very simple.

bravos4evr 08-24-2016 10:15 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by EvilKing00 (Post 1576328)
I guess its documentry but imo a great one and suggest it to anyone who wants to know who killed jfk. Im not kidding

" jfk the smoking gun"

Imo lays out with evedence who killed JFK, how it happened with photos, and why it was covered up. A must see. Was on netflix a while ago, may still be there.

Its not some far fetched BS crap, but rather very simple.

Not to start WW3 but I saw that and thought it was a bunch of silly nonsense that ignores other evidence and hand waves away all the things that make it's claims ridiculous.


anyway, another good culty movie that not a lot of folks have seen is Brotherhood of the Wolf. It's a period costume drama, a kung fu movie, a werewolf movie and about 10 other things rolled into one is just nuts! I loved it. (watch the subtitled version as the dubbing is distractingly bad)

clydepepper 08-24-2016 07:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by the 'stache (Post 1576205)
Well, I was really referring to them acting together, but their racier scenes certainly made for a couple minutes of compelling cinema. :D Naomi Watts is incredible, a great actress, and easy on the eyes. I've always liked her. Liev Schreiber is a lucky guy. And Laura Harring? Well, she was Miss USA for a reason. Just a beautiful woman.

And, I lol'd at the Marty Feldman reference.



They ACT too???? :eek:

MikeGarcia 08-26-2016 09:58 AM

ooo--I forgot one....
 
..."Body Double"---wow , what a plotline plus a Dennis Franz cameo---talk about perfect casting ;

..

Stonepony 08-26-2016 02:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MikeGarcia (Post 1577240)
..."Body Double"---wow , what a plotline plus a Dennis Franz cameo---talk about perfect casting ;

..

Yaaa, I took a girl on a first date to that one- not realizing it was soft porn:eek
Still a good one! I watched it again a few months ago and wasn't quite as impressed.

Michael B 08-28-2016 12:55 AM

Fresh (1994) - Sean Nelson, Samuel L. Jackson, Giancarlo Esposito

Sugar Hill - Wesley Snipes, Michael Wright and Khandi Alexander (CSI Miami, There's Something About Mary). Dark movie

My Life as a Dog (Mit Liv Som Hund) (1985) - Swedish

The Five Heartbeats (1991)- Robert Townsend, Leon (Cool Runnings) and Michael Wright. I think Wright is one of the finest Black actors. Also in 'Sugar Hill' above and "The Principal" with Jim Belushi.

Nightcrawler (2014) - Jake Gyllenhaal. Wide release and a bit dark

The Tribe (1970) - Jan-Michael Vincent, Earl Holliman, Darren McGavin. Made for tv movie.

Duel (1971) - Dennis Weaver. Early Steven Spielberg. Made for tv.

Run Lola Run (Lola Reent) (1998) - Franka Potente best known as Marie from The Bourne Identity and The Bourne Supremacy. German

Buster and Billie (1974) - Jan-Michael Vincent, Pamela Sue Martin, Clifton James (Cool Hand Luke, Man With the Golden Gun, Live and Let Die) and in his first role ever - Robert Englund (Freddie Krueger). Takes place in 1940's Georgia. One of my favorite funny movie lines of all times comes from this movie :

Whitey (Englund) to Buster (Vincent) have skipped school and driven to the coast of Georgia. Walking in a park and Whitey to Buster - "Hey Buster I think I spot us some babaroonies." Englund told me that one of the 'babaroonies' was his first wife, though she is not credited.


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