Don't care about the director and it doesn't make it an automatic better movie because he directed it. I just prefer Red Dragon. Creepier and more atmospheric. The 80's synth music took me out a bit of this one.
Don't care about the director and it doesn't make it an automatic better movie because he directed it. I just prefer Red Dragon. Creepier and more atmospheric. The 80's synth music took me out a bit of this one.
We'll have to agree to disagree, but honestly I feel 'creepier and more atmospheric' describes Manhunter better than Red Dragon. I will give Red Dragon its due for being more accurate to the book's ending, though.
Bleak and raw, but still tasteful, gritty yet refined visuals
Interesting characters, great performances by everyone, effective character development, intense/kinetic action and emotional moments, great score and perfect sound design and mix, you can practically feel the ricocheting shots as you hear them whistle past you.
Dat scene
where the German soldier finds Machine below the tank and doesn't rat him out...
That was some very satisfactory reward for Machine.
David Ayer definitely knows how to handle team dynamic, I can't wait to see what he'll do with comicbook characters.
The Motion Picture -------------- 0/10
The Wrath of Khan ----------- 8,5/10
The Search for Spock --------- 7/10
The Voyage Home ------------ 6/10
The Final Frontier ------------ 2/10
The Undiscovered Country - 7,5/10
Wild Card was boring for a Jason Statham movie, the few fight scenes in it were entertaining though. And it ended in a whimper. 6/10
Defiance with Daniel Craig was much better! Very well done ww2 flick about four jewish brothers hiding out in the forest trying to care for a camp of other Jewish families. 8/10
My fondest memory of Star Trek: The Motion Picture is the Phileas Fogg Devilishly Hot Tortillas I was eating while watching it once. They were delicious. And I can't get them anywhere anymore.
The film itself, dunno bout 0/10 but it certainly isn't great. It, Star Trek V and STID would occupy the bottom of my ranking table, not sure exactly which order.
Bleak and raw, but still tasteful, gritty yet refined visuals
Interesting characters, great performances by everyone, effective character development, intense/kinetic action and emotional moments, great score and perfect sound design and mix, you can practically feel the ricocheting shots as you hear them whistle past you.
Dat scene
where the German soldier finds Machine below the tank and doesn't rat him out...
That was some very satisfactory reward for Machine.
David Ayer definitely knows how to handle team dynamic, I can't wait to see what he'll do with comicbook characters.