Jump to content

The Panda

Free Account+
  • Posts

    25,878
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    99

Everything posted by The Panda

  1. Number 37 Aliens (1986) 20th Century Fox, Directed by James Cameron (74 Points, 21 Votes) "Get away from her, you bitch! Top 5 Placements: 1 Top 10 Placements: 2 Top 25 Placements: 6 Previous Rankings: 2016 (79, +42), 2014 (72, +35), 2013 (36, -1), 2012 (54, +17) Awards Count: Won 2 Oscars Tomatometer: 98% (9.0 Avg Rating) Box Office: 85.2m (210.3m Adjusted) Synopsis: Ellen Ripley is rescued by a deep salvage team after being in hypersleep for 57 years. The moon that the Nostromo visited has been colonized, but contact is lost. This time, colonial marines have impressive firepower, but will that be enough? Critic Opinion: "Now ``Aliens`` arrives to remind us how good and nightmarish a carefully crafted space-horror film can be. It`s more action-packed than its predecessor, and its creatures are more numerous, larger and toothier than the ``Alien`` model. They are equally bad-tempered, though, especially when confronted by a pack of tough-guy (and gal) marines come to do them dead. These marines, a motley crew that makes the Dirty Dozen look like a pack of choir boys, have been sent to investigate odd happenings on a distant Earth colony. With them, initially in an advisory role, is Sigourney Weaver, reprising her role as Warrant Officer Ripley, sole survivor of the Nostromo, who has been drifting through space in suspended animation with her cute cat for 57 years. Ripley is understandably reluctant to return to this place. It is where the first alien was discovered. She is full of dire warnings and bad dreams. Once the marines land--after a few tasty appetizers--the film becomes a feast of fights and special effects, from the high-tech weaponry of the marines to the aliens themselves. Though there are sure to be some gun junkies who salivate over a Thompson submachine gun coupled with a Franchi SPAS 12 pump-action shotgun mechanism, ``Aliens`` wisely never allows its admittedly eye-catching and inventive gizmos to control the film. Rather they provide striking punctuation." - Rick Kogan User Opinion: "Aliens is an incredible interesting movie. The first hour basically nothing really happens. Sure, there are character introductions, the setting and mystery is established and the Vietnam allegory is more than obvious, but the film for me kicks off with the failure of the operation. But i cant help it or me, its all just so entertaining. Cameron just has a way to make movies entertaining no matter how long they are. Aliens has some great action, but the focus is on Ripley and her evolution from survivor to heroine - now thats how you make a fantastic female protagonist! Weaver was already great in the first one, but nearly all of her most memorable moments are from this movie." - @Brainbug "Probably one of the most influential sci-fi pieces of fiction of the past 50 years. So many contemporary sci-fi novels, comics, films, and video games have nods to or have elements lifted from this film." - @4815162342 "Without a doubt the best film of 86. The cast, the direction, the cinematography, the music, Bishop, Hudson, Newt. Incredible film!" - @baumer Commentary: James Cameron strikes again, this time with Aliens which saw a considerable increase on this list from the prior two year. Aliens is a rare sequel that manages to not only completely differentiate itself from the original (while keeping some of that same spirit alive), but it manages to be a sequel that's just as high of quality as the first. What's even more interesting though is how Cameron takes Scott's Alien, and then makes the franchise his own, turning a slow-building horror film into an action packed thrill ride filled to the brim with one liners and an awesome lead character. Aliens saw very wide appeal from the lists, appearing on 34% of the lists submitted, tying itself with Last Crusade and Memento as the movie with the most broad appeal thus far. Decade Count: 90s (14), 10s (12), '00s (10), 80s (10), 70s (6), 60s (5), 50s (4), 40s (2), 30s (1) Tomatometer Count: Over 90% (51), 80%-90% (11), 70%-80% (2) Adjusted Box Office Count: 1b+ (1), 900m (2), 800m (1), 600m (1), 500m (1), 400m (7), 300m (5), 200m (9), 100m (13), Under 100m (22) Director Count: Alfred Hitchcock (3), James Cameron (3), Damien Chazelle (2), David Fincher (2), Stanley Kubrick (2), Richard Linklater (2), John McTiernan (2), Martin Scorsese (2), Ridley Scott (2), Lee Unkrich (2), J.J. Abrams (1), Paul Thomas Anderson (1), John Avildsen (1), Ash Brannon (1), Frank Capra (1), Ron Clements (1), Joel and Ethan Coen (1), Francis Ford Copolla (1), Alfonso Cuaron (1), Stanley Donen (1), Clint Eastwood (1), Victor Fleming (1), Milos Forman (1), Terry Gillam (1), Rian Johnson (1), Terry Jones (1), Gene Kelly (1), Akira Kurosawa (1), John Lasseter (1), David Lean (1), Ang Lee (1), Spike Lee (1), Sergio Leone (1), Katia Lund (1), James Mangold (1), Michael Mann (1), Fernando Meirelles (1), Hayao Miyazaki (1), John Musker (1), Christopher Nolan (1), Jordan Peele (1), Roman Polanski (1), Harold Ramis (1), Rob Reiner (1), Russo Brothers (1), Gus van Sant (1), Steven Spielberg (1) Bryan Singer (1), Andrew Stanton (1), Isao Takahata (1), Quentin Tarantino (1), Guillermo Del Torro (1), Gary Trousdale (1), King Vidor (1), Orson Welles (1), Peter Weir (1), Robert Wise (1), David Yates (1) Franchise Count: Best Picture Winner (7), Pixar (3), James Cameron (3), Star Wars (2), Marvel (2), Toy Story (2), Studio Ghibli (2), WDAS (2), Alien and Predator (2), 'Before' (1), Blade Runner (1), Monty Python (1), X-Men (1), MCU (1), Captain America (1), Terminator (1), Die Hard (1), Harry Potter (1), Rocky (1), Oz (1), Indiana Jones (1), Steven Spielberg (1) Genre Count: Drama (22), Adventure (19), Thriller (16), VFX Driven (16), Fantasy (15), Sci-Fi (14), Comedy (13), Action (13), Epic (12), Romance (11), Period Piece (10), Family/Children (10), Novel Adaption (9), Crime/Noir (9), Indie (8), War (8), Sequel (8), Animation (7), Tragedy (7), Horror (7), Musical (6), Cult Classic (5), Foreign Language (5), Western (4), Christmas (3), Melodrama (3), Spy/Detective (3), Romantic Comedy (3), Sports (3), Superhero (2), Comic Book (2), Bio-Pic (2), Satire (2), Remake (2)
  2. I agree completely with this, the first half was funny but I think it was fairly abrupt and clunky compared to how well the first is put together. However by the second half I was fully onboard and loving it as much as the first. Given the shaky history of comedy sequels, I was really happy with it
  3. Honestly a 50% drop for IW is pretty good considering all of its fan base should have seen it by now, and that there’s over 100m of new direct competition, plus 3 new openers taking up screens
  4. 18.6m is a pretty good preview number. If it plays like Jurassic World that means a 200m OW!
  5. Number 38 Gladiator (2000) Dreamworks Distribution, Directed by Ridley Scott (70 Points, 20 Votes) "Are you not entertained?!" Top 5 Placements: 1 Top 10 Placements: 2 Top 25 Placements: 4 Previous Rankings: 2016 (Unranked), 2014 (Unranked), 2013 (66, +28), 2012 (59, +21) Awards Count: Won 5 Oscars, Including Best Picture Tomatometer: 77% (7.2 Avg Rating) Box Office: 187.7m (318.9m Adjusted) Synopsis: When a Roman General is betrayed, and his family murdered by an emperor's corrupt son, he comes to Rome as a gladiator to seek revenge. Critic Opinion: "Jagged and impressionistic in a way clearly influenced by “Saving Private Ryan,” 10-minute opening battle is a savage spectacle, as General Maximus (Crowe) commands his troops to “unleash hell” on their overmatched adversaries with a deluge of arrows and flaming canisters that set the barbarians’ protective woods on fire.But as external conflicts are put to rest, internal trouble is only beginning. The arrogant and unbalanced Commodus (Joaquin Phoenix) arrives at the front, along with his beautiful older sister, Lucilla (Connie Nielsen), just in time to learn that his ailing father (Richard Harris) has named the triumphant Maximus his successor as emperor. For his part, Maximus, a Spaniard who has never seen Rome and, far more important, has been separated from his wife and son for nearly three years, wants no part of this plan.But Maximus makes the mistake of spurning Commodus. After killing his father in a fit of jealous spite, the insecure new emperor orders the execution of the popular general. The resourceful Maximus escapes this fate but reaches home too late; when he arrives, he finds his wife and son dead, his farm torched. In the poetic manner of Sergio Leone, Scott uses a man of action’s bitter and idealized memory of his lost family as a motif and a motive for the single-minded pursuit to which he devotes the remainder of his life." - Todd McCarthy User Opinions: "Love this movie. Crowe's performance is excellent, Phoenix's performance is excellent, Zimmer's music is awesome, and the story is compelling." - @redfirebird2008 "Just finished watching the extended version. The score from Hans Zimmer was perfect for this, and i teared up throughout the movie during a few scenes that had his excellent score in the background. Solid performances from everyone and solid direction and script also. The end is heart breaking. Probably one of my all time favorite - I regret not watching it earlier." - @ChD Commentary: Ridley Scott comes into the list for the second time with his sword-and-sandals Roman Epic, Gladiator. Gladiator is one of the last truly great historical epics we've had, almost like a reflection back on a genre that's (for the most part) been left in the past in this modern blockbuster world. The film is filled with gritty, intense and pretty awesome action and battle sequences. While the film has been criticized for its pretty blatant historical inaccuracies, the film has a beating heart at its center that drives the plot and makes a film set 2000 years ago resonate deeply with a modern audience. Surprisingly, this film had missed the last two times we did the list, but it received pretty broad support this go-round, as it ended up on 33% of the list submitted. Decade Count: 90s (14), 10s (12), '00s (10), 80s (9), 70s (6), 60s (5), 50s (4), 40s (2), 30s (1) Tomatometer Count: Over 90% (50), 80%-90% (11), 70%-80% (2) Adjusted Box Office Count: 1b+ (1), 900m (2), 800m (1), 600m (1), 500m (1), 400m (7), 300m (5), 200m (8), 100m (13), Under 100m (22) Director Count: Alfred Hitchcock (3), James Cameron (2), Damien Chazelle (2), David Fincher (2), Stanley Kubrick (2), Richard Linklater (2), John McTiernan (2), Martin Scorsese (2), Ridley Scott (2), Lee Unkrich (2), J.J. Abrams (1), Paul Thomas Anderson (1), John Avildsen (1), Ash Brannon (1), Frank Capra (1), Ron Clements (1), Joel and Ethan Coen (1), Francis Ford Copolla (1), Alfonso Cuaron (1), Stanley Donen (1), Clint Eastwood (1), Victor Fleming (1), Milos Forman (1), Terry Gillam (1), Rian Johnson (1), Terry Jones (1), Gene Kelly (1), Akira Kurosawa (1), John Lasseter (1), David Lean (1), Ang Lee (1), Spike Lee (1), Sergio Leone (1), Katia Lund (1), James Mangold (1), Michael Mann (1), Fernando Meirelles (1), Hayao Miyazaki (1), John Musker (1), Christopher Nolan (1), Jordan Peele (1), Roman Polanski (1), Harold Ramis (1), Rob Reiner (1), Russo Brothers (1), Gus van Sant (1), Steven Spielberg (1) Bryan Singer (1), Andrew Stanton (1), Isao Takahata (1), Quentin Tarantino (1), Guillermo Del Torro (1), Gary Trousdale (1), King Vidor (1), Orson Welles (1), Peter Weir (1), Robert Wise (1), David Yates (1) Franchise Count: Best Picture Winner (7), Pixar (3), Star Wars (2), James Cameron (2), Marvel (2), Toy Story (2), Studio Ghibli (2), WDAS (2), 'Before' (1), Blade Runner (1), Monty Python (1), Alien and Predator (1), X-Men (1), MCU (1), Captain America (1), Terminator (1), Die Hard (1), Harry Potter (1), Rocky (1), Oz (1), Indiana Jones (1), Steven Spielberg (1) Genre Count: Drama (22), Adventure (19), Thriller (15), VFX Driven (15), Fantasy (15), Sci-Fi (13), Comedy (13), Action (12), Epic (12), Romance (11), Period Piece (10), Family/Children (10), Novel Adaption (9), Crime/Noir (9), Indie (8), War (8), Sequel (7), Animation (7), Tragedy (7), Horror (6), Musical (6), Cult Classic (5), Western (4), Foreign Language (5), Christmas (3), Melodrama (3), Spy/Detective (3), Romantic Comedy (3), Sports (3), Superhero (2), Comic Book (2), Bio-Pic (2), Satire (2), Remake (2)
  6. I honestly find the movie to be a pretty hot mess, and contradictory (and not really in an illuminating way). But obviously it struck a chord.
  7. Number 39 Fight Club (1999) 20th Century Fox, Directed by David Fincher (70 Points, 19 Votes) "The first rule about fight club is you don't talk about fight club." Top 5 Placements: 1 Top 10 Placements: 2 Top 25 Placements: 7 Previous Rankings: 2016 (39, No Change), 2014 (26, -13), 2013 (18, -21), 2012 (18, -21) Awards Count: Nominated for 1 Oscar Tomatometer: 79% (7.3 Avg Rating) Box Office: 37m (66.7m Adjusted) Synopsis: An insomniac office worker, looking for a way to change his life, crosses paths with a devil-may-care soapmaker, forming an underground fight club that evolves into something much, much more. Critic Opinion: ""Fight Club" delivers a sucker punch to the audience and then pulls the rug out from under it. It is sensational. It is also grimly funny. The mordant script by Jim Uhls, a crystalliza tion of the Chuck Palahniuk novel, may be too good. Norton delivers so many unadulterated, trenchant observations that the narration almost becomes overloaded. The hyper-intense look of the film derives from the narrator's skewed point of view, and it is a tour de force of art direction: the peeling- apart house where Tyler lives, the cityscape in the explosive last scene, the seedy lowlife bar where Tyler and his new buddy hatch Fight Club and the inky basements where the face-pummeling bouts occur. Don't sell this film short, especially its power on a visceral level. The fights range from Norton's first hesitant, then enthusiastic blow to Pitt's face outside the bar to elaborately staged bouts slugged out in the gritty darkness of borrowed basements." - Bob Graham User Opinions: "One of the best movies ever made and definitely Top 5 all time for me. Thrilling, engaging, mesmerising and fearless. That's pretty much what Fight Club is. And you can't help but notice how some of the ideas the film revolves around are just as fitting for today's society as they were back then. Maybe even more so. It also displays one of the, if not the most memorable character ever created by Hollywood. Pitt's Tyler Durden is complex and charming and irresistible in that way that you cheer for him as hard as you can even if he's supposedly the bad guy at some point. And then the movie ends and it leaves you wonder: What if...?" - @James "Yeah, the big message of Fight Club is to find your own way without losing yourself in the process of a dubious system. Yeah, living a dull corporate life injected with an unfulfilling office job and bouts of mindless consumerism is a pretty lousy way to live, but joining a "Fuck Society" cult and going off the nihilistic deep end is no better. Naturally, a lot of kids think they're "above the man" and only think about the first part of this. It's a brilliant movie that plays with finding our own desires in a strange and frustrating world. " - @Hunt for the Wilderpasta Commentary: I guess this is another one of those films the internet fanboy demo goes crazy over that I'm not as huge on, but I won't let that stop me from talking this film up (I'll just need to take some other perspectives beyond my own). Fight Club is a bloody, intense and captivating take from David Fincher on aspects of how we live in society, a type of conformism vs. rebellion, and he goes into this film with an intent to highlight both sides while also ending up with a stance that doesn't really fall with either. The film is quotable, with some really memorable moments, and it's a truly unique film by Fincher. Fight Club managed to be on around 31% of the lists that were submitted with a mean score of 3.7 from the users who voted for it. Decade Count: 90s (14), 10s (12), '00s (9), 80s (9), 70s (6), 60s (5), 50s (4), 40s (2), 30s (1) Tomatometer Count: Over 90% (50), 80%-90% (11), 70%-80% (1) Adjusted Box Office Count: 1b+ (1), 900m (2), 800m (1), 600m (1), 500m (1), 400m (7), 300m (4), 200m (8), 100m (13), Under 100m (22) Director Count: Alfred Hitchcock (3), James Cameron (2), Damien Chazelle (2), David Fincher (2), Stanley Kubrick (2), Richard Linklater (2), John McTiernan (2), Martin Scorsese (2), Lee Unkrich (2), J.J. Abrams (1), Paul Thomas Anderson (1), John Avildsen (1), Ash Brannon (1), Frank Capra (1), Ron Clements (1), Joel and Ethan Coen (1), Francis Ford Copolla (1), Alfonso Cuaron (1), Stanley Donen (1), Clint Eastwood (1), Victor Fleming (1), Milos Forman (1), Terry Gillam (1), Rian Johnson (1), Terry Jones (1), Gene Kelly (1), Akira Kurosawa (1), John Lasseter (1), David Lean (1), Ang Lee (1), Spike Lee (1), Sergio Leone (1), Katia Lund (1), James Mangold (1), Michael Mann (1), Fernando Meirelles (1), Hayao Miyazaki (1), John Musker (1), Christopher Nolan (1), Jordan Peele (1), Roman Polanski (1), Harold Ramis (1), Rob Reiner (1), Russo Brothers (1), Gus van Sant (1), Ridley Scott (1), Steven Spielberg (1) Bryan Singer (1), Andrew Stanton (1), Isao Takahata (1), Quentin Tarantino (1), Guillermo Del Torro (1), Gary Trousdale (1), King Vidor (1), Orson Welles (1), Peter Weir (1), Robert Wise (1), David Yates (1) Franchise Count: Best Picture Winner (6), Pixar (3), Star Wars (2), James Cameron (2), Marvel (2), Toy Story (2), Studio Ghibli (2), WDAS (2), 'Before' (1), Blade Runner (1), Monty Python (1), Alien and Predator (1), X-Men (1), MCU (1), Captain America (1), Terminator (1), Die Hard (1), Harry Potter (1), Rocky (1), Oz (1), Indiana Jones (1), Steven Spielberg (1) Genre Count: Drama (21), Adventure (18), Thriller (15), VFX Driven (15), Fantasy (15), Sci-Fi (13), Comedy (13), Action (11), Epic (11), Romance (11), Family/Children (10), Novel Adaption (9), Crime/Noir (9), Period Piece (9), Indie (8), Sequel (7), War (7), Animation (7), Tragedy (6), Horror (6), Musical (6), Cult Classic (5), Western (4), Foreign Language (5), Christmas (3), Melodrama (3), Spy/Detective (3), Romantic Comedy (3), Superhero (2), Comic Book (2), Bio-Pic (2), Satire (2), Remake (2), Sports (2)
  8. I was about to do a write up for the live action one and then say "oops wrong one!" But I figured that'd be too mean/obvious, especially after Footloose.
  9. Number 40 Beauty and the Beast (1991) Walt Disney Animation Studios, Directed by Gary Trousdale (70 Points, 15 Votes) "How can you read this? There's no pictures!" Top 10 Placements: 2 Top 25 Placements: 8 Previous Rankings: 2016 (47, +7), 2014 (44, +4), 2013 (68, +28), 2012 (77, +37) Awards Count: Won 2 Oscars, Nominated for Best Picture Tomatometer: 94% (8.5 Avg Rating) Box Office: 145.9m (320.3m Adjusted) Synopsis: A young woman whose father has been imprisoned by a terrifying beast offers herself in his place, unaware that her captor is actually a prince, physically altered by a magic spell. Critic Opinion: "Disney's new full-length animated feature, "Beauty and the Beast," is more than a return to classic form, it's a delightfully satisfying modern fable, a near-masterpiece that draws on the sublime traditions of the past while remaining completely in sync with the sensibility of its time. This is a giant step forward for Disney's animation unit -- and a quantum leap past its blandly diverting work in "The Little Mermaid." For the first time in a Disney cartoon, you don't feel as if you've slipped into a time warp. The sense of humor, even the obligatory moral subtext, seems fresh. There's even a kind of impudence in the comedy; you don't feel clobbered with wholesomeness. And yet nothing is lost in bringing a contemporary spirit to this familiar tale of love triumphing over physical imperfection. The storytelling is brisk and engaging, the animation imaginative and deeply textured, the music and the production numbers sublime. Let's not mince words -- it's great." - Hal Hinson User Opinions: "Childhood films are often hard to analyze. For years, I've thought of Beauty and the Beast as a perfectly decent animated Disney movie, but certainly not one of my favorites. After returning to it for the first time in five years though after both performing in a stage version and seeing a live-action remake, I finally understand why this is great. A timeless love story constantly made anew thanks to gorgeous animation and legendary music. The music is staged just as marvelously as it is written, dynamically moving the characters and the "camera" around in a way that always engages. The Beast is clearly one of the greatest animated characters of all time, being ridiculously expressive and shockingly sympathetic throughout despite the admittedly awful way he acts for a lot of the film. However, Belle is truly the heart of the film, one of Disney's best leads. Beauty and the Beast is often considered one of the greatest Disney films of all time, and I've always had trouble agreeing with that. Now, I completely understand why. Beauty and the Beast is one of the greatest movie musicals ever made, brilliantly utilizing fantastic songs to move forward its narrative full of memorable characters realized by superb animation. An absolute classic." - @Blankments "Arguably the best Disney Renaissance film ever made. The pacing and character development were excellent, and the gradual transition of the Beast from cruel to compassionate was handled very well. This was the kind of direction Thor needed" - @Squaremaster316 Commentary: What do you get when you add Stockholm Syndrome and Beastiality together, while throwing in a pinch of gender roles? You get one Disney's feminist classics, Beauty and the Beast! Jokes aside, Beauty and the Beast is a beautifully animated film, with enchanting songs, a touching (although admittedly somewhat disturbing) romance, and some hilarious little moments, it's no wonder why this managed to be the first animated film to ever be nominated for Best Picture, a massive feat. Nearly everyone has seen this film, especially after that one remake thing came out not to long ago, so I'm not sure if I really have to sell what makes this film work so well. Beauty and the Beast ended up on around 25% of the lists submitted with a high mean score of 4.7 from the users who put it on their list. Decade Count: 90s (13), 10s (12), '00s (9), 80s (9), 70s (6), 60s (5), 50s (4), 40s (2), 30s (1) Tomatometer Count: Over 90% (50), 80%-90% (11) Adjusted Box Office Count: 1b+ (1), 900m (2), 800m (1), 600m (1), 500m (1), 400m (7), 300m (4), 200m (8), 100m (13), Under 100m (21) Director Count: Alfred Hitchcock (3), James Cameron (2), Damien Chazelle (2), Stanley Kubrick (2), Richard Linklater (2), John McTiernan (2), Martin Scorsese (2), Lee Unkrich (2), J.J. Abrams (1), Paul Thomas Anderson (1), John Avildsen (1), Ash Brannon (1), Frank Capra (1), Ron Clements (1), Joel and Ethan Coen (1), Francis Ford Copolla (1), Alfonso Cuaron (1), Stanley Donen (1), Clint Eastwood (1), David Fincher (1), Victor Fleming (1), Milos Forman (1), Terry Gillam (1), Rian Johnson (1), Terry Jones (1), Gene Kelly (1), Akira Kurosawa (1), John Lasseter (1), David Lean (1), Ang Lee (1), Spike Lee (1), Sergio Leone (1), Katia Lund (1), James Mangold (1), Michael Mann (1), Fernando Meirelles (1), Hayao Miyazaki (1), John Musker (1), Christopher Nolan (1), Jordan Peele (1), Roman Polanski (1), Harold Ramis (1), Rob Reiner (1), Russo Brothers (1), Gus van Sant (1), Ridley Scott (1), Steven Spielberg (1) Bryan Singer (1), Andrew Stanton (1), Isao Takahata (1), Quentin Tarantino (1), Guillermo Del Torro (1), Gary Trousdale (1), King Vidor (1), Orson Welles (1), Peter Weir (1), Robert Wise (1), David Yates (1) Franchise Count: Best Picture Winner (6), Pixar (3), Star Wars (2), James Cameron (2), Marvel (2), Toy Story (2), Studio Ghibli (2), WDAS (2), 'Before' (1), Blade Runner (1), Monty Python (1), Alien and Predator (1), X-Men (1), MCU (1), Captain America (1), Terminator (1), Die Hard (1), Harry Potter (1), Rocky (1), Oz (1), Indiana Jones (1), Steven Spielberg (1) Genre Count: Drama (20), Adventure (18), Thriller (15), VFX Driven (15), Fantasy (15), Sci-Fi (13), Comedy (12), Action (11), Epic (11), Romance (11), Family/Children (10), Novel Adaption (9), Crime/Noir (9), Period Piece (9), Indie (8), Sequel (7), War (7), Animation (7), Tragedy (6), Horror (6), Musical (6), Cult Classic (5), Western (4), Foreign Language (5), Christmas (3), Melodrama (3), Spy/Detective (3), Romantic Comedy (3), Superhero (2), Comic Book (2), Bio-Pic (2), Satire (2), Remake (2), Sports (1)
  10. Ah okay, that makes a lot more sense. Drive Ins are kind of made for that I never make something I’m anticipated to see a date. Because then I’ll care more about what I’m going to see then the actual date, which kind of jeopardizes the whole thing.
  11. Good on you, if only because couples that go crazy in the theater ruin the film for people around them. I don’t get the point of paying money to see a movie only to ignore that movie to have sex. You can easily do that in your own house (with a movie in the background to) and get a much better ‘experience’ for free that doesn’t piss off everyone around you.
  12. For the last two months my Discover Weekly playlist on Spotify has included a different crappy cover of ‘A Million Dreams’ or some other stupid Showman song. Spotify hates me, I should unsub and go to Apple Music because they clearly have no basic respect for human dignity. They won’t let me forget about the dumb movie.
  13. I was so nervous at that title that the video would start with “I’m not a stranger to the Dark” That movies scarred me
  14. If we can get 17m Previews, I could see this being a realistic predict Thu: 17m Fri: 39.1m Sat: 45.8m Sun: 34.3m 3-Day: 136.2m 3 Day Way overshooting would be Thu: 17m Fri: 51m Sat: 57m Sun: 41.6m 3 Day: 166.6m A tame predict would be Thu: 17m Fri: 34m Sat: 40.8m Sun: 30.6m 3 Day:122.4m
  15. There'll be at least one spandex movie tomorrow, uh oh. Almost all of tomorrows movies look very commercially friendly...
  16. Here's 10 more just misses! 166. Edge of Tomorrow 167. Bicycle Thieves 168. Manchester by the Sea 169. Kill Bill Vol 1 170. Hot Fuzz 171. Who Framed Roger Rabbit 172. Deadpool 173. Django Unchained 174. Interstellar 175. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use and Guidelines. Feel free to read our Privacy Policy as well.