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Kevin Bacon

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Posts posted by Kevin Bacon

  1. I remember 2010 being a much better field than any since, though with 10 you also get stuff like Avatar and The Blind Side(!) that doesn't belong in there in the first place. But other interesting movies like D9, 127 Hours, and the like get in and make the race a bit more interesting even if people like us know it's down to like two movies and the less interesting choice will probably win--after all, The Social Network loss was pretty much the last time I bothered watching the Awards.

    • Like 1
  2. Excellent season, so much going on. This year every day seems to have at least 1 show I look forward to every day and Wednesday it's The Americans.

    Mon- Better Call Saul

    Tues- I Zombie

    Wed- The Americans

    Thurs- The Blacklist, Elementary

    Fri- 12 Monkeys

    Man, The Americans and Saul stick out like sore thumbs on that list.
  3. It's been an extremely long time since a movie truly scared me. As in, induced true fear in me. Possibly since I was a kid. It's a sensation I didn't re-discover up until the past year and a half or so, when I uncovered the spectacular world of indie horror games, with titles like Slender: The Eight Pages, Outlast, Paranormal, Amnesia: The Dark Descent, PT, and the Five Nights at Freddy's series doing something nothing else has: making me turn it off because I couldn't handle it. I've found that, as an adult, film doesn't possess that ability like it used to when I was younger, which is a weird feeling as a big fan of horror films. More recent movies like The Descent and 1408 managed a certain level of suspense, where Evil Dead or The Crazies remakes provided gory thrills--yet the real standout genre fare as of late has been the likes of The Cabin in the Woods and You're Next that subvert the genre entirely and in the process become clever, violent satire.

     

    I took all this into account going into It Follows, which I knew only a few things about: it has a 95% Tomatometer, it stars the lovely Maika Monroe (who you should know from The Guest and if you don't what are you doing watch The Guest already), it's got a bitchin' score, it's a legitimate horror film, and it's going to be a while before I can catch it on demand because it's only playing in a few cities. But, alas, due to popular demand, it's expanded to a wide release and just so happened to end up in my town tonight. So, I grabbed a friend and headed to the theater. There were only a few others in attendance, unsurprisingly, and the trailers were absolutely dreadful with ads for Unfriended and some ridiculous Nicolas Sparks bullriding movie. But then the movie followed, and it was time to see what exactly I was in for.

     

    Critics called the movie "terrifying", a claim I was dubious on myself because movies don't terrify me. Did this buck that trend? No. But holy shit, did it induce some anxiety. Without giving away any of the plot, once the plot gets set into motion about 20 minutes in, the movie becomes an unrelenting barrage of tension with very few jumpscares to break it. My friend noted that it was as if they took what made Halloween scary and stripped it down to its very core and ran with it. Whenever there isn't a direct threat onscreen, it's always with us in spirit, certainly lurking somewhere nearby, prone to pop up in any of the many long scenic shots at any given moment, and even if it doesn't, the loud, booming score will have you certain that it will.

     

    It goes without saying that director David Robert Mitchell is responsible for much of this, but equal props go to Disasterpiece for the intense retro synth-driven score and the cast--specifically Monroe, who once again nails it and could easily find herself becoming the next big "last girl" going forward or just as easily go in an entirely different direction; either way, her future is bright.

     

    There's a respectable chance that with its expansion this becomes a sleeper hit with all the hype in the world behind it, in which case you'll probably see it. Or it could fade away, in which case you should see it anyway because it's a totally unique and wonderfully made horror that you're pretty much certain to have never seen anything like. 9/10

    • Like 7
  4. That actually looks ok.

    I prefer the old title though, but that trailer is quite good. Thomas Jane looks different!

    IT FOLLOWS is headed for $100,000+ from 4 theaters this weekend after a $40,000 Friday. 95% on Rotten Tomatoes.

    Well I suppose discussion of that will be limited to this thread since the BOD thread I made broke some sort of rule.

     

    It Follows is expanding to 1000+ theaters next weekend in light of that number.

  5. Breaking Bad is really the only show where I've never come across anyone who really hates on it. i recall mixed opinions a few years ago but that seems to have disappeared since the third season. It's a worthy #1 even if it isn't my personal choice

    Yeah it's a show that you can't really go wrong with at number one even if you have something different (The Wire, The Sopranos, The Shield, Deadwood) in that spot yourself. It's a perpetual top three choice.
    • Like 1
  6. Sons is better

    Is what somebody who thinks the US Office is way better than the UK version would say.

    Sons is like if you took the first three seasons of The Shield, cranked up the pulpiness, machismo, and "edginess", and then had the quality fall off a cliff in seasons 4-7, leaving the show meandering around for its last few seasons before limping to the finish line.

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