The Last Film You Saw.

Red State. Bad movie was bad.

Snow White and the Huntsman, twice.

Surprisingly good, for what it was. Kristen Stewart actually tries to act, unconstrained by the terrible writing of the “Twilight” movies. Sadly her face often remains inert throughout the movie, and her rousing speech at one point was so badly written I almost mistook it for Kojima writing about lightning and thunder in MGS4. (On that note, the Magic Mirror sounds like Vamp) She gets some fun action scenes though.

Chris Hemsworth does an absolutely bang up job as the Huntsman, with a great accent and great deadpan humor playing off Snow White. The cinematography is very good, keeping everything framed quite well, and dare I say it, artistically, from quiet moments to combat sequences.

Oh and naturally, there’s Charleze Theron’s performance as the truly evil Queen. Awesome.

I saw Tron Legacy.

I hate you people for talking about the Daft Punk cameo so much. You made it sound like a big deal. I had my finger poised over the mute button throughout the whole flick, awaiting to be disgusted by a three-minute glorified rave sequence, but it was just a few seconds showing a hole in the wall as some bland electronic music played.

The music in Blade Runner is fucking amazing.

You’re pretty mad about that movie huh?

The Double. Richard Gere, Martin Sheen

It wasn’t bad, nor was it all that great. It had a bunch of A list actors, but felt like a predictable low budget movie. Martin Sheen’s performance was pretty much useless, leaving much to be desired. Richard Gere did a fair job portraying his character, though his death scene was rather abrupt and hokey. Even with these two greats acting mediocre to a poor script, it was Topher Grace that stole the spotlight. Also, the guy who plays Bill Compton in True Blood does a horrible Russian impression.

Iron Man 2

After some deliberations, I think I like this one more than the original. I hadn’t realized until the other day that Tony invented the same energy as the Tesseract cube, tying this movie into The Avengers more than I thought they had originally. I should have noticed this earlier, but I hadn’t watched it since before Captain America, so out of sight and all… This also explains why Thor’s lightning attack powered his suit in The Avengers.

Gasp Blasphemy! :stuck_out_tongue:

It makes sense, but how do you know that? At what point did they say that? Or are you just theorizing?

I just finished watching the 2009 Star Trek, it was okay.

What’s more is that I’ve now officially watched every single episode and movie of Star Trek ever made.
I feel as though my nerdiness has been proven.

At first I was just theorizing. Tony got the idea for his new element from his father, who found the Tesseract Cube while looking for Captain America. Also, Thor’s lightning strike charges up Tony’s reactor.

Then, while watching Iron Man 2, I noticed there are sketches of the Cube in Howard Stark’s notes in the bin that Tony is rummaging through. So I consider that theory confirmed.

American Psycho

Castaway on the Moon (Korean, get with subtitles in ENG|SWE) was an amazing movie.

Get it. Watch it. See it.

It starts off with a suicide and gets truly bizarre after that, without resorting to surrealism. It’s weird but realistic. It focuses on only two characters. Some of their weird thoughts are narrated throughout, yet they make perfect sense (from a certain point of view).

While I was at it, I decided to watch Moon (the 2009 one about the guy in the moonbase).

Pretty good. The ending felt abrupt, though, considering how slow other parts felt. It’s one of those endings where they have some people say a few audio clips like it’s a news station, and then the exposition gets left at that.

Prometheus. Good movie, beautiful visuals, but…

SPOILERS IN BLACK TEXT
[COLOR=‘Black’]Why did they take off their helmets? I’d keep them on in case there was some disease they didn’t know about.
Also, when a round space ship is rolling towards you, you fucking run to the side!
I agree with this video(spoilers in the video)

Today I watched Hobo With A Shotgun and Falling Down. I should go and see Léon/The Professional again so I can see at least one movie in which the main character survives.

Oh, and I saw an old adaptation/documentary called Mission to Moscow which follows the US diplomat to the USSR preceding the outset of WWII.

I just finished the Macross Plus OVA. Meh. It was talked up too much for me to enjoy it, probably.

Koreans make the best movies.

The friend who recommended that one to me told me it was the happiest Korean movie he’d ever seen.

He describes in fair detail to me how every other Korean movie he sees is very powerful, very interesting, very vivid, and always ends in terrible tragedy (with the only variable being when tragedy enters the movie).

His description of Castaway on the Moon was: “It’s like a normal Korean movie but in reverse.

You should see ‘I Saw the Devil’

It’s so badass.

I accidentally 12 gigs of WWII documentaries

I hope I have space for that Devil one :awesome:

Founded in 2004, Leakfree.org became one of the first online communities dedicated to Valve’s Source engine development. It is more famously known for the formation of Black Mesa: Source under the 'Leakfree Modification Team' handle in September 2004.