What's the last non-horror/non-scifi/non-Porn movie you watched today??

Started by Dr.Teufel Geist, August 01, 2009, 09:56:42 PM

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slayergriffith

Quote from: Scatter on February 25, 2011, 09:25:58 PM
Slayer, I see you're stuck in the 70s with movies.............a man after my own heart!
I haven't really noticed, now that you mention it i have been watching alot of seventie movies.
I hate to advocate drugs, alcohol, violence, or insanity to anyone, but they've always worked for me.

slayergriffith

I hate to advocate drugs, alcohol, violence, or insanity to anyone, but they've always worked for me.


thelatewinslowleach

My music is for Phoenix. Only she can sing it. Anyone else who tries, dies.

slayergriffith

I hate to advocate drugs, alcohol, violence, or insanity to anyone, but they've always worked for me.


thelatewinslowleach

     The Social Network
Reccommended. Look for Dark Shadows' David Selby as a lawyer.
My music is for Phoenix. Only she can sing it. Anyone else who tries, dies.

RHosking

Lately all I have been watching is 70's TV like episodes of The Rockford Files and Kojak.  The last movie - almost shameful to say was police Academy 4 on Netflix streaming.  I recently saw all seven again - last time was as a somewhat youthful teen in the 80's.  Though they are pretty bad - something about them caught my funnybone and eye(the eye part was Leslie Easterbrook for sure!).  Now the last movie I saw in the theatre was The King's Speech - it was as good as everyone says it is.

BaronLatos35

"For one who has lived but a single lifetime, you are a wise man ...Van Helsing."
"I shall awaken memories of love and crime and death..."

MDG

Appointmnet with Danger, a middling procedural with Alan Ladd. Interesting in that the two killers are played by Jack Webb and Harry Morgan, partnered before their Dragnet days.
MDG

long live kong

Monster lovers never grow old....



Elisabeth

A STAR IS BORN, with Fredric March and Janet Gaynor  (1937)
"E"
"....I do hope he won't upset Henry..."

Scatter

"Brotherhood Of The Bell" (1970) Glenn Ford, Dean Jagger. Made-for-TV fare about a man (Ford) who is part of a secret society of the rich and powerful who is forced to destroy an old friend for the good of the brotherhood. This leads him to a crisis of conscience and causes him to try to expose the sect to the media, which in turn causes the brothers to turn their considerable resources toward his destruction.

Jagger and Ford are outstanding, as is Will Geer. Yet more evidence of the creativity and talent assembled during 70s TV, and why that era has never been, and likely WILL never be, surpassed for its quality.
We're all here because we're not all there.
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