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What the hell were they thinking? It was actually a really decent movie up until that point and then frickin aliens? How did that tie in with the original Cloverfield? Or even this new Paradox movie? It's a shame because I remember actually really liking the original minus the "monster close up" scene, but this mythos around it now is just awful to the point that it taints the movie for me.
All this talk about bad monster movies makes me feel bad enough that I should recommend a good one, so if you haven't seen it, one of the most underrated monster movies is probably Splinter from 2008... absolutely fantastic (albeit smaller) monster...
The Classic Movie Marathon continues. Started with Citizen Kane. I hadn't seen it in 40 years, and while I understand its importance from the standpoint of directing and cinematography, with the script predating modern non-sequential narration, the retold story of William Randolph Hearst is just not that compelling. In contrast, To Kill a Mockingbird is one I hadn't ever seen, for some strange reason. It really deserves its place in any Top 10 list of films. In black and white from 1962, Gregory Peck as Atticus Finch and his little daughter Scout, and this amazing story will make you cry if you're not a soulless beast.
Casablanca is playing now. Doctor Zhivago is next.
Now To Kill a Mockingbird is joining the list of banned books, because the lefties are realizing that it violates the current mantra, that victims are always to be believed, and to defend the accused is to be beneath contempt. I wonder how Harper Lee is dealing with her new found infamy. I suppose it underlines the true genius of the book, that it is actually dealing with timeless themes - just rearrange the characters a little and you have anytime, anyplace. Of course, none of these idiots have ever actually read the book.
What did you guys who have “Kong Skull Island” think of it?
I think it would be interesting to see a modernized version of To Kill a Mockingbird with the setting changed to a college campus and the accused changed to a white male frat boy. Atticus Finch might be a lawyer working for Fire. You get essentially the same story with the same mob mentality (lynching in the modern age has been replaced by making someone chronically unhirable or unable to enroll in a different university, accomplishing the same), but instead of everyone thinking that they would be the ones out there supporting Atticus Finch, you would actually recreate the animosity that a character like that would have really had to have put up with by virtually everyone.
Just like everyone assumes that they would have been the person who, like Captain von Trapp in Sound of Music, pulled down the Nazi banners when he found them hanging at his house. More likely, they would have been the ones who turned him in for pulling them down.