"Taken" is such a bad movie. I mean damn. It's a shame that's at the top. It was as bad or worse than "Righteous Kill."
Really? I loved it. I had never had a crush on Liam Nisson until that movie. Also, it had tons of HSQ moments for me.
'Lessons'
A place to talk about movies--old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
"Taken" is such a bad movie. I mean damn. It's a shame that's at the top. It was as bad or worse than "Righteous Kill."
Really? I loved it. I had never had a crush on Liam Nisson until that movie. Also, it had tons of HSQ moments for me.
I thought Taken was ridiculous. The boys here love the action, but for me, the setup was so absurd. "Hi, let me drop anvil after anvil the possible danger to my daughter so the (stupid) viewers will know what's happening when it happens exactly the way I said it could." I couldn't get past that.
I watched Taken the other night. Did they ever show what happened to the other girl the daughter was with when they were taken? Did I miss something?
Also, was it really necessary for Liam to kill all those people? Couldn't he have just winged a few more of them? Also, re: my question above, couldn't Liam have saved a few more victims who weren't his daughter? It seemed kind of cold to just leave them all behind.
With all the best of and decade lists around I started trying to think of movies in the 2000s that stayed with me (in no order):
Tsotsi
Billy Elliot
Brokeback Mountain
Memoirs of a Geisha
Amelie
Cold Mountain
The first Bourne
Where the Wild Things Are
Momento
Away from her
The Incredibles
I actually stopped paying attention halfway through, Tom. No clue.
Tom, Liam Neeson's character found her in the 2nd brothel--handcuffed to a bed, dead from a drug overdose.
I enjoyed the movie. Yeah, there were anvils but the action was well done. I hated the daughter but I thought it was interesting that all three brothels were identical in scheme--with doors/curtains in labrythian setups and the girls drugged out of their minds. They just got fancier the more money the guys were spending.
I saw a GREAT interview with Liam Neeson that made me love him--someone asked him about how difficult it was doing the fight scenes for a man of his "advanced age." He said the fight scenes and stunts weren't difficult at all--it was the running! LN's a smoker so he was really tired after they made him run after all those perps.
I laughed at the anvil virginity will save you life! 'Cause that's funny.
Toy Movies: Smurfs, Care Bears, and Play-Doh Adapted For The Big Screen (VIDEO)
Imagine if Peter Jackson turned "The Smurfs" into an epic war movie. Or if Wes Anderson put his spin on Teddy Ruxpin. It'd be pretty awesome. In Dan Meth's "Toy Movies," all your favorite childhood toys are re-imagined through the eyes of famous directors. We'd shell out for David Lynch's "Koosh Ball."
Cashmere, Please don't use (font color="white") for spoiler font. Use the s quickedit or (span class="spoiler").
I found it amusing that Neeson's virginal brunette daughter was played by the slutty blonde on Lost. And the callous disregard for anybody else's daughter bothered me a lot, too.
I sort of liked Eternal Sunshine as one of those plotless dreams one has, that you get flashes of in memory later on, but don't feel a compulsion to string together narratively. The characters were part of the scenery for me.
And ita's couples are mine, I think.