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 Post subject: Re: Your Top 20 of All Time
PostPosted: Fri Sep 17, 2010 6:14 am 
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Kesslers_Curse wrote:
Pardo wrote:
Kickboxer is epic but Bloodsport has pretty much constant fighting all the way through and I love the fact you have differnt fighters from around the world with different styles of martial arts.


And don't forget Bolo; the greatest martial arts villian of all time.


I always thought Bolo in Bloodsport looked quite cute and cuddly for a baddie.

The range of styles on offer is good though, and that scene with the coin and Arabian guy in the hotel- classic.

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 Post subject: Re: Your Top 20 of All Time
PostPosted: Fri Sep 17, 2010 6:20 am 
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Pardo wrote:
Total Recall is a blast as well but Robocop is so over the top and fun, I just put it on and you know you're in for a good time! I remember watching Total Recall back in about 1991 when I was about 7 on good old pirate video. My parents would let me watch pretty much anything unless it had sex in. There is no way I will do the same for my kids, the first 18 I saw was 'Gymkata' at the age of 6 and I still hold that film to be nothing short of amazing! Kickboxer is epic but Bloodsport has pretty much constant fighting all the way through and I love the fact you have differnt fighters from around the world with different styles of martial arts.


I pretty much had a free reign of what I watched too. I was 11 when I first saw Robocop. It came in the post from the Britannia music and film club (whatever happened to them) in the morning and me and my dad were watching it during our lunch an hour later.
The only bit I had to cover my eyes for was when Bob was snorting coke off that hooker's boobs, everything else was deemed OK?

Not sure what to do when my little one is older. I'm all for showing him stuff, but my wife isn't too sure. I mean he took his first steps whilst i was watching A Serbian Film (on my laptop with headphones though)! See what happens I suppose. Stick with In The Night Garden for the time being.

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 Post subject: Re: Your Top 20 of All Time
PostPosted: Fri Sep 17, 2010 12:17 pm 
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phurious wrote:
Pardo wrote:
Total Recall is a blast as well but Robocop is so over the top and fun, I just put it on and you know you're in for a good time! I remember watching Total Recall back in about 1991 when I was about 7 on good old pirate video. My parents would let me watch pretty much anything unless it had sex in. There is no way I will do the same for my kids, the first 18 I saw was 'Gymkata' at the age of 6 and I still hold that film to be nothing short of amazing! Kickboxer is epic but Bloodsport has pretty much constant fighting all the way through and I love the fact you have differnt fighters from around the world with different styles of martial arts.


I pretty much had a free reign of what I watched too. I was 11 when I first saw Robocop. It came in the post from the Britannia music and film club (whatever happened to them) in the morning and me and my dad were watching it during our lunch an hour later.
The only bit I had to cover my eyes for was when Bob was snorting coke off that hooker's boobs, everything else was deemed OK?

Not sure what to do when my little one is older. I'm all for showing him stuff, but my wife isn't too sure. I mean he took his first steps whilst i was watching A Serbian Film (on my laptop with headphones though)! See what happens I suppose. Stick with In The Night Garden for the time being.


I have an 8 and 5 year old and I know they couldn't cope with anything remotely strong. So while I don't hide my 18 dvds anywhere out of their reach (as mentioned previously on another thread my Dawn of the Dead remake sits next to the Wiggles) they would be put off by the cover anyway.

Of course I watched stuff above my certificate level when I was a kid but I saometimes regretted it. The kid scratching at the window in Salems Lot freaked me out for years and the knock knock knocking of the hook in 'The Fog' was scarey too. But then thats the power of these images and I think the kids generally respect their gutt feeling of whether to watch it or not. I certainly wouldn't say 'hey look at this this is cool' if I knew it would upset them.

The first film I can recall they shrinked away from was the original Batman movie (Adam West one) where the shark bites his foot!


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 Post subject: Re: Your Top 20 of All Time
PostPosted: Fri Sep 17, 2010 12:31 pm 
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My nine year old girl absolutely loves District 9. I would never let them watch any of my more extreme titles though.

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 Post subject: Re: Your Top 20 of All Time
PostPosted: Fri Sep 17, 2010 5:48 pm 
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HoratioHufnagel wrote:
Of course I watched stuff above my certificate level when I was a kid but I saometimes regretted it. The kid scratching at the window in Salems Lot freaked me out for years


Yeah That bit in Salems lot is spine tingling. The only film I remember watching and really fucking me over was watching Pet Sematary at aged 10 and Zelda, she traumatized me so much it took me till I was 23 to watch it again (i'm only 26 now) I also saw a episode of Freddys Nightmares at way to young an age and it was an episode when this woman has to babysit at this house and they have a deranged daughter locked up in the basement. I think if I saw Mario Bava's 'The Drop Of Water' at a young age that would have creeped me out as well

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 Post subject: Re: Your Top 20 of All Time
PostPosted: Fri Sep 17, 2010 5:52 pm 

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Yeah definitely add to the Salem's Lot window scene. Really creepy.

That tv movie had some of the most scariest vampires--also the scene where the teacher's house guest is in the rocking chair and says: "loooook at me teacha! Look at me!!"
and when they are killing Barlow and the light in the room is swinging and you can see the vampires crawling towards the kid.


Robocop didnt make my top twenty but its high up there. Its not a scientific list anyway.
:)


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 Post subject: Re: Your Top 20 of All Time
PostPosted: Fri Sep 17, 2010 7:41 pm 
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Salem's Lot was something I saw pretty young, not sure when, but I was definitely at primary school and yes, that window scene was the talk of the school yard the next day.

I've not seen it since so my memory is hazy, but I remember being absolutely shit-scared when Barlow rises up from the floor in the kitchen. Is this an actual scene? Or something I've made up in my mind? Anyways it really made me nervous about dark shapes on the floor in my bedroom.

As for censoring stuff from my son. Well I'll come to that hurdle when it rears its head. It depends how he develops as a person really.

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 Post subject: Re: Your Top 20 of All Time
PostPosted: Sat Sep 18, 2010 2:12 am 

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Yeah that's a great scene too.
The table starts to shake and the light flickers--as a family is talking to the priest (about their kid's fascination with monsters ha)
and this weird black shape busts in through a window and rises from the corner of the kitchen floor.
Then he turns around and kills the kid's parents.

The priest has to trade himself so the kid is allowed to escape.
James Mason is pretty creepy in it too.


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 Post subject: Re: Your Top 20 of All Time
PostPosted: Mon Sep 27, 2010 2:18 pm 

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I couldn't seem to narrow it down to just 20, but I did my damn best:

- Apocalypse Now Redux
- Star Wars: Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back
- The Good, The Bad & The Ugly
- Alien/Aliens
- Don't Look Now
- China Town
- The Godfather/The Godfather Part II
- HEAT
- A Clockwork Orange
- Rear Window
- Citizen Kane
- The Third Man
- Seven Samurai
- The Seventh Seal
- Andrei Rublev
- Aguirre: Wrath of God
- Breathless
- Blue Velvet/Mulholland Drive
- A History of Violence/Eastern Promises
- Easy Rider
- If
- Natural Born Killers
- True Romance
- Taxi Driver
- Salvador
- The Deer Hunter
- Inception
- Ed Wood
- High Fidelity
- The Exorcist
- Blade Runner: The Final Cut
- Star Trek: Wrath of Kahn
- Planet of the Apes
- The Thing
- Silent Running
- Metropolis
- The Matrix
- Moon
- Mad Max
- Akira
- Ichi The Killer
- Tetsuo Iron Man
- Battle Royale
- Zatoichi
- Infernal Affairs
- Old Boy
- Night Watch
- Pans Labyrinth
- Let The Right One In

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 Post subject: Re: Your Top 20 of All Time
PostPosted: Sun Aug 21, 2011 11:44 am 
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BAM! List updated and reshuffled :D

1. Don’t Look Now [Roeg]
2. Rosemary’s Baby [Polanski]
3. The Godfather I & II [Coppola]
4. Psycho [Hitchcock]
5. The Tenant [Polanski]
6. The Innocents [Clayton]
7. The Wicker Man [Hardy]
8. Fargo [Coen]
9. Blue Velvet [Lynch]
10. Ghost World [Zwigoff]
11. Goodfellas [Scorsese]
12. Rear Window [Hitchcock]
13. The Third Man [Reed]
14. Barton Fink [Coen]
15. The Shining [Kubrick]
16. Deep End [Skolimowski]
17. Mystery Train [Jarmusch]
18. Black Cat, White Cat [Kusturica]
19. Blade Runner [Scott]
20. Martin [Romero]
21. For a Few Dollars More [Leone]
22. Mulholland Drive [Lynch]
23. Dog Day Afternoon [Lumet]
24. Suspiria [Argento]
25. The Conversation [Coppola]
26. Harold and Maude [Ashby]
27. Taxi Driver [Scorsese]
28. Night of the Hunter [Laughton]
29. A Clockwork Orange [Kubrick]
30. The Fly [Cronenberg]
31. Texas Chainsaw Massacre [Hooper]
32. Sunset Blvd. [Wilder]
33. Séance on a Wet Afternoon [Forbes]
34. Red Lights [Kahn]
35. The Shout [Skolimowski]
36. Zodiac [Fincher]
37. Judex [Franju]
38. Once Upon a Time in the West [Leone]
39. The Thing [Carpenter]
40. Night of the Living Dead [Romero]
41. Do the Right Thing [Lee]
42. Onibaba [Shindo]
43. Keane [Kerrigan]
44. I Walked With A Zombie [Tourneur]
45. The Vanishing [Sluzier]
46. Spider [Cronenberg]
47. Thirst [Chan-Wook]
48. Dogville [Von Trier]
49. Alien [Scott]
50. Lemming [Moll]
51. Dawn of the Dead [Romero]
52. Kiss Me Deadly [Aldrich]
53. Village of the Damned [Rilla]
54. Ariel [Kaurismaki]
55. Ace in the Hole [Wilder]
56. Mumsy, Nanny, Sonny, and Girly [Francis]
57. Happiness [Solondz]
58. Jackie Brown [Tarantino]
59. Female Prisoner 701: Scorpion [Ito]
60. Long Weekend [Eggleston]
61. Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai [Jarmusch]
62. A Simple Plan [Raimi]
63. El Topo [Jodorowski]
64. Home [Meier]
65. The Ipcress File [Furie]
66. Dead Man [Jarmusch]
67. Wise Blood [Huston]
68. Cul-de-sac [Polanski]
69. Harry, He’s Here to Help [Moll]
70. Deep Red [Argento]
71. Magnolia [Anderson]
72. Trees Lounge [Buscemi]
73. Beetlejuice [Burton]
74. The Exorcist [Friedkin]
75. Valhalla Rising [Winding Refn]
76. The White Ribbon [Haneke]
77. Twelve Monkeys [Gilliam]
78. The Draughtsman’s Contract [Greenaway]
79. Dogtooth [Lanthimos]
80. Shogun Assassin [Houston]
81. Elephant [Van Sant]
82. The Evil Dead [Raimi]
83. Cache [Haneke]
84. Miracle Mile [De Jarnatt]
85. Q the Winged Serpent [Cohen]
86. Carnival of Souls [Harvey]
87. Female Convict Scorpion: Jailhouse 41 [Ito]
88. Night on Earth [Jarmusch]
89. The Killing of a Chinese Bookie [Cassavetes]
90. Les Diaboliques [Clouzot]
91. The Exorcist III [Blatty]
92. Rififi [Dessin]
93. Frenzy [Hitchcock]
94. Vampire’s Kiss [Bierman]
95. Katalin Varga [Strickland]
96. Ravenous [Bird]
97. Re Animator [Gordon]
98. Fear X [Winding Refn]
99. Timecrimes [Vigalondo]
100. The Devil and Daniel Webster [Dieterle]


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 Post subject: Re: Your Top 20 of All Time
PostPosted: Mon Aug 22, 2011 7:59 pm 
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Location: St. Amant, LA
Robocop > Total Recall
Cyborg > Any other JCVD film

My dad and I went to the theater to see 'Cyborg' when it was first released. I was 8 years old. Been in love with the idea of the post-apocalypse ever since.


Last edited by jaho420 on Mon Aug 22, 2011 8:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: Re: Your Top 20 of All Time
PostPosted: Mon Aug 22, 2011 8:13 pm 
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There is a serious lack of JCVD in my film viewing history :o . . .


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 Post subject: Re: Your Top 20 of All Time
PostPosted: Mon Aug 22, 2011 8:22 pm 
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I couldn't quite narrow it down to 20. This is the order that I thought of as I was typing and minus the shuffling of a couple of titles, they seem to pretty much be in order.

Mulholland Drive (Lynch)
The Thing (Carpenter)
The Shining (Kubrick)
Blade Runner (Scott)
Solaris (Tarkovsky)
Dawn Of The Dead (Romero)
Apocalypse Now (Coppola)
Deep Red (Argento)
Short Cuts (Altman)
For A Few Dollars More (Leone)
Pulp Fiction (Tarantino)
Videodrome (Cronenberg)
Zombie (Fulci)
No Country For Old Men (Coen)
Goodfellas (Scorsese)
Serbian Film (Spasojevic)
Warriors (Hill)
80 Blocks From Tiffany’s (Weis)
Gozu (Miike)
Santa Sangre (Jodorowsky)
City Of God (Meirelles & Lund)
Damnation (Tarr)
Texas Chainsaw Massacre (Hooper)
Pusher I-III (Refn)
Ran (Kurosawa)
Hard Boiled (Woo)
Eastern Promises (Cronenberg)
Evil Dead 2 (Raimi)
Amores Perros (Inarritu)
Irreversible (Noe)
Shogun Assassin (Houston)
The Exorcist (Friedkin)
Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior (Miller)
The Big Lebowski (Coen)
The Hit (Frears)

Think I might try to do a full 100 one day.


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 Post subject: Re: Your Top 20 of All Time
PostPosted: Wed Aug 24, 2011 3:22 pm 
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Ask me tomorrow and it'll probably be a different list. In no particular order;

Battle Royale
Dawn of the dead
Superman
Raiders of the lost ark
Dark water
Ju dou
Oldboy
Apocalypse now
Pulp fiction
Leon
Nil by mouth
Totoro
Robocop
Ravenous
Deliverance
Jaws
The Conversaion
Tremors
Blood simple

OK, thats 19 of them. Trying to pick a 20th title is frankly too much of a struggle. :)

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 Post subject: Re: Your Top 20 of All Time
PostPosted: Mon Aug 29, 2011 8:49 am 

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Posts: 4
I like animated, action and romantic movies. So my favorite are;

Baby's Day out
Kung Fu Panda 1
Kung Fu Panda 2
Toy story 1
Toy story 2
Toy story 3
Titanic
Transformer
Harry Potter Series.
Cars 1
Cars 2
Final Destination

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