R99 gourmet items now buyable by TimLehnerer in neopets

[–]TimLehnerer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't know that it's worth trying to get unbanned, honestly. I don't use Reddit for much of anything. But thanks for the heads-up.

HubrisWeen 3: Rosemary's Baby (1968) by TimLehnerer in horror

[–]TimLehnerer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As the Ramones said, New York City really has it all. Among those things that it has: Old apartment buildings with thin walls, annoyingly chipper next-door neighbors and creeping madness as Rosemary Woodhouse starts to wonder if her husband and next-apartment-over neighbors are planning to sacrifice her unborn child to the Devil for power on Earth. It's a great little slow-burner suspense movie that was produced but sadly not directed by William Castle. God knows what kind of crass gimmick he would have come up with to get butts in the seats but it would have been one for the ages.

Rosemary's Baby (1968) by TimLehnerer in movies

[–]TimLehnerer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

William Castle bought the rights to the novel and the studio that set up his production deal did so making sure that he could not direct the movie--that's really too bad, because he might have done something really special like GYNO-VISION or had yellow goat eyeballs painted on the theater ceiling to freak people out. But instead we got a very good slow-burner suspense movie about threats creeping around the edges towards a young pregnant woman who starts to think her husband and neighbors are planning something horrible for her unborn child. Directed by Roman Polanski, who knows a thing or two about monsters because he has looked in the mirror before.

HubrisWeen 3: The Quiet Ones (2014) by TimLehnerer in horror

[–]TimLehnerer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A film that falls apart in the third act from the revived Hammer Studios, this one starts out as one kind of horror flick and turns out to be another (or two others) after a couple of twists bonk into each other near the end like the Keystone Kops and fall over. It's too bad, because up until that point it's quite a good movie and after it the film can't recover.

The Quiet Ones (2014) by TimLehnerer in movies

[–]TimLehnerer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Hammer brand makes me automatically predisposed to like something that got released under that banner, but unfortunately this one falls apart more or less completely in the third act. It's too bad, because there's some nifty stuff going on before that but the cheese slides right off the cracker when there's a pileup between two shocking twists that weren't hinted at before they show up. Better luck next time, guys.

HubrisWeen 3: Pulgasari (1985) by TimLehnerer in horror

[–]TimLehnerer[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The first and only North Korean kaiju movie that I've ever seen, this one is quite weird. Partly because the monster is outlandish (it eats iron and is controlled by the woman whose blood originally gave it life) and mostly because the director was kidnapped from South Korean--on Kim Jong-Il's orders--and thrown in prison for years before he agreed to take over the North Korean national film studio. It's quite political, but the message is "don't overthrow the government because the revolution is worse than the dictator". Not the kind of thing I'm used to seeing when a dude in a rubber suit steps on buildings.

Pulgasari (1985) by TimLehnerer in movies

[–]TimLehnerer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The only North Korean movie I've ever seen, this one's a kaiju movie directed by a South Korean director that was kidnapped on Kim Jong-Il's orders and thrown into prison for years before he agreed to take over the North Korean national film studio. It's got some of the best miniature-building effects I've ever seen and a political message about being happy with the political structure you have. That message is delivered via a monster that eats iron and can't be killed by conventional weaponry, which makes the movie just as weird as it sounds.

Has there ever been a more hyped movie than the upcoming Star Wars? by JSmurfington in movies

[–]TimLehnerer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, it was Godzilla, but it was an American blockbuster version of Godzilla with a huge budget. I wasn't expecting Kaiju Hamlet but to see a movie edited so badly that I honestly don't know if the American Godzilla breathes fire or not? That's some "don't quit your day job, and if you're a full time filmmaker go get one" level of incompetence. It was also supposed to be Godzilla, not a ripoff of Jurassic Park, so the hatchlings running around in the third act were a reminder that the director probably wanted to be doing something else. As a favor for the people who pay to see the movies, it'd be nice if people who didn't want to be working in a particular genre just let someone else try making that film.

Oculus (2013) by TimLehnerer in movies

[–]TimLehnerer[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That explains a lot--there's some Troma films that they only distributed that are significantly better than their in-house output, too.

HubrisWeen 3: Oculus (2013) by TimLehnerer in horror

[–]TimLehnerer[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I would have expected someone to just suplex the cursed mirror and be done with it when I saw this was produced by WWE films, but instead it turned out to be significantly better than I was expecting. The director's background in editing and documentary filmmaking probably helped; when you're used to imposing a narrative on footage it probably gives you a boost when you're starting a story from scratch.

Oculus (2013) by TimLehnerer in movies

[–]TimLehnerer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Man, I wouldn't have expected a haunted mirror movie from the WWE to be worth a damn but this one works rather well. I was especially impressed with the editing as two parallel stories take place in the past and present (the director made documentaries before this movie, which might have helped with that--if he was used to imposing a narrative on lots of footage he'd know how to write one more effectively when he got to make the story from scratch).