In no particular order:
Revenge of the Sith
Return of the Jedi
The Empire Strikes Back
Gladiator
Last King of Scotland
X-Men First Class
Casino Royale
Schindler's List (for comedic purposes)
Batman Begins
The Dark Knight
Gettysburg
The Last Samurai
Braveheart
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Favorite movies?
- Darth_aurelius
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- NotTheElliot
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The Thing (1982) is one of the best body horror movies ever made.
The Truman Show
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly
Dumb and Dumber
BTW, Braveheart had a sequel which was much more historically accurate, "Outlaw King". Would heavily recommend watching a review of it.
The Truman Show
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly
Dumb and Dumber
BTW, Braveheart had a sequel which was much more historically accurate, "Outlaw King". Would heavily recommend watching a review of it.
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Have you seen the remake of The Thing? I am too lazy to actually look up the release date but I know it would have been within the last 8 years or so. I thought it was very good though naturally, a bit derivative.NotTheElliot wrote: 10 Jun 2024, 08:14 The Thing (1982) is one of the best body horror movies ever made.
The Truman Show
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly
Dumb and Dumber
BTW, Braveheart had a sequel which was much more historically accurate, "Outlaw King". Would heavily recommend watching a review of it.
I can't stand Jim Carrey as I find that his form of "comedy" relies almost exclusively on facial contortions coupled with extremely infantile kids jokes which is beneath my intellectual level. He is the antithesis of the comedic geniuses behind South Park.
I also saw Outlaw King but thought that it was inferior in every way to Braveheart as the music was far less inspiring then James Horner's magnificent score, the cinematography was befitting of a Netflix made for TV movie, the acting was mostly mediocre though the guy who played the Earn de Warren did a convincing job (I can't stand douchebag Chad Captain Kirk in that movie or any other) and the battle scenes just seemed cheap and paltry compared with the titanic and gruesome medieval clashes featured in Braveheart. Also, Mel Gibson is a great and powerful enemy of the jews and as such, his films receive even greater praise from me.
Captain, Commanding Officer and Founding Father of the Incel Movement
- Darth_aurelius
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Red Dragon is one of the most underrated and unappreciated films in the last 20 years. Ralph Fiennes is brilliant and his turn as the autistic, serial killmaxxing, gymcel sperg really shows his incredible range especially when contrasted with his performance in something like Schindler's List where he played the sophisticated, cosmopolitan SS camp commandant. Also, I did see Perfume many years ago which one of my former undergrads recommended to be and found it to be sensationally degenerate in its raunchy and explicitly sensual themes although I will say that from the standpoint of cinematography and technical movie making, it was very well done.Nagger wrote: 10 Jun 2024, 10:16 Silence of the Lambs (because of Hannibal)
Hannibal
Red Dragon
Dark Knight
No country for old men
Ted K
The Hobbit movies (only modern highly successful movie with almost no foids)
The Perfume: the story of a Murderer
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- Nagger
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Yeah I agree Red Dragon is a true gem. I liked Perfume because it followed the book relatively precisely (it only cut out some unnecessary parts that didn't really affect the plot too much). Anyhow the plot is in my opinion pretty good, a brocel basically has the power to do anything he wants and chooses to rope in his own creative way. Anyhow, even though the autor in german, the book portrays LE FRENCH, so you know what you are getting into regarding nudity and sex.Darth_aurelius wrote: 10 Jun 2024, 10:58Red Dragon is one of the most underrated and unappreciated films in the last 20 years. Ralph Fiennes is brilliant and his turn as the autistic, serial killmaxxing, gymcel sperg really shows his incredible range especially when contrasted with his performance in something like Schindler's List where he played the sophisticated, cosmopolitan SS camp commandant. Also, I did see Perfume many years ago which one of my former undergrads recommended to be and found it to be sensationally degenerate in its raunchy and explicitly sensual themes although I will say that from the standpoint of cinematography and technical movie making, it was very well done.Nagger wrote: 10 Jun 2024, 10:16 Silence of the Lambs (because of Hannibal)
Hannibal
Red Dragon
Dark Knight
No country for old men
Ted K
The Hobbit movies (only modern highly successful movie with almost no foids)
The Perfume: the story of a Murderer
I also forgot to add Inglorious Bastards because Hans Landa is my spirit animal, even though the film was made by jews for jews his character is still one of the most memorable in the history of cinema.
Also undergrads... are you a professor? How can someone as based as you make it into academia? No offence but you must work for some regional or smaller collage, I don't imagine that the lefties would allow anyone of your caliber to even come close to academic circles. Like my uni is super duper gay... even mentioning that I like Hans Landa is probably enough to get me expelled.
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Lol SS Standartenfuhrer Hans Landa is one of my personal heroes and one of the most Machiavellian and brilliant characters from any film that I can think of. I do agree with your assessment of the movie as jewish propaganda but that is an a priori and axiomatic truth in the domain of cinema as it is modulated by hebrew sensibilities and the directorial discretion of the jews who contrive to foist their propaganda on normies.Nagger wrote: 10 Jun 2024, 15:09Yeah I agree Red Dragon is a true gem. I liked Perfume because it followed the book relatively precisely (it only cut out some unnecessary parts that didn't really affect the plot too much). Anyhow the plot is in my opinion pretty good, a brocel basically has the power to do anything he wants and chooses to rope in his own creative way. Anyhow, even though the autor in german, the book portrays LE FRENCH, so you know what you are getting into regarding nudity and sex.Darth_aurelius wrote: 10 Jun 2024, 10:58Red Dragon is one of the most underrated and unappreciated films in the last 20 years. Ralph Fiennes is brilliant and his turn as the autistic, serial killmaxxing, gymcel sperg really shows his incredible range especially when contrasted with his performance in something like Schindler's List where he played the sophisticated, cosmopolitan SS camp commandant. Also, I did see Perfume many years ago which one of my former undergrads recommended to be and found it to be sensationally degenerate in its raunchy and explicitly sensual themes although I will say that from the standpoint of cinematography and technical movie making, it was very well done.Nagger wrote: 10 Jun 2024, 10:16 Silence of the Lambs (because of Hannibal)
Hannibal
Red Dragon
Dark Knight
No country for old men
Ted K
The Hobbit movies (only modern highly successful movie with almost no foids)
The Perfume: the story of a Murderer
I also forgot to add Inglorious Bastards because Hans Landa is my spirit animal, even though the film was made by jews for jews his character is still one of the most memorable in the history of cinema.
Also undergrads... are you a professor? How can someone as based as you make it into academia? No offence but you must work for some regional or smaller collage, I don't imagine that the lefties would allow anyone of your caliber to even come close to academic circles. Like my uni is super duper gay... even mentioning that I like Hans Landa is probably enough to get me expelled.
I work at a major university somewhere in the midwestern US. I have a JD and while I never actually took the bar in my home state or practiced law, I have taught constitutional law, political science, philosophy, intro to criminology and some history courses to undergrads for quite a while now. I typically teach the survey courses as I am generally regarded as the most charismsmaxxed professor in our department and as such, they try to get me to sell the discipline to kids who are often lacking in intrinsic motivation and personal discipline. I got to where I am on the basis of my academic record which is impeccable but also because I am actually very good at teaching. I can bifurcate my life and my mind via a form of cognitive dissonance so that I can assimilate myself to the habits, patterns and sensibilities of normies while in the classroom. Ironically enough, I tend to be an extremely popular professor with both men and foid undergrads alike though not for my looks but rather for my knowledge of the subject area, charisma and communication skills.
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- lifesucksandyoudie
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The Prestige is my favorite Nolan movie and one of my favorite movies overall.
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Ahh yes, a movie I have watched many times and actually own on both BlueRay and DVD. I love that quote by David Bowie's Tesla when he says something to the effect of "they say man's reach exceeds his grasp; but what they ought to say is man's reach exceeds his imagination". Also, the film does an excellent job at investigating the subjective nature of consciousness as one must ask oneself the question of which of those Hugh Jackman's at the end was the real Hugh Jackman.lifesucksandyoudie wrote: 10 Jun 2024, 21:50 The Prestige is my favorite Nolan movie and one of my favorite movies overall.
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- lifesucksandyoudie
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It's a very meaningfully profound and insightful film with deep themes, we can both agree on that. The message about the truth hiding in plain sight but we simply refuse to see it as we can't accept something that obvious being true really resonated with me when I first watched it. I feel like that phrase is very emblematic of how the blackpill works as well.Darth_aurelius wrote: 10 Jun 2024, 21:57Ahh yes, a movie I have watched many times and actually own on both BlueRay and DVD. I love that quote by David Bowie's Tesla when he says something to the effect of "they say man's reach exceeds his grasp; but what they ought to say is man's reach exceeds his imagination". Also, the film does an excellent job at investigating the subjective nature of consciousness as one must ask oneself the question of which of those Hugh Jackman's at the end was the real Hugh Jackman.lifesucksandyoudie wrote: 10 Jun 2024, 21:50 The Prestige is my favorite Nolan movie and one of my favorite movies overall.
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Good point comrade. I too appreciate films that convey their themes using nuance and allegory as opposed to the typical noisy trash that Hollywood generates for the brutish prowls and plebs. And yes, I think that one of the very first lines in the film was that monologue delivered by Christian Bale's character where he talks about the unseen and unknowable aspects of magic, rather foreshadowing the events in the narrative but also a sort of general axiom on the nature of life.lifesucksandyoudie wrote: 10 Jun 2024, 22:12It's a very meaningfully profound and insightful film with deep themes, we can both agree on that. The message about the truth hiding in plain sight but we simply refuse to see it as we can't accept something that obvious being true really resonated with me when I first watched it. I feel like that phrase is very emblematic of how the blackpill works as well.Darth_aurelius wrote: 10 Jun 2024, 21:57Ahh yes, a movie I have watched many times and actually own on both BlueRay and DVD. I love that quote by David Bowie's Tesla when he says something to the effect of "they say man's reach exceeds his grasp; but what they ought to say is man's reach exceeds his imagination". Also, the film does an excellent job at investigating the subjective nature of consciousness as one must ask oneself the question of which of those Hugh Jackman's at the end was the real Hugh Jackman.lifesucksandyoudie wrote: 10 Jun 2024, 21:50 The Prestige is my favorite Nolan movie and one of my favorite movies overall.
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