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Scott Pilgrim vs the World
#16
This is next on my netflix list. I heard he wears a couple Smashing Pumpkins t shirts and that the Pumpkins were a recurrent part of the graphic novels so I've been looking forward to it for a while.
Life is a bitch, but she's totally doable.
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#17
I finally got to see this the other night, and I want to purchase it now. I thought it was great.

Strange indeed, but really a lot of fun.
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#18
<!--quoteo(post=124201:date=Dec 21 2010, 08:08 PM:name=vegascub)-->QUOTE (vegascub @ Dec 21 2010, 08:08 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><!--quotec-->I finally got to see this the other night, and I want to purchase it now. I thought it was great.

Strange indeed, but really a lot of fun.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->

The music in it was awesome too.
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#19
Watched this the other night. I enjoyed the more straightforward story of Scott and his relationships much more than the fighting scenes. It was kind of funny the first couple of times but then it felt sort of gimmicky.

Still -- most of the movie was very funny and clever. Good stuff.

3.5/5 stars
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#20
Yeah, I watched this the other night with my daughter. i have to admit, it was better than I thought it would be. My daughter loved it.

And it was nice to see Michael Cera break character for a change.......
Wang.
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#21
I actually avoided this movie because I got it confused with the movie Kick Ass (which looks terrible.) I ended up watching it the other night and enjoyed it.
If Angelo had picked McClellin, I would have been expecting to hear by training camp that kid has stage 4 cancer, is actually 5'2" 142 lbs, is a chick who played in a 7 - 0 defensive scheme who only rotated in on downs which were 3 and 34 yds + so is not expecting to play a down in the NFL until the sex change is complete and she puts on another 100 lbs. + but this is Emery's first pick so he'll get a pass with a bit of questioning. - 1060Ivy
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#22
<!--quoteo(post=92393:date=Apr 23 2010, 12:51 PM:name=jstraw)-->QUOTE (jstraw @ Apr 23 2010, 12:51 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><!--quotec--><!--quoteo(post=92377:date=Apr 23 2010, 01:23 PM:name=rok)--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (rok @ Apr 23 2010, 01:23 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><!--quotec--><!--quoteo(post=92338:date=Apr 23 2010, 11:16 AM:name=jstraw)--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (jstraw @ Apr 23 2010, 11:16 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><!--quotec--><!--quoteo(post=92337:date=Apr 23 2010, 11:13 AM:name=Scarey)--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Scarey @ Apr 23 2010, 11:13 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><!--quotec--><!--quoteo(post=92102:date=Apr 22 2010, 12:54 PM:name=rok)--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (rok @ Apr 22 2010, 12:54 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><!--quotec--><!--quoteo(post=92067:date=Apr 22 2010, 11:58 AM:name=BT)--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (BT @ Apr 22 2010, 11:58 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><!--quotec--><!--quoteo(post=92042:date=Apr 22 2010, 09:53 AM:name=rok)--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (rok @ Apr 22 2010, 09:53 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><!--quotec-->I watched the trailer a few months back. I'm kind of torn. I like the concept and the actors/director involved, but the trailer was a bit over the top and bizarre for me, and usual for me, the more bizarre the better. I'm still interested to see it though.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->

I think it's based on a comic or graphic novel, hence the over the topness.
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Yep, and I was aware of that. I guess I've grown tired of the way in which action sequences are overdone and cartoonish these days. I hate that trend so much. I blame the Matrix and 300.
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It's a shame that The Matrix is seen this way. When the movie first came out it was so original. The sequels and the fact that half of every modern day comedies parodies it has watered it down so much though. The original movie really doesn't get as much credit as it deserves.
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My only two problems with The Matrix are that it makes no fucking sense...and Keanu Reeves.
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The concept of the first Matrix was a whole lot more interesting than the reality of it. I thought the 1st half was near perfect. It all went downhill once Keanu was unplugged from the Matrix though and then it became more or less a straight action movie. The sequels are nearly unwatchable for me. I like the existentialism and much of the story, and the action is nice and all, but they leave me wondering what the hell was the point of it all.

I know this was mentioned in another thread, but I've always preferred Dark City to Matrix. Very similar idea that came before Matrix, the action isn't overly stylized, and I could relate to the characters a lot more. Plus, the studio didn't ruin it with sub-par sequels.
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Our robot overlords will not use humans for batteries. It's just plain dumb.
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It was meant to be based on Baudrillard as Simulacra and Simulation is seen in the movie, but apparently he Baudrillard said it was a weak effort:

<!--quoteo-->QUOTE <!--quotec-->Le Nouvel Observateur – Your reflections on the real and the virtual are one of the references advanced by The Matrix’s directors. The first episode mentionned you explicitely and one could even notice the cover of Simulacrum and simulation, released in 1981. That surprise you?

Jean Baudrillard – There is a misunderstanding of course, that is the reason why I previously hesitated to talk about The Matrix. The Wachowski staff did contact me after the first episode to involve me in the following ones, but that really was not conceivable! (Laugh). What we have here is essentially the same misunderstanding as with the simulationist artists in New York in the 80s. These people take the hypothesis of the virtual as a fact and carry it over to visible fantasms. But the primary characteristic of this universe lies precisely in the inability to use categories of the real to speak about it .

N. O. – However, the link between the movie and the vision you elaborate in, for instance, Le crime parfait, is striking. The evocation of a desert of the real, these totally virtualised men/spectres, who are no more than energy cells for sentient beings…

J. B. – Yes, but there had already been other movies dealing with the growing blur between the real and the virtual: The Truman Show, Minority Report, even Mulholland Drive, David Lynch’s masterpiece. The Matrix’s main point is as a paroxystic synthesis of all of that. Sadly, the mechanism is roughly done and don’t arouse any trouble. Either characters are in the Matrix, that is in the digitalisation of everything. Or they are radically out of it, as it happens at Zion, the city of the rebels. Actually, the most interesting thing would be to show what does happen at the joining of these two worlds. Anyway, the real nuisance in this movie is that the brand-new problem of the simulation is mistaken with the very classic problem of the illusion, already mentionned by Plato. Here lies the mistake.

The world as a complete illusion is the problem that faced all great cultures and they solved it thanks to art and symbolization. What we did invent in order to put up with this pain is a simulated real, a virtual universe cleansed of everything dangerous or negative and wich now override the real, to wich it is the final solution. Now, The Matrix is totally that! Everything that is related to dream, utopia, phantasm is present there, “realized”, a complete transparency. The Matrix is like a movie about the Matrix that could have produced the Matrix 1 .

N. O. – It is also a movie intending to denounce technicistic alienation while making complete use of the fascination toward the digital world and computer graphics…

J. B. – What really is striking in The Matrix 2 is there is not the tiniest irony to help the spectator taking this monumental special effect in the rear. Not even one sequence with this “punctum”, as Barthès says, this striking je-ne-sais-quoi to put one in front of something real. By the way, this makes the movie an instructive symptom as well as a fetish for a world ruled by the screen, where it exists no distinction between the real and the imagination world anymore. The Matrix is in many respects an extravagant thing, both naïve and pervert, with no above and no beyond. The pseudo-Freud speaking at the end of the movie said it: sometime in the past, we have had to re-program the Matrix in order to integrate some anomalies in the equation. And you, the opponents, are part of it. So here we are, in my opinion, in a complete virtual circuit with no outdoor 2 . I once again disagree! (Laughs) The Matrix implies the present situation is the one of an all-powerful superpower 3 and so effectively echoes its propagation. Ultimately, the spread of this takeover is indeed a very part of the movie. As McLuhan said:message is medium. The message of The Matrix is its very propagation, by relentlessly contaminating everything.

N. O. – Striking too is how present American marketing success, ranging from The Matrix to Madonna last album, explicitely present themselves as critics of a system wich promote them massively…

J. B. – That is indeed wich makes our times quite difficult to stand. This system products a trompe-l’œil negation, wich in turn is becoming a part of the entertainment industry, the same way obsolescence is a part of the industry as a whole. Moreover, it is the most efficient way to forbid any true alternative. No more there is an external omega point for apprehending this world, no more any antagonistic function, only a fascinated adherence. Nevertheless, the more a system is coming close to perfection, the more it is coming close to destruction. View it as an objective irony; nothing is never settled. September 11 was a part of it, of course. Terrorism is not an alternate power, it is only the metaphor of this almost sucidal turn-around of the occidental power against itself. This is what I said at that time, but it was not accepted. No reason to be nihilistic or pessimistic anyway. The system, the virtual, the Matrix, everything may go back to the scrap heap of History. Reversibility, challenge, seduction are indestructibles.

Aude Lancelin – Le nouvel Observateur — n°201<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->

http://web.archive.org/web/20080113012028/...rd_english.html
If Angelo had picked McClellin, I would have been expecting to hear by training camp that kid has stage 4 cancer, is actually 5'2" 142 lbs, is a chick who played in a 7 - 0 defensive scheme who only rotated in on downs which were 3 and 34 yds + so is not expecting to play a down in the NFL until the sex change is complete and she puts on another 100 lbs. + but this is Emery's first pick so he'll get a pass with a bit of questioning. - 1060Ivy
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#23
BTW, the problems I have with the Matrix are pretty much the same I have with Inception. Both have lofty ambitions (in terms of philosophy) but end up being a juiced up action movie with amazing effects. I enjoyed the Matrix more because a) it came out first and [img]style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/cool.gif[/img] it is original in terms of style. But Inception is nearly a complete ripoff. Plus everyone I talked too about it before described it as being weighty, mind-bending, trippy, etc., but I discovered those people thought Fight Club and The Matrix involved more critical thinking than they were capable of. So people ruined it and it ruined itself. Fuck Inception.
If Angelo had picked McClellin, I would have been expecting to hear by training camp that kid has stage 4 cancer, is actually 5'2" 142 lbs, is a chick who played in a 7 - 0 defensive scheme who only rotated in on downs which were 3 and 34 yds + so is not expecting to play a down in the NFL until the sex change is complete and she puts on another 100 lbs. + but this is Emery's first pick so he'll get a pass with a bit of questioning. - 1060Ivy
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#24
The first matrix was great. The rest sucked.
Wang.
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#25
I just watched it, and I thought it was absolutely incredible. I thought most of the movie was absolutely pitch perfect. It was funny, and it was nuts, and for the most part everything worked. It might have been a bit too long, but there was so much going on, and I loved almost all of it.

I'm overselling it, as it probably won't appeal to everyone, but it was so far to the opposite spectrum of what passes for entertainment in Hollywood right now, that it deserve praise for how unique it was. That it all worked for me puts it on another level.
I wish that I believed in Fate. I wish I didn't sleep so late. I used to be carried in the arms of cheerleaders.
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#26
<!--quoteo(post=125984:date=Jan 11 2011, 11:54 PM:name=BT)-->QUOTE (BT @ Jan 11 2011, 11:54 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><!--quotec-->I just watched it, and I thought it was absolutely incredible. I thought most of the movie was absolutely pitch perfect. It was funny, and it was nuts, and for the most part everything worked. It might have been a bit too long, but there was so much going on, and I loved almost all of it.

I'm overselling it, as it probably won't appeal to everyone, but it was so far to the opposite spectrum of what passes for entertainment in Hollywood right now, that it deserve praise for how unique it was. That it all worked for me puts it on another level.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->


All it was missing was Russell Brand.
Wang.
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