Inland Empire is probably the scariest movie I've ever seen. Not sure if it's a great movie though.
Inland Empire is probably the scariest movie I've ever seen. Not sure if it's a great movie though.
I like them about evenly for different reasons.
Very solid list, and really glad to see Drag Me to Hell on there; a lot of people seem to dismiss it.
She wears wigs!
Houston, we have a dog!
I also think it's a good use of Jai Courtney.
Has he done that voice more than once? The only thing that I think is comparable is his role in 12 Years a Slave.
Has he done that voice more thhan once? The only thing that I think is comparable is his role in 12 Years a Slave.
Christopher Grace sounds really Christian though.
Didn't Casey Affleck punch him or something?
Mary Elizabeth Winstead and Brie Larson remind me a lot of each other. Both great!
Well from a plot perspective yeah, but Mad Max is very ambitious in terms of stunt work and practical effects
*car crash*
She looks like Olivia Wilde's ecoterrorist from Portlandia in that picture.
Not that I think it deserves as low a score as the truly terrible comic book movies, but I'm pretty baffled by Age of Ultron's fairly positive reception on those websites. I just don't think it's a good movie. Could it just be from all the build-up and the goodwill of other Marvel movies?
Plus the dream sequences were lifted straight from the original.
Wes Craven's Old Nightmare: A Nightmare on Elm Street
Yeah and initially they think he was wrongfully accused and that's why he's going after them, but then it turns out he was just rightfully accused. Not handled very well.
The fact that it's a higher-concept horror franchise makes me feel like they're more obligated to change it up as opposed to something like Friday the 13th. Not saying it'll be good necessarily.
This may just be me being naive, but it seems like this'll have to be pretty different because of how recent the other reboot was, right?