just rewatched Scooby Doo on Zombie Island for the first time in many many years but I still remembered pretty much everything fufu it was always my favorite Scooby Doo despite how much I did and still do hate zombies. Anyway it's a good movie.
just rewatched Scooby Doo on Zombie Island for the first time in many many years but I still remembered pretty much everything fufu it was always my favorite Scooby Doo despite how much I did and still do hate zombies. Anyway it's a good movie.
I saw Paper Towns a few weeks back with my friend at the cinema, and loved it! And An Interview With A Vampire was on tv the other night and whilst being slightly creepy, the ending was great!!
My dad is incapable of watching anything from beginning to end, so I watched some of Shawshank Redemption, intercut with bits of other TV stations, the other night. It was amazing, even when "Americans shouting about repossession!" happened every fifteen minutes.
My dad recorded it thinking it would be a movie I'd enjoy and he was right. I thought it had a pretty interesting story, and even though the ending didn't play out like I hoped, I still liked it.
Frank (2014)
It was an alright movie. I liked many elements of it, the whole outsider artist aspect with calls to Beefheart and Daniel Jonhston was great and by having the main character be a complete opposite from the band members really highlights the whole outsider artist mentality. It was meant to be people just creating art for the sake of it, because of it's just part of their nature to do it. The most important thing to walk away this movie is how hard it drives the message that talent isn't created by personal trauma or mental illnesses, it's just something that comes from nature.
the one by joel edgerton or whatever his name is. it was alright but it tried too hard to psychological drama/thriller. and it was too much scratch on the surface for my taste. and the beginning and end was a bit too obvious at points.
so yeah it was good, the middle was best. but yeah nothing more than your 'murica storytelling.