Some more movies I saw recently:
Dungeons & Dragons (2000), goodbad/10
Watched this as part of a bad movie night, and boy is it a treat in that regard! I could just say that Marlon Wayans plays one of the main characters and leave it at that, but it's got many other enjoyable aspects as well. It has a weird clash of occasionally great production values contrasted with costumes that look like subpar cosplay. It being just pre-LOTR and just post-90s means the tone is as painfully datedly semi-ironic as you can get. But the real highlight here are the CGI effects that are not only used for creature effects, but also for sweeping establishing shots. And because the CG is just good enough to not be Lawnmower Man level but not even close to being actually good, it hits a very interesting, very specific type of dated. It's wild to think that a mere 5 years later we had Peter Jackson's King Kong whose effects still hold up. A delight of a good bad movie, and highly recommended.
Another Round, aka Druk (2020), 8/10
A very good and interesting look at alcohol and the culture around it. All the acting is great, especially the physical drunk acting, the story is interesting, the characters are likable, and it's very nuanced. Instead of going "alcohol bad!!!" or "yay partying" it covers a wide spectrum depicting the highest highs and the lowest lows and everything in between. The cinematography and editing are both great too. The thing I'm a bit iffy on is the ending, and how it feels kind of stretched. All of it feels justified and necessary for the story, it's just presented in a way where it feels it could end at multiple points. The final scene is fantastic though, and what you take away from it depends very much on your personal relationship with alcohol.
Bo Burnham's Inside, 2021 10/10
Okay, it's not exactly a movie, but it is feature length and it's heavily music-based, so I'm comfortable calling it a musical. The 10/10 rating is more because there's pretty much nothing to compare it to save for Burnham's previous special, Make Happy, and even then this is so wildly different. It's funny, haunting, sinister, beautiful, depressing, sad, downright unsettling, and simply unlike anything I've ever seen. Pretty much no matter your age or background it will hit you hard at some point (turning 30 next year made his song about that quite harrowing to watch for me). In a way it feels like a career culmination for Burnham, and I'm not the only one who's drawn comparisons to Pink Floyd's The Wall. And yet I still feel that he's yet to make his magnum opus, his 2001: A Space Odyssey. And what he does next is anyone's guess, because he's proven to be amazing at so many different things: writing, directing, performing live or on camera, editing, the world is his oyster. And I can't wait to see what he does next.
Dungeons & Dragons (2000), goodbad/10
Watched this as part of a bad movie night, and boy is it a treat in that regard! I could just say that Marlon Wayans plays one of the main characters and leave it at that, but it's got many other enjoyable aspects as well. It has a weird clash of occasionally great production values contrasted with costumes that look like subpar cosplay. It being just pre-LOTR and just post-90s means the tone is as painfully datedly semi-ironic as you can get. But the real highlight here are the CGI effects that are not only used for creature effects, but also for sweeping establishing shots. And because the CG is just good enough to not be Lawnmower Man level but not even close to being actually good, it hits a very interesting, very specific type of dated. It's wild to think that a mere 5 years later we had Peter Jackson's King Kong whose effects still hold up. A delight of a good bad movie, and highly recommended.
Another Round, aka Druk (2020), 8/10
A very good and interesting look at alcohol and the culture around it. All the acting is great, especially the physical drunk acting, the story is interesting, the characters are likable, and it's very nuanced. Instead of going "alcohol bad!!!" or "yay partying" it covers a wide spectrum depicting the highest highs and the lowest lows and everything in between. The cinematography and editing are both great too. The thing I'm a bit iffy on is the ending, and how it feels kind of stretched. All of it feels justified and necessary for the story, it's just presented in a way where it feels it could end at multiple points. The final scene is fantastic though, and what you take away from it depends very much on your personal relationship with alcohol.
Bo Burnham's Inside, 2021 10/10
Okay, it's not exactly a movie, but it is feature length and it's heavily music-based, so I'm comfortable calling it a musical. The 10/10 rating is more because there's pretty much nothing to compare it to save for Burnham's previous special, Make Happy, and even then this is so wildly different. It's funny, haunting, sinister, beautiful, depressing, sad, downright unsettling, and simply unlike anything I've ever seen. Pretty much no matter your age or background it will hit you hard at some point (turning 30 next year made his song about that quite harrowing to watch for me). In a way it feels like a career culmination for Burnham, and I'm not the only one who's drawn comparisons to Pink Floyd's The Wall. And yet I still feel that he's yet to make his magnum opus, his 2001: A Space Odyssey. And what he does next is anyone's guess, because he's proven to be amazing at so many different things: writing, directing, performing live or on camera, editing, the world is his oyster. And I can't wait to see what he does next.
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