Cult movies means many things to many people — Ben Wheatley's introduction touches on the manner in which he discovered the underbelly of cinema, but it won't be shared by everyone, of course — and everyone will have their own favorites.
Not exact matches
If you've ever seen the
cult movie Memento with Guy Pierce and Carrie - Ann Moss, you understand exactly what I
mean.
He's continued working with Greg over the years, using the
cult status of The Room to his benefit and pretending he
meant for his
movie to be a comedy all along.
Speaking about the film recently in Los Angeles, Cera — who in this film, takes some refreshingly bold steps away from his usual one - note nerd persona — and co - writer / director Edgar Wright (who also did the zany
cult classics Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz) discussed the
meaning of the film, the stretching Cera had to go through for the role, and the way in which the film's hyperkinetic action sequences are really just the same as the dance scenes in Grease or a Gene Kelly
movie.
That didn't
mean Tarantino didn't create good
movies; it just seemed to indicate that he couldn't make anything that went beyond his
cult audience.
This film is actually terrible — I
mean, yeah — it is scary in the sense that its creepy, but I think, really, the film is just the byproduct of global DVD residuals from the directors father — allowing Panatos to string together a series of overproduced, overgrained interior sequences, cheap synth score and a slasher
movie ending, and trying to pass it off as a «
cult movie», when really we, the audience, need to know who, what or where the protagonist is coming from, what her dramatic need is, who she interacts with, and so on.
I
mean, you can not intentionally go out and make a
cult movie.
That
means smaller
movies with
cult - like fanbases can get in with just over 300 votes.
With Michael Shannon in the role of Roy, the boy's father, and Kirsten Dunst as Sarah, his mom, this
movie emphasizes the extent to which parents will protect their son even if it
means running away from gun - toting figures from a mysterious
cult under the leadership of Calvin Meyr (Sam Shepard).
I
mean, A Christmas Story is about as sacrosanct as a Christmas
movie gets, incredibly beloved after having gone from
cult classic to family classic.