People seem to
hate this film because it's a different type of film for Scott.
Not exact matches
In the end, I really
hated my viewing of this picture, which is very upsetting,
because I really liked the original
film.
[/ color][/ font][font = Arial][color = darkred][i] Michael Moore
Hates America [/ i] is the best of the rebuttal
films because Wilson smartly refrains from preaching.
I understand why some people
hated it,
because they didn't get the picture or simply
because they don't like this type of
film.
In my History of Documentary
film course, the classes were always split: there were those who loved it and those who
hated it
because it didn't tell a story.
Anyone who
hates this movie
because it does not comport with their beliefs about the «real story» is either a racist or simply misses the point: Phiona overcomes great odds to achieve what she does in the
film.
I sat through this
film stunned by Irving and his followers» ignorance and
hate, and distraught by how easily some people will believe lies just
because they coincide with their worldview.
It was (is) maintaining a positive overall rating and people are praising it saying just how wonderful it is; hearing all this made the anticipation even greater, which I
hate because most
films don't live up to the hype.
, Bronson (Refn, 2008)
because many people saw it as a flawed
film, Alpeis (Alps, Giorgos Lanthimos, 2011)
because it was an extremely acquired taste, and Only God Forgives
because it was
hated and loved in equal extremes among those who saw it.
Awkward
because I want to like all Duplass - related
films always but now I'm faced with the prospect of
hating one.
is misleading
because while draped in Darius Khondji's luxuriant, golden - hued cinematography like the silks of Lady Liberty's gown, and decked in loving period costume and detail, the
film is really a small - scale human drama in which those Gray staples, a love triangle and a love /
hate brother-esque relationship, play out beat by minutely observed beat.
None of that matters half as much as telling me how much you loved a
film, or even how much you
hated it (but it better not be a movie I like
because you don't want to know what happens next).
Favorite horror
film is The Terminator... I actually
hated Terminator 2,
because it was too much of a kids» movie... Rather than a horror, like the original.
It doesn't matter much either way,
because this is one of those
films that of the few who see it, many will like it while few will love or
hate it.
«I think there was a little bit of extra critical
hate towards it
because it's changing the landscape of the movie business,» he said, «but I think «Bright» is maybe a movie that needs to be reviewed by public opinion rather than viewed through the highbrow prism of
film criticism.»
Possibly it was
hated for offering little in the way of hope (and in places explicitly denying the audience hope), or
because at times you get the feeling the director is judging the audience for watching his
film.
I almost didn't post them
because this is the kind of thing that makes me really
hate film critics or even fake
film critics masquerading as real
film critics; don't tell me how your collective minds work
because I don't really want to know!
2001: A Space Odyssey wasn't even nominated for Best Picture, but I'm listing Dr. Strangelove
because I absolutely
hate the
film that beat it, George Cukor's smug, shrieking My Fair Lady.
This is one of those
films I am not sure to recommend,
because you may love it or
hate it, depending on how appealing you find animated fantasies.
Anyone who requires straightforward narratives and complete coherence from a
film upon first viewing should exit right now
because you would probably
hate Inherent Vice.
Because origin stories aren't just for superheroes, J.D. Salinger is set to receive his own
film detailing his life prior to becoming the guy who wrote Catcher In The Rye and fucking
hated having his picture taken.
All in all, I
hated Vacation but not
because the
film was really poorly written, was painfully unfunny, and featured all unlikable characters, but rather
because the
film never even tried to grasp the concept that made the original
films so great.
The first distributor I worked with was involved in Metropolitan, and at that time all these movies were being promoted as black comedies, and I think I told him if something is a black comedy I
hate it and he said I think you should call your
film a white comedy
because it's the reverse of a black comedy.
I'm dancing around the issue
because I
hate spoilers, but suffice to say the
film gets very dark indeed before coming out on the right side of the story.
J.D. Salinger, the man, would have
hated «Salinger,» the
film — not just
because the famously reclusive writer would have recoiled at the effort to expose his private life, but also
because it's -LSB-...]
1/2 * / **** Image B + Sound A - Commentary C + starring Val Kilmer, Derek Luke, William H. Macy, Ed O'Neill written and directed by David Mamet by Walter Chaw
Because we
hate Arabs (and women almost as much as we think that Arabs
hate women, those hateful Arabs), there are
films like David Mamet's patently ridiculous, relentlessly offensive, unintentionally hilarious Spartan.
Gay Harry Potter actress Miriam Margolyes
hates playing lesbians in
films and TV dramas
because she is terrified of acting out same - sex kisses.The 69...
Because I never was: I mean, I never
hated him, but I was never that interested in picking up a book, so it's interesting to realize that I almost always love
film and television adaptations of his work.
Back in the 1990s, when I still read the Village Voice, I could predict what their reviews were going to say,
because their critics
hated every mainstream studio
film, especially if it looked like it was going to be a big hit.
They are full of mistakes and they are repeatedly caught telling lies
because it's the trend (like when they did the Resident Evil
films and it is the trend to
hate on them) and when somebody calls them out their excuse is that «it's all for fun» and their fanbase are calling the others fanboys and crybabies.