Sentences with phrase «movie geek like»

Not exact matches

Fitzgerald said a challenge in a movie like Snowden is to appeal to the American public, which includes many people who don't know or care about geek - speak, while also remaining credible with hacker types.
I build my own computers, I geek out over a faster processor, I read, a lot, I like Sci - Fi / Fantasy movies and books, video...
I can be considered a bit of a geek, and a homebody, but I do like to go out and have fun or watch a movie.
I like to cook; My family is EXTREMELY important to me; I like to see interesting movies and watch LOTS of cartoons; I a bibliophile; I am bisexual and I think countercultural movements are cool (body mods, geek subculture, etc)
a geek, a gamer... I love movies and tv, comic books and graphic novels, video and board games... I'm looking for a woman who likes the same and doesn't list «Hiking» as one of their favourite activities.
Like music, movies, national parks... I am a reader and a wannabe geek.
As a teen comics fan in the early Eighties, I remember all the talk about a new Batman movie, so I really like the parts about the flick's long development; it's cool to know what was going on behind the scenes while we geeks waited anxiously.
Genre geeks will be especially impressed by the main titles theme, which sounds like it could have been lifted from one of Jean Rollin's sex - vampire movies of the 1970s.
Much like how GrindHouse from directors Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez was a loving tribute to movie geeks, Scott Pilgrim is a film for computer geeks.
The gore is plentiful and sometimes inventive (I love the use of a zombie - familiar as traction to one of the eternally - bogged cars in movies like this), and the addition of geek avengers leads to Scream commentary like, «A whole new genre, man.»
However, director Paul Feig has proven himself not only brilliant in understanding nerd sympathies («Freaks & Geeks») but also a comedy virtuoso with movies like «Bridesmaids» and «Spy.»
Here, he brings in the likes of Guillermo del Toro, Peter Bogdanovich, Jamie Lee Curtis, Elijah Wood, Karyn Kusama and Bret Easton Ellis to talk about «Psycho,» with a project that sounds like a movie geek feast.
What's left is this appreciation of a film that is delighted with cinema and experimental without being a jerk about it (very much like Lars Von Trier's Zentropa, specifically in a black - and - white rear - process cab ride with none of that feeling that Tarantino's trying to make a point as opposed to recognizing something that looks cool and feels right)-- a film that is Tarantino in all his gawky, hyperactive, movie - geeking, idioglossic splendour, fully - formed and trying only a bit too hard.
I look forward to a new Vincenzo Natali movie like most movie geeks anticipate the next feature from Steven Spielberg or Martin Scorsese.
It's like a 13 year old geek got their first shot at making a movie or writing a story and this is the weird, self involved fantasy world they came up with.
If you're like most people, you probably know James Franco best as the goofy comic actor from «Pineapple Express,» «This Is the End,» «The Interview» and the like, or the intense dramatic actor who earned an Oscar nomination for «127 Hours,» played «Spider - Man's» best friend / nemesis in Sam Raimi's movies and headlined an acclaimed James Dean TV biopic after getting his start on «Freaks and Geeks
7) The Conjuring (2013)-- I hate movies that pull the «Based on a True Story» card, but leave it to a horror geek like James Wan to win me over.
Movies like Homefront are so difficult to write a review for because they are not horrible, so I'm not able to rage out against them, and they are not spectacular, so I can't geek out for them.
But for everything that the movie gets right, «What We Do in the Shadows» suffers from the same problem as Taika Waititi and Clement's last collaboration, the geek - chic rom - com «Eagle vs. Shark» — namely, that the concept feels like it's been stretched well beyond its limits, despite the brisk 85 - minute runtime.
As he's proven time and time again from geek favorites like Firefly and Con Man, to films like Death At a Funeral (one of my favorite movies for absolutely no reason), not to mention his facility with rooster voices, Alan Tudyk is very much at home with nerdy comedy.
Heavy stuff, but it all plays out like an action movie written by a geek, and its appeal can not be understated.
Why geeks like inception is the most tenuous and poor article I've seen about this movie.
Many critics have put down the movie because the dreams are neat and orderly, not messy and chaotic — but that's the point, these are geek dreams, carefully programmed in advance, like a video game.
About Blog Just a geek who likes to talk about the movies he's watching!
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