Unlike many other science fiction movies, the action scenes are never gratuitously violent (see: The Colony) or lapse into uninvolving videogame - style action (see that unnecessary 300 sequel and about 80 % of all Hollywood action
movies made nowadays).
Not exact matches
There seems to be so much interest
nowadays in «the
making of» type TV programs, books and
movies that it almost seems that people are more interested in how something was
made, and all the background material that goes with it, than they are in the thing itself.
Will remind you just how much
movies from the 1970s differ from the ones
making their way to the megaplexes
nowadays...
People let themselves think they're having superhero
movie fatigue because there are many of them
made nowadays, but as I said, it doesn't matter if people have powers.
Such concerns become moot once the picture passes a certain point, however, as Death Wish transforms into just the sort of unapologetically ruthless and violent thriller that rarely gets
made nowadays (ie its very existence is a delightful novelty)- with the
movie's second half boasting a series of gleefully over-the-top instances of R - rated mayhem (including an awesomely cringeworthy torture sequence involving a scalpel and battery acid).
Ricki And The Flash is a
movie of things that may have been done better earlier — sometimes by Demme himself — but which are done all too rarely
nowadays, which
makes it feel both retro and refreshing.
Considering the popularity of MMA
nowadays, it
makes a lot of sense that this
movie should get an update right about now.
As mass shootings invade American life on a terrifyingly routine basis
nowadays, the November 17 launch of Marvel's The Punisher brings a conflicted cacophony of gunfire and blood - dripping militarism and nihilism that
makes Charles Bronson's Death Wish
movies look like a philosophical pillow fight.
Not remarking on how good the
movie was or wasn't (sounds like it was good), I want to know is it the trend to now
make every prepubescent girls fantasy novels into a
movie nowadays?
This setting allows Bay and writer Ehren Kruger (who wrote two good
movies over a decade ago — Arlington Road and The Ring — before descending into Hollywood hackdom) the films only flourish of ironic «wit» — the crotchety old gent theatre owner (great character actor Richard Riehle, wasted here) complains that all they
make sequels and remakes
nowadays.
Although it seems like a big
movie nowadays, Braveheart wasn't a particularly big hit at the box office at the time of its release, only really
making its money back after the Academy Award for Best Picture fueled its interest in home video.
We at Self - Publishing Relief know that
nowadays, successful self - published books have the same chance at being
made into a
movie as traditionally published stories.