Author Topic: What is the best movies have you seen?  (Read 10058 times)

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Offline BabylonianJew

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What is the best movies have you seen?
« on: March 28, 2007, 01:18:55 PM »
The best movies i have seen was Munich, Braveheart, Schindlers list, Inuyashia(Great anime the movie),Ghandi, 300( the Ultimate movie)

Offline Trumpeldor

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #1 on: March 28, 2007, 02:42:28 PM »
The best movies i have seen was Munich, Braveheart, Schindlers list, Inuyashia(Great anime the movie),Ghandi, 300( the Ultimate movie)

Munich? Schindler's list?

This is symptomatic of kike sickness.

Offline New Yorker

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #2 on: March 28, 2007, 05:00:12 PM »
Munich was a terrible film, not saying that it wasn't well executed, the filmmakers craftwork isn't what was terrible. The terrible part is that Munich was a propaganda film for the enemy, it humanized the subhuman mass murdering terrorist scum, couldn't have been worse if Arafat commissioned it to be made himself.

Back to the question of this thread; Best Movies?

300
Gladiator
The Lord of the Rings Trilogy
The Star Wars films
Raiders of the Lost Ark
King Arthur

I like epic, visually spectacular films that transport me to a world of heros and adventure. Where men are men and women are demure and lovely, where the bad guys lose, right wins, and the guy gets the girl.  8)
« Last Edit: March 28, 2007, 05:12:22 PM by NewYorker »
Nuke the arabs till they glow, then shoot them in the dark.

Allen-T

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #3 on: March 28, 2007, 05:36:24 PM »
Tura Satana in Faster Pussycat Kill! Kill! John Waters called it the best movie ever made and will undoubtedly prove to be the best movie that ever will be made. Period. :o

Din Rodef

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #4 on: March 28, 2007, 06:03:18 PM »
Beyond the Valley of the Dolls
It's a Wonderful Life
A Clockwork Orange

Offline dawntreader

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #5 on: March 28, 2007, 07:28:58 PM »
Munich was a terrible film, not saying that it wasn't well executed, the filmmakers craftwork isn't what was terrible. The terrible part is that Munich was a propaganda film for the enemy, it humanized the subhuman mass murdering terrorist scum, couldn't have been worse if Arafat commissioned it to be made himself.

Back to the question of this thread; Best Movies?

300
Gladiator
The Lord of the Rings Trilogy
The Star Wars films
Raiders of the Lost Ark
King Arthur

I like epic, visually spectacular films that transport me to a world of heros and adventure. Where men are men and women are demure and lovely, where the bad guys lose, right wins, and the guy gets the girl.  8)

I've got to agree with New Yorker here. All the films he listed are also my favorites.

I WOULD add three more Spielberg films to this though:

E.T. the Extraterrestrial
Close Encounters of the Third Kind
Jaws
Victory is a thing of the will. -General Ferdinand Foch

Our peace must be a peace of victors, not of the vanquished.
- General Ferdinand Foch

We have met the enemy and they are ours.
- Oliver Hazard Perry

Offline Joe Gutfeld

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #6 on: March 28, 2007, 07:33:02 PM »
I have to add Raiders of the Lost Ark, The Natural, The Divinci Code, and League of their own.  I will also add the James Bond classic, Goldfinger.

Offline Sarah

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #7 on: March 28, 2007, 07:40:54 PM »
I think Munich is a great film. I also enjoy a good laugh watching, trashy American Comedy movies and new age garbage, its relaxing and there no tension.
Everytime i watch a new film i always end up saying to myself, "wow, that was the best film i've EVER watched," then the excitement dies down.
I think we should be wary of films, they can signify a lot of deeper meanings.
Also, when there are explicit or really degrading scenes in a movie, is it a sin to even watch the film? I mean, it shows that we are tolerating it as we have paid to watch such a thing but there are nasty things in most films.....

Offline Sarah

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #8 on: March 28, 2007, 07:55:51 PM »
But it doesn't stop it being a good film. Not good in terms of morals but in professionalism, acting etc
It would be great if Spielberg was on the right track and a kahanist.
I didn't perceive the film to be anti-Israel, infact it made me support Israel and i especially like the part when the toy maker says:
"But we're meant to be righteous, we are jews not murderers."
It delves into controversy but it defintly allows you to think.

Offline MarZutra

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #9 on: March 28, 2007, 08:08:27 PM »
I tend to like Casablanca even though it is full of Communists.  Below is a very good article by Cinnamon Stillwell on the movie 300 on the SFGate.Com website...  enjoy

'300': Critics Hate It, America Loves It


Cinnamon Stillwell

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

When it comes to the offerings of Hollywood, rarely does a film resonate strongly with both mainstream America and the largely liberal world of film critics. For the two seem to inhabit different universes, particularly when it comes to depictions of patriotism, war, religion and the age-old struggle between good and evil.

When bad reviews and huge box office numbers coincide, the gulf between critics and audiences is laid bare. Such was the case with "The Passion of the Christ" and "National Treasure," both of which Americans flocked to see even as critics shook their heads in disbelief.

The unprecedented success of the recent film "300" is further evidence of this pattern. While critics have largely panned "300," Americans clearly haven't been listening. The film's opening weekend brought in $70 million, with all 57 of its early IMAX midnight showings selling out, making it the highest-grossing March opening ever and third-highest opening for an R-rated feature. And its box office numbers have remained high ever since.

Based on the graphic novel by Frank Miller (of "Sin City" fame) and directed by Zack Snyder, "300" is a fictional recounting of the famous Battle of Thermopylae in 480 BC. The battle pitted King Leonidas and his bodyguard of 300 Spartans -- aided by the Thespians -- against the vast army of the Persian King Xerxes. Seeking to block the Persian army at a narrow mountain pass until Sparta and the rest of Greece could amass the will and forces to fight, the greatly outnumbered Spartan warriors used their superior fighting skills, bravery and determination to hold the "Hot Gates" to the last man. It was the Spartan sacrifice at Thermopylae that enabled the Greeks to later triumph over the Persians and carry on a civilization that brought us democracy and the rule of law.

Critics See the Wrong Film

While critics described the film as overly violent, juvenile, stupid, macho, right-wing, race-baiting and, according to Stephen Whitty of the Newark Star-Ledger, an expression of "Saturday-matinee xenophobia," "300" clearly has resonated with the masses. The reasons for this are obvious, at least to anyone who doesn't inhabit the ranks of the intellectual elite. The film's time-honored themes of bravery, honor, camaraderie, sacrifice, courage against all odds and, above all, the struggle between good and evil, are tailor-made for mainstream America during a time of war. Its success bespeaks a yearning for stories that tap into the ideals of a nation fighting for its survival.

Throughout "300" are references to the sort of absolutes and eternal values that undoubtedly led to the discomfort of some of its liberal critics. The militaristic Spartan culture, where young men were raised from birth to be warriors in service to protecting the city-state, is portrayed in all its brutal glory. King Leonidas' equally strong wife, Queen Gorgo, seeking to enlist the military aid of the reticent Spartans, reminds the general court of Sparta that "freedom is not free." Indeed, had those 300 Spartans failed in their stand at Thermopylae, their people would have been slaughtered or enslaved. In other words, "300" reminds us that free people will only remain so if they are willing to fight.

The film is definitely a bloody affair, and there are moments when the violence is almost pornographic. But given that it depicts battles fought with swords, spears, shields and, at times, bare hands, the film's gory details are likely historically faithful. Other sword-and-sandal epics have covered similar territory. Unlike films where the violence is gratuitous, the violence in "300" is part and parcel of the story and to omit it would be to omit the nature of the beast.

One certainly cannot complain about the visual beauty of the film, which to my mind is unparalleled. Presented in a dream-like sepia tone punctuated only by splashes of red and brown, "300" successfully marries the art of the graphic novel with cinematic form. While the film relies on computer-generated backgrounds, it never feels cold or cartoonish. It also managed to stay true to the historical basis for the story, even as fantastical elements such as monsters, giants, grossly misshapen hunchbacks and the seemingly immortal ephors inhabit the film. Iconic images -- such as the scenes where the Persian emissaries arrive atop a hill on horseback and where the Persian soldiers are pushed off a cliff during battle, both in slow motion -- stay in the mind long after the film ends.

Spartans vs. Persians

The film may look spectacular, but what most critics object to is its simplistic portrayal of Persians as bad guys and Spartans as good guys. While neither civilization was what we'd today call progressive, the film's juxtaposition is fairly accurate. On the one hand, there were the Persians with a military made up largely of slave conscripts and bent on conquest. On the other, there were Spartan and Thespian citizen soldiers defending their freedom. The film alludes to this contrast when the Persian King Xerxes, in wooing the Greek traitor Ephialtes to his side, says disdainfully: "Leonidas would have you stand. All I ask is that you kneel."

The differences between the two cultures' treatment of women is also evident throughout the film. The relationship between King Leonidas and his wife is that of equals; indeed, Queen Gorgo is as much a partner in her husband's political life as she is at home. This does not go unnoticed by a Persian emissary, who, while meeting with Leonidas and Gorgo to demand Sparta's surrender, questions why "this woman thinks she can speak amongst men?" To which she answers, "Only Spartan women give birth to real men."

Yet Spartan culture is not entirely glorified in the film. The practice of infanticide when newborns were deformed or seen as weak is portrayed in "300" and not in a sympathetic fashion. Like just about every other civilization of the ancient world, Spartan society included a slave class, in its case called the Helots.

Mullocracy vs. Reality

Still, the contrast between the Spartans and the Persians in "300" cannot be denied, which may account for another of the film's critics -- the Iranian government. Rankled by the depiction of Spartans as heroic and Persians as oppressive, Iranian government spokesman Gholam Hossein Elham called the film a "cultural intrusion against Iran" and threatened that "the Iranian nation and those involved in cultural activities [would] respond to such a cultural aggression."

In the sort of paranoid, anti-Semitic approach that has become emblematic of the Iranian government, the Islamic Republic of Iran News Network chalked the film up to the machinations of the "famous and rich American Jew." Presumably, that would be the founder (actually, there were four, all brothers) of Warner Bros. Pictures, which, for good measure, IRINN TV labeled the "Zionist Warner Company."

If the Iranian government truly objected to the film's depiction of the age-old conflict between East and West, it might want to temper its own belligerence. For such commentary comes during a time when Iran is holding 15 British sailors for allegedly entering their waters, even though they were picked up in Iraqi territorial waters. The seizure may be an attempt to try to distract the international community from its focus on Iran's nuclear program, seeing as the U.N. Security Council toughened its sanctions against the country just this past week. Either that or the Iranian government is trying to provoke Britain and the United States into a military reaction with what is in fact an act of war. It doesn't help that Iran continues to be a proven player in the insurgency in Iraq, helping to cause the sort of chaos and destruction that is affecting Coalition troops and fellow Muslims alike.

At the same time, the Mullocracy that rules Iran presides over a largely unsupportive and restive populace -- one that, when put to the test, is actually among the most pro-American in the Muslim world. So perhaps the Iranian government's thin-skinned reaction to a simple piece of entertainment hints at a larger insecurity of its own making.

While at the end of the day "300" is merely a film, its historical lessons are well taken. In a time when some would have us capitulate to tyranny instead of fighting -- not only for our freedom, but for that of other, subjugated peoples -- the example of the brave Spartans is one we would do well to follow.

This, it seems, is what the critics don't understand.

Cinnamon Stillwell is a San Francisco writer. She can be reached at [email protected]. Read her blog at cinnamonstillwell.blogspot.com/.
"‘Vehorashtem/Numbers 33:53’: When you burn out the Land’s inhabitants, you will merit to bestow upon your children the Land as an inheritance. If you do not burn them out, then even if you conquer the Land, you will not merit to allot it to your children as an inheritance." - Ovadiah ben Yacov Sforno; Italian Rabbi, Biblical Commentator, Philosopher and Physician.  1475-1550.

Offline Sarah

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #10 on: March 28, 2007, 08:12:42 PM »
Wow her name is cinnamon. I think i might call my child, "ground corriander", by the time i have one.....names like that will be the new "in" thing probably.

As for the film 300, after watching it, i still don't fully get the entire story. The spartans were amazing, thats my summery.

Offline dawntreader

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #11 on: March 28, 2007, 08:23:55 PM »
Munich is Anti-Israel. It was made by the self-hating kike, Steven Spielberg.



Oy watch it. I think Spielberg is one of the greatest film makers of all time.
Victory is a thing of the will. -General Ferdinand Foch

Our peace must be a peace of victors, not of the vanquished.
- General Ferdinand Foch

We have met the enemy and they are ours.
- Oliver Hazard Perry

Offline nessuno

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #12 on: March 28, 2007, 09:35:52 PM »
Munich is Anti-Israel. It was made by the self-hating kike, Steven Spielberg.



Oy watch it. I think Spielberg is one of the greatest film makers of all time.
Of course you do  ;)
Be very CAREFUL of people whose WORDS don't match their ACTIONS.

Offline New Yorker

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #13 on: March 28, 2007, 09:42:19 PM »
Munich is Anti-Israel. It was made by the self-hating kike, Steven Spielberg.



Oy watch it. I think Spielberg is one of the greatest film makers of all time.
Of course you do  ;)


I have to disagree, he ruined the film because he humanized the Islamic terrorist scum, you don't do that! The terrorists should have been portrayed as the vile villians that they are, dark, evil, deranged subhumans!
Nuke the arabs till they glow, then shoot them in the dark.

Offline Trumpeldor

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #14 on: March 28, 2007, 09:43:56 PM »
Munich is Anti-Israel. It was made by the self-hating kike, Steven Spielberg.



Oy watch it. I think Spielberg is one of the greatest film makers of all time.
Of course you do  ;)


I have to disagree, he ruined the film because he humanized the Islamic terrorist scum, you don't do that! The terrorists should have been portrayed as the vile villians that they are, dark, evil, deranged subhumans!


And he gave the message that Jews belong in Brooklyn [at the end].

Offline MarZutra

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #15 on: March 28, 2007, 10:26:22 PM »
I must say that Spielberg is an amazing Producer/Director BUT he is also very UN-Jewish and when George Jonas, writer of the book Vengeance of which Munich was based, published article after article and gave interviews of his disgust at the moral equivalency between the PLO/Islamofascist terrorists and the Israeli's.  Sad, but I have to agree that the movie was very anti-Israel, unJewish and amoral.  The book however is much better than the movie.  My two cents.... ;)
"‘Vehorashtem/Numbers 33:53’: When you burn out the Land’s inhabitants, you will merit to bestow upon your children the Land as an inheritance. If you do not burn them out, then even if you conquer the Land, you will not merit to allot it to your children as an inheritance." - Ovadiah ben Yacov Sforno; Italian Rabbi, Biblical Commentator, Philosopher and Physician.  1475-1550.

Allen-T

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #16 on: March 28, 2007, 11:24:47 PM »
Beyond the Valley of the Dolls
It's a Wonderful Life
A Clockwork Orange

Another Russ fan here, who'd of thought! ;)

Allen-T

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #17 on: March 28, 2007, 11:35:16 PM »
More faves;

At Land-Maya Deren
Macbeth-Roman Polanski
The Bourne films [Identity/Supremecy]
Bullets Over Broadway-Woody Allen[sorry Chaim ;D]
Betty In Blunderland-Whoever made the Betty Boop cartoons
And Justice For All-Norman Jewison
The Departed-Scorcese
The Velvet Underground & Nico-Andy Warhol
 

Offline Trumpeldor

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #18 on: March 28, 2007, 11:36:57 PM »
More faves;

At Land-Maya Deren
Macbeth-Roman Polanski
The Bourne films [Identity/Supremecy]
Bullets Over Broadway-Woody Allen[sorry Chaim ;D]
Betty In Blunderland-Whoever made the Betty Boop cartoons
And Justice For All-Norman Jewison
The Departed-Scorcese
The Velvet Underground & Nico-Andy Warhol
 

I never fall asleep at the movies but both Bourne films put me to sleep.

Offline MassuhDGoodName

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #19 on: March 29, 2007, 01:01:09 AM »
Andrei Tarkovsky's The Zone (USSR)
Red Beard Japan
Is Paris Burning?
Europa Europa
Treasure of the Sierra Madre
The Left Hand of G-d
Stalingrad Germany
The Driller Killer
The Yearling
Starship Troopers

...just to name a few of them

Din Rodef

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #20 on: March 29, 2007, 02:07:18 AM »

Another Russ fan here, who'd of thought! ;)

It's a guilty pleasure  :D

Din Rodef

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #21 on: March 29, 2007, 02:10:55 AM »
In order to appreciate great art, one must also be able to appreciate great trash.

hrmmmm......Adam Sandler's "Billy Madison" comes to mind
« Last Edit: March 29, 2007, 02:13:00 AM by Din Rodef »

Offline Sarah

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #22 on: March 29, 2007, 03:25:25 AM »
ADAM SANDLER is the bomb. I love billy madison, 50 first dates......its unbelievable trashy, stupid and makes me side split with laughter at its cheesy jokes.
The bourne films are brilliant too but theres something odd about them.

Allen-T

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #23 on: March 29, 2007, 07:46:16 AM »
In order to appreciate great art, one must also be able to appreciate great trash.

hrmmmm......Adam Sandler's "Billy Madison" comes to mind

Oh yes!! She Devils on Wheels by Hershall Gordon Lewis, Warhol's Dracula, Any Jess Franco, Any Ted V Mikels, etc.

Allen-T

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Re: What is the best movies have you seen?
« Reply #24 on: March 29, 2007, 07:47:55 AM »
ADAM SANDLER is the bomb. I love billy madison, 50 first dates......its unbelievable trashy, stupid and makes me side split with laughter at its cheesy jokes.
The bourne films are brilliant too but theres something odd about them.

One thing I like about the Bourne films is it reminds me of travelling around Europe myself.