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Best Blu-ray Movie Deals
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Best Blu-ray Movie Deals, See All the Deals » |
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#2 |
Blu-ray Knight
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Scorsese- Pretty much any leo movie. Except wolf, that's a gooden.
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Thanks given by: | Bolo Seagull (03-11-2020) |
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#3 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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Ridley Scott: White Squall. A fizzled attempt at earnestness and schmaltz, utterly antithetical to his personality as a filmmaker. Thank God he never tried it before or since.
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Thanks given by: | DR Herbert West (03-11-2020), Gacivory (03-11-2020) |
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#12 |
Special Member
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Steven Spielberg: 1941
Ridley Scott: Alien Covenant Martin Scorsese: New York New York Alfred Hitchcock: Torn Curtain Tim Burton: Charlie and the Chocolate Factory & Dumbo Clint Eastwood: Jersey Boys John Carpenter: Village of the Damned Peter Weir: The Truman Show (although I need to try and watch it again) John McTiernan: Rollerball Michael Mann: The Keep (haven't seen Blackhat yet though) Mel Brooks: Dracula Dead and Loving It Those are the ones I can think of right now. |
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#14 |
Blu-ray Count
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George A. Romero: Bruiser
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Thanks given by: | DR Herbert West (03-11-2020) |
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#17 |
Blu-ray Samurai
Jul 2012
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De Palma - Almost anything after "Carlito's Way". I love his films until then.
Oliver Stone- From "Alexander" forward. Love him until then. Spielberg- 1941, Hook (Still haven't seen his past four films) Spike Lee- She Hate Me, School Daze Coppola- Jack I pretty much like everything from Scorsese and Tarantino, but my least favorite from Scorsese is either "New York, New York" or "Boxcar Bertha" ( I still think they're OK, though); and my least favorite from Tarantino is "Death Proof" (especially when combined with the entire 'Grindhouse'), but it's still pretty good, too. Woody Allen- Cassandra's Dream Kubrick- Killer's Kiss (early one, still watchable), Fear and Desire Kurosawa- I struggle getting into his earliest stuff. Starting with "Drunken Angel" and "Stray Dog", I start to appreciate his films more. After that, my least favorite is "Scandal", from 1950. Fellini- The White Shiek Hitchcock- Under Capricorn, The Trouble with Harry Bergman- "All These Women" John Carpenter- The Ward George A. Romero- There's Always Vanilla |
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