r/movies 22h ago

News Comedian Russell Brand charged with rape

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58.5k Upvotes

r/movies 18h ago

Review No, really. You don't have to know a single thing about Dungeons and Dragons to thoroughly enjoy "Dungeons and Dragons: Honor Among Thieves" (2023)

4.1k Upvotes

I never gave this movie any of my attention for two solid years. I don't know a druid from a bard, I have no idea what charisma points are, and I wouldn't know the word "Demogorgon" if it wasn't for Stranger Things.

So naturally I thought there's no way I could follow along in "Honor Among Thieves" because I know diddly squat about the franchise.

But you guys ... you wouldn't let it be. So many posts, so many comments, saying how wonderful this movie was. I gave in and watched it last night.

It's really good. Yes, just like you have all been screaming at me. Good action, good comedy, good SFX, all around a great movie.

I really loved Hugh Grant's performance. He pulls off smarmy and slimy quite well.

And I was leaping out of my seat when I saw live-action versions of these guys. Yay fanservice!

I know I was a dummy. Forgive me.


r/movies 21h ago

Poster New Poster for 'The Fantastic Four: First Steps'

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2.2k Upvotes

r/movies 19h ago

Media New Image from 'Avatar: Fire and Ash'

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1.0k Upvotes

r/movies 13h ago

Discussion I was NOT prepared for Grave of Fireflies

843 Upvotes

Last night I was cozy in my bed looking for a cute movie to watch. I haven’t seen many studio gibli movies but the ones I’ve seen I absolutely adored. I see Grave of Fireflies on Netflix with 2 cute little kids on the cover and I’m so ready for a My Neighbor Totoro-type movie. I was SO wrong. From the beginning I could tell how it was going to end but MY GOD. Ruined my night. And my day. And possibly my week. Will I recover? Who knows. Cute cozy fun movie suggestions will be appreciated.


r/movies 9h ago

News Robert McGinnis, Creator of Iconic James Bond Posters, Dies at 99

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865 Upvotes

r/movies 20h ago

Media First Images from Jesse Armstrong’s HBO Movie ‘Mountainhead’ Starring Steve Carell, Jason Schwartzman, Cory Michael Smith and Ramy Youssef

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685 Upvotes

r/movies 18h ago

Discussion What is the single greatest acting performance you have seen?

416 Upvotes

What is the single greatest acting performance you have seen?

It's got to be Meryl Streep in Sophie's Choice for me. Such a heartbreaking and nuanced portrayal of loss and devastation, and doubly impressive because she had to learn two languages fluently and had to speak German with a Polish accent, when neither language was native to her.


r/movies 15h ago

Question What was the best detective movie ever made?

199 Upvotes

I'd choose The Maltese Falcon as the characters and the overall story, twists and all, made it such a good film.

Of course Bogies sardonic wit rounds off so many of the interactions and is perhaps scene stealing at it's finest.

Many people forget that three of the major actors were reunited the next year for Casablanca.


r/movies 13h ago

Discussion What movies did you see when you were way too young for them?

126 Upvotes

What film, for whatever reason, just stays with you constantly because you saw it way, way too young to either "get" it, or it was just too much for a undeveloped brain?

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There's plenty of films that scarred me, etc. I picked out Friday the 13th Part 2 for a sleep over at like 10 years old. No bueno. Here's a bunch of cover art from VHS store horror movies I compiled, FWIW: https://imgur.com/gallery/vhs-horror-movie-cover-art-that-enthralled-captivated-you-youth-from-late-70s-to-early-90s-9L046CH

But I'm not talking about horror, vs just not "getting it" or having adult themes way out of your league?

The one film I saw because "cute robots" was Silent Running by Douglas Trumbull, starring Bruce Dern. Almost feels like a spiritual ancestor of High Life in one sense, but like things that made you who you are... Fred Rogers, Carl Sagan, etc... this film gave me a presence of mind about nature that I learned way too young. It's at the core of how I behave and treat this planet...

But it shattered and broke me. I know Huey's forest is still out there, but when Louie died, and when Dern says goodbye to the robots... I mean, it was just pure trauma for my child mind.

I wonder what other people saw that just anchored into their soul or heart, or became the basis for their fears or weird stuff, all because you saw it too young?


r/movies 19h ago

Discussion Brian De Palma's "Raising Cain" is a instant reminder of how brilliant John Lithgow is at playing psychos

116 Upvotes

The influences of Alfred Hitchcock are there as "Raising Cain" playis like Psycho meets Sybil. Lithgow plays respected Dr Carter Nix who happens to have multiple personalities, some of them being psychotic murderers. Lithgow plays each of these personas with a distinct sense of extreme emotion, be it shyness or weakness or playful sadism. His performance keeps changing it up whenever a persona takes over, at one point he assumes a female persona, and Lithgow always had a bit of feyness in his acting which perfectly allows him to convincingly add that extra layer.

Supporting roles are fine, I liked Frances Sternhagen as an eccentric psychologist trying to get to Carter Nix. Lolita Davidovich wears beautiful dresses. Steven Bauer has a nude scene. And aging actress Gabrielle Carteris plays a teenager again, this time no glasses and trashy.


r/movies 22h ago

AMA Hi /r/movies! I am Alex Scharfman, writer/director of DEATH OF A UNICORN, the new A24 movie starring Paul Rudd and Jenna Ortega, in theaters now! Ask me anything!

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95 Upvotes

r/movies 10h ago

Discussion Which Shane Black-written movie do you prefer? (Lethal Weapon, Monster Squad, Last Boy Scout, Long Kiss Goodnight, Kiss Kiss Bang Band, Nice Guys, etc.)

90 Upvotes

Your choices:

  • Lethal Weapon (1987): Two newly paired cops who are complete opposites must put aside their differences in order to catch a gang of drug smugglers.
  • The Monster Squad (1987): A group of 12-year-olds form a Universal Monsters fan club called Monster Squad, and have to attempt to save their hometown from Count Dracula and his monsters when they show up for real.
  • The Last Boy Scout (1991): A private detective's protected female witness is murdered, prompting him and the victim's boyfriend to investigate the crime that leads to a corrupt politician and a crooked football team owner.
  • Last Action Hero (1993): With the help of a magic ticket, a young movie fan is transported into the fictional world of his favorite action movie character.
  • The Long Kiss Goodnight (1996): Government agents come after an amnesiac woman, who gradually remembers her past.
  • Kiss Kiss Bang Bang (2005): After being mistaken for an actor, a New York thief is sent to Hollywood to train under a private eye for a potential movie role, but the duo are thrown together with a struggling actress into a murder mystery.
  • Iron Man 3 (2013): When Tony Stark's world is torn apart by a formidable terrorist called the Mandarin, he starts an odyssey of rebuilding and retribution.
  • The Nice Guys (2016): In 1970s Los Angeles, a mismatched pair of private eyes investigate a missing girl and the mysterious death of a porn star.
  • The Predator (2018): When a young boy accidentally triggers the universe's most lethal hunters' return to Earth, only a ragtag crew of ex-soldiers and a disgruntled scientist can prevent the end of the human race.

r/movies 3h ago

Review I finally watched The Truman Show

71 Upvotes

This movie came out years before I was born and it kept popping up in my feed because I listen to mitski and one of her song is greatly used in many edits of the movie. I was interested as soon as I saw that short video and after watching the film, I am in awe. This is what I would consider an

I honestly cried and I wish to forget it so I could watch it all over again. A true masterpiece. It will my favorite movie for a while. So, I felt better after watching it.

and in case I don't see ya Good afternoon Good Evening and Good Night.


r/movies 12h ago

Discussion What movie forever changed (good or bad) a pre-existing song for you?

54 Upvotes

I think the most famous would be "Stuck In The Middle With You" from Reservoir Dogs.

It took me years to be able to separate "Goodbye Horses" from Silence of the Lambs (no thanks to Jay & Silent Bob).

I am interested in songs that existed independently before the film. Nothing that was written specifically for the movie.


r/movies 6h ago

Media Joe Versus the Volcano (an underappreciated Hanks classic) - Joe Quits (for context, he just learned he has a terminal illness) Spoiler

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55 Upvotes

r/movies 15h ago

Discussion Movies that feel "existential"?

46 Upvotes

People often talk about scarring, the most gruesome, or films you watched too young, etc. But there's a softer side of that trend, and it's simply the feeling of existentialism within the context of the film, whether storyline, visual vocabulary, subtext, etc. So what are some other films that feel this way, like:

Silent Running

Watership Down

Threads or the Day After Tomorrow

Aniara

Until the End of the World

Mindwalk

My Dinner with Andre


r/movies 9h ago

Discussion Any thoughts on Zardoz?

37 Upvotes

I saw this movie when I was in a vacation when me and my brother stayed up and we were 10 and 12. It’s super bizarro with ultra violence, and lots of nudity, and Sean Connery flying around in a stone triangle. So much to unpack it ha to be one of the strangest big celebrity movies I have ever seen.


r/movies 17h ago

Discussion Crocodile Dundee (1986) is a film of its time. 80s Film nostalgia. It got two sequels. What did you most like about the film?

36 Upvotes

It's insane how successful Crocodile Dundee was back in the 80s. 174 million dollars domestically.

I didn't realize Paul Hogan was a comedian or his character was supposed to be funny. I still had a great time watching Crocodile Dundee and I am bitter Linda Koslowzski never got a break outside of Crocodile Dundee. He got the credit yet she's the one who dominated the last act as her character runs for the Train station.

A heartwarming film, personally.


r/movies 22h ago

AMA I am Tolga Karaçelik, the Director/Writer of Brainstorm Media’s dark-comedy PSYCHO THERAPY: THE SHALLOW TALE OF A WRITER WHO DECIDED TO WRITE ABOUT A SERIAL KILLER. It stars Steve Buscemi, John Magaro, and Britt Lower. It's out in theaters now. Ask me anything!

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29 Upvotes

r/movies 17h ago

Discussion Ben Whitehead was awesome as Wallace in "Wallace & Gromit vengeance most fowl"

29 Upvotes

Ben whitehead did really a good cracking job voicing wallace in the 2024 aardman netflix movie "Wallace & gromit vengeance most fowl", as he was able to do a very identical imitation to peter salis (Rip), and exactly with the same way wallace talks, he easily fills the big shoes and he is a really good successor to peter salis as wallace voice actor.

Because sadly peter salis passed away in 2017 after retiring in 2010, with the last time he voiced wallace was in the 2008 short film "matter of loaf and death".

But ben whitehead managed to do him jeastice by nailing wallace voice and the way he is speaking perfectly.

I didn't even realise it wasn't the same voice actor when i watched the movie for the first time.

So what are your oppinions on him as wallace?


r/movies 15h ago

Recommendation Skeet Surfing - Top Secret

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23 Upvotes

r/movies 22h ago

Discussion What makes Das Boot so darn good?

16 Upvotes

To me (and a lot of others of course) Das Boot is in the top 3 of whatever list you can think of. I rewatch it maybe every 3-5 years or so and every time I am blown away about that this movie from 1981 not feels old one bit in the technical department.

Except the exceptional direction, execution and cast, What makes it remarkable is that is not just "another great war movie" where you at some point, directly or indirectly will be fed with morals, and the movie will make sure that by the end of it, you will know the good guys from the bad ones. I don´t say it is necessarily a bad thing but I think it is much more difficult to make a ww2 movie that will not in the slightest give a hint of the moral shortcomings of the germans (or the japanese).

This is I think the core to what makes Das Boot a unicorn. It balances a really touchy subject so masterfully that no one can blame it for being either too political and pretentious, but it´s not lame and totally avoiding on the other side either. It just feels very real and honest.

So what is your take on Das Boot?


r/movies 23h ago

Trailer Sketch | Official Trailer | Angel

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19 Upvotes

r/movies 8h ago

News AMA/Q&A Announcement - Alex Garland - Tuesday 4/8 at 4:00 PM ET - Director of 'Civil War', 'Ex Machina', 'Warfare', 'Annihilation', 'Men' - Writer of '28 Days Later', '28 Weeks Later', 'Dredd', 'Sunshine', 'Never Let Me Go', and '28 Years Later'

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20 Upvotes