by jellydonut25 » Thu Jul 14, 2016 11:54 am
Tex Montana Will Survive - From the director of The Battery (an excellent micro-budget zombie film, that was the first zombie movie in a LONG time I'd seen actually do something I'd never really seen done before in the subgenre), comes a comedy about a disgraced survival show host trying to prove his doubters wrong. It can occasionally be a bit hit-or-miss, but given that it has an even smaller budget than The Battery (The Battery was made for like $6,000, Tex Montana came in around $1,500), is JUST Jeremy Gardner in front of the camera for 90 minutes, and was mostly improvised, it's a pretty good little movie. It wears a little thin after a while, but it's an impressive achievement and continues making Gardner a talent to keep an eye on. 4/5
EDIT: Not sure why I posted when I had like 4 other movies:
Doomsday Book - It's an anthology movie about three apocalypse/post-apocalypse/future stories. The first is a DECENT zombie thing, with a score that brings it all together satisfyingly. The second is directed by Jae-woon Kim (A Tale of Two Sisters, I Saw the Devil) is EXCELLENT. It's spectacularly written and shot, proving Kim's talents as a storyteller and director. The third is fun, but not great. It's a little hard to describe without giving it away, but basically a meteor is bearing down on the Earth and a family is in their bunker, waiting to survive the impending impact. Overall, it's not a great anthology film, but I got it for like $2 and at that price, it's not horrible. 3/5
Aaah! Zombies! - Low-budget zombie fare about people who become zombies, but don't realize it. They all look and act and talk normal to one another, and all the normal people look different. It's a fun concept, and it does a few interesting things with it. Enough at least such that it holds your attention for its 90 minute run time. 3/5
Krull - I'd never seen this before, and I was actually expecting something different (more space-oriented) but as low-budget fantasy films go, Krull is a fun ride that harkens back to a different era of filmmaking with location shooting and sets and costumes and makeup and it's an overall satisfying experience. 3.5/5
Sunshine - A very interesting movie about a mission to drop a mega-bomb into the heart of the sun in order to create a new sun, since ours is dying. It's a bit clunky at times, a bit predictable at others, and not incredibly well-acted, but it's got some really good scifi ideas, a good plot, and some great atmosphere and directing to tie it all together. 4/5
Deadpool - Just checkin out my blu-ray. It's a testament to how much I like this movie that I put it on thinking I'd start cleaning and doing things around the house and at several different spots found myself plunked down on the couch, watching. 4.5/5
Kick-Ass 2 - I hadn't seen this since theaters. I don't know if it was because my memories of it put my expectations fairly low, or what, but I feel like I enjoyed it quite a bit this time around. 3.5/5
Big Man Japan - My first time seeing this. I like all the wacky, trippy, inexplicable monsters and the battle sequences, but it's maybe a bit TOO dull outside of them. I understand that's kinda the point, and it is fairly well-written, but it's actually maybe done just a tad too well and it can be a slog to get from one battle to the next. 3.5/5