The Virgin Suicides for me. I bought it last week and haven’t been able to work up the gumption to watch it yet. Maybe tonight.

  • kip@piefed.zip
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    3 hours ago

    Happiness (1998) is extremely dark and very funny at the same time

    The War Zone (1999) is relentlessly bleak and uncomfortable

  • romanticremedy@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    4 hours ago

    La la land. Not the whole movie but the scene at the end always makes me emotional. It reminds of my ex, who I spent almost 10 years with. What if our relationship worked out?

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    5 hours ago
    • One flew over the cuckoo’s nest
    • Aftersun
    • The father
    • Manchester by the sea
    • Million dollar baby
    • dditty@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 hours ago

      Aftersun is a beautiful and poignant film with excellent dramatic performances by Paul Mescal and Frankie Corio that I will probably never watch again because it’s sooooo sad 😭

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    7 hours ago

    Interstellar and Arrival The scene where cooper watches his kids grow up and get kids of their own in like 5 minutes always gets me.

  • mech@feddit.org
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    9 hours ago

    The Road
    The only truly realistic post-apocalyptic movie.
    There is no hope. There is no humanity pulling together in times of crisis.
    Just one man trying to keep his son and himself alive for another day, after losing everything else.

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      9 hours ago

      Maybe I just didn’t give it enough of a chance, but I really just didn’t get this film honestly. For me it just felt like a sort of ‘depression porn’ without really much substance to it.

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        5 hours ago

        The movie is an adaptation of the book by Cormac McCarthy. The book won the Pulitzer and the James Tait Memorial Prize.

        “Depression Porn without substance” is a funny way to characterize the movie.

  • Kühlschrank@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    Requiem for a Dream. Aronofsky is a legend and totally up my alley but this and a couple other films he has done I only have the energy to watch once.

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      7 hours ago

      What makes it worse for me is there was an old channel 4 advert that kad clips from lots of movies and the names of the movies in the current roster.

      I thought the names matched the clips… and requiem for a dream appeared alongside a film I’ve not actually identified with a guy shooting over a limo saying something like “death to some thing something and bad cinema”

      So a few years later I finally sit down to watch requiem for a dream expecting some weird Hollywood critic (or something)

      Kept waiting for that scene until things got really dark and then kind of knew something was amiss.

      On the upside: no heroine for me thanks

    • bulwark@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      I thought of this one as well. It’s my favorite movie I never want to see again.

    • A_norny_mousse@feddit.org
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      9 hours ago

      I, too, remember this one. But it’s so long since I’ve seen it. But every time I consider a re-watch I wuss out.

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    9 hours ago

    I would say Grave of the Fireflies, but like a lot of people I’ve never wanted to watch it again so I’m not sure if I could say it’s my favourite.

  • CerebralHawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    7 hours ago

    君の名は。 (your name.) — the first big twist. When ya boy Taki first sets foot on the school (as himself) and looks at the lake and you realise what the movie’s been doing this whole time.

    Star Trek: Deep Space Nine did it like 15-20 years prior (and I loved that episode) but I never saw it coming. You go back and watch, and the movie kinda slaps you with a fresh fish with the clues, especially the date where he and his coworker are looking at all the photos. Camera stays there a good little while, too. Like damn. Stevie Wonder coulda saw that twist coming. But I was captivated by the beauty of the film. And the music.

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    6 hours ago

    Strangely these are my favourite kind of films, as there is something cathartic about emerging from an emotional roller coaster. These films have stayed me with long after:

    • Irreversible
    • 21 Grams
    • Never Let Me Go
    • Burning
    • First Reformed
    • The Long Walk
    • kip@piefed.zip
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      3 hours ago

      i read never let me go, didn’t know there was a film. do you think it’s still worth watching with prior knowledge?

  • danh2os@piefed.social
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    8 hours ago

    Everything Everywhere All At Once. I watch it every year and I pretend I’m a different character every time. I’m in my Waymond phase now. Watch it from his point of view when you’re ready.