Posted on 12/08/2006 4:56:23 AM PST by Dr. Scarpetta
I never got to see 'One Night with the King.' Do you recommend it?
great point
Are those guys prescient or what?
What did you especially like about Apocalypto?
I want to see it, but will have to close my eyes from the gore, is it easy to it coming?
If the barbarity of Communism could be captured it would make this movie pale.. And the barbarity of Islam is untold also.. Islam first makes a conquered people grovel before it savages them on many levels.. Ask the Maronites in Lebanon and the Copts in Egypt.. and the Armenian..
Maybe thats Mel's intention.. throwing a glass of cold water in peoples faces.. i.e. "get real folks"..
"...throats being slit...decapitated heads..."
Hmmm, sounds like the Daily Muslim News.
Offensive in a movie, but not in real life,eh?
Once again, its ok to be offended and outraged by
PAST atrocities, but not by the ones happening NOW.
Mayans aren't threatening us. A combination of
Islam and our own cowardice is.
Can't blame Mel for THAT bloodthirst, now can we?
At first, I thought that was a movie about a homosexual, and I didn't want to go, then I found out it was about the Queen of England, so I reluctantly went to see it. HATED IT! I thought it to be a boring rehash of the Diana fairy tale in real life of the late 20th century, seen from the otherwise unknowable eyes of the Queen herself. The guy that played Tony Blair was such a sissy I couldn't believe it. I couldn't stand the boredom, and I couldn't fall asleep, so I left and saw something else.
I haven't seen it, but everything I heard about it from people whose opinions I respect indicated that it was a good movie.
It is not nearly as bad as they say. They are trying to sell newspapers. The head bouncing down the steps is not graphic at all.
The actors. They were amazing. In particular the "hero" and main "villain" were just incredible. One of the most memorable villains in film history. The actors do so much with their eyes and expressions. And they are all complete unknowns--I can't even imagine how his casting director found them.
They may have,but the Aztecs were here and they were as bad or worse. Aztec priests would drag some poor fool up the steps of their pyramid lay him out on an alter hold him down while another one would take a razer sharp obsidian (black glass like stone) knife and cut his beating heart out. Afterwords the rest of the crowd there would EAT what was left of him. Cortez wrote of this in his diary when he conquered Latin America.
Bunch of hypocrites.
"First we had "Braveheart" and "The Patriot", which got a whole bunch of conservatives into the theaters to watch his stuff. (And I was one of them, although the violence in "The Patriot" repulsed me, and it was NOT historically accurate.) Then he made "The Passion," and got millions of Christians into the theaters to be traumatized by the violence he showed in exquisite detail."
A lot of conservatives are men, we enjoyed the combat scenes in Braveheart and The Patriot, many of us carry guns and expensive fighting knives every day, even though we are just regular citizens.
Many of us are veterans, we liked the way the tomahawk was used in The Patriot, some of us own tomahawks and it has been used by American GIs in hand to hand combat in Iraq.
I look forward to seeing Mel's latest movie, and as someone that has to respond to a woman's scream, anytime, anywhere, no matter the odds, or whether I am armed or not, I hope that I pick up just a little something from his scenes of violence.
I don't like slasher films, but I do enjoy Mel's manly, realistic portrayals of combat, where the good guys are always fighting for a good cause, and I hope all American males learn the noble, manly message that runs through his films like Braveheart, The Patriot, We Were Soldiers, The Passion, and I hope Apocalypto.
Mel Gibson is clearly a madman. At least he's channeling his madness into movies, instead of more harmful activities.
Mel is building a case for Jesus through a series of movies . And yes, he is that smart.
The difference is nobody tries to pretend Texas Chainsaw Massacre or Saw are some form of high art that needs to be respected or have major awards bestowed upon them. Since Braveheart Gibson's movies have (with a couple of exceptions) been getting more and more gruesome, using many more gallons of kero syrup than all but the cheesiest of slasher films, and yet he runs around insisting they're high art and important films with important messages. At some point somebody needs to sit Mel down and explain to him that he's really on the path to becoming Wes Craven with subtitles.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.