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Twenty Most Overrated Films of All Time: Part 2
Big Hollywood ^ | Mar 20th 2011 | Ben Shapiro

Posted on 03/21/2011 8:46:19 PM PDT by winstonwolf33

10. Titanic: If you’re a teenage girl, I understand – Leo is soooo dreamy (retch). But if not, you have no excuse. Utterly ludicrous interpretation of a tragic event. Exploitative in the extreme. Yes, during the sinking of the Titanic, I’m sure that people went hunting each other with pistols. The dialogue is some of the worst ever penned. And she throws the diamond into the sea at the end? My God, old woman, there are millions starving and you throw a priceless jewel into the ocean? Selfish hag.

9. Some Like It Hot: Not a terrible movie, just not a great one. Still unsure why this is considered one of the great comedies of all time. I love Billy Wilder, but this isn’t his best comedy, or even among his top ten movies (see The Apartment, The Fortune Cookie, Stalag 17, the underrated Ace in the Hole, Witness for the Prosecution, Ball of Fire, Sabrina, Love in the Afternoon, Sunset Blvd. and Ninotchka all rank above it). And what the hell does the last line even mean?

8. Chinatown: A good movie, but is it really the best script of all time?

7. 2001: A Space Odyssey: 45 minutes of greatness, almost two hours of poop, including half an hour of monkeys hitting each other with sticks. Oh yeah, and there’s a monolith.

6. The Usual Suspects: When I finished this movie, I wanted to punch somebody. Here’s the deal with twist endings: you have to give the audience clues, and the twist must not invalidate the entire movie. The Usual Suspects broke both these rules. First, the clues were not available the entire movie – only when they show you the board, the mug, etc. do you realize he’s been making up the story. That’s called cheating.

(Excerpt) Read more at bighollywood.breitbart.com ...


TOPICS: TV/Movies
KEYWORDS: films; movielist; movies
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To: All
On the flip side, a highly underrated movie I just saw last week “ A Solitary man “ with Michael Douglas. What a remarkable film! Great character study and Douglas is really strong in this movie.
81 posted on 03/21/2011 10:12:33 PM PDT by warsaw44
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To: Auntie Mame
“I was a good man, wasn’t I?” which completely ruined the movie. It made me hate the entire movie I had just watched. Blech!

Why? I thought that scene was particularly touching, because he knew that the Hanks character essentially gave up his life for him.

82 posted on 03/21/2011 10:13:36 PM PDT by dfwgator
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To: Judges Gone Wild

>>except Meryl Streep was hot.<<

Meryl Streep is to acting what obama is to politics. She is so over the top that even SHE can’t see where the scenery she chewed up is left behind.

Her use of “deftness” is to wield an axe where a small dagger is needed.


83 posted on 03/21/2011 10:13:52 PM PDT by freedumb2003 (Liberalism is a philosophy of sniveling brats. /P. J. O'Rourke, 1991)
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To: Professional

You’ve got to be kidding! Fargo would be listed in the top 20 of my favorite movies.


84 posted on 03/21/2011 10:14:22 PM PDT by willk
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To: RobRoy
Yeah, but there is a cool part, toward the end, where this big ship sinks. ;)

After we see Jack and Rose, we all are rooting for the ship to successfully sink. The handcuffs should have held....

85 posted on 03/21/2011 10:16:10 PM PDT by freedumb2003 (Liberalism is a philosophy of sniveling brats. /P. J. O'Rourke, 1991)
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To: winstonwolf33

The best or close to it is “The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance”. Next one “1984”. The worst is hard to pick since there are so many.


86 posted on 03/21/2011 10:16:44 PM PDT by count-your-change (You don't have be brilliant, not being stupid is enough.)
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To: dfwgator; All

For a couple of good Titanic movies see ‘A Night To Remember’(1958)
and ‘Titanic’ (1953) with Barbara Stanwyck and Clifton Webb.
This one defly blends fact with fiction, while A Night To Remember, an excellent Brittish film is more documentary like.


87 posted on 03/21/2011 10:17:19 PM PDT by patriot08 (TEXAS GAL- born and bred and proud of it!)
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To: Professional

Please don’t reprint profanity such as the ‘f’ bomb here.
There are ladies present.


88 posted on 03/21/2011 10:19:30 PM PDT by patriot08 (TEXAS GAL- born and bred and proud of it!)
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To: I still care

Dirty Dancing used to be what I considered the worst movie ever. I’ve seen some other stinko movies since but it still among the worst.


89 posted on 03/21/2011 10:23:39 PM PDT by willk
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To: All

Re; Titanice, in the first place, I didn’t like the two leads. They just didn’t go together.
There were too many scenes were you were expected to just suspend belief- like how could they be sloshing around in frigid water for hours on the ship and still be functional.
The only redeming features were the spectacular special effects and the theme, ‘My Heart Will Go On’.


90 posted on 03/21/2011 10:27:30 PM PDT by patriot08 (TEXAS GAL- born and bred and proud of it!)
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To: atc23

He is PATHETIC


His flaunting of his foot fetish on the big screen is more than I can take.


91 posted on 03/21/2011 10:27:40 PM PDT by warsaw44
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To: patriot08
and the theme, ‘My Heart Will Go On’.

Yeah, the first 1,000 times you had to hear it.

92 posted on 03/21/2011 10:28:27 PM PDT by dfwgator
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To: truthguy

Ben Shapiro is a an excellent young Conservative writer.

Benjamin Shapiro was born in 1984 in Burbank, Calif. and brought up in the home of two Reagan Republicans,. He entered the University of California Los Angeles at the age of 16 and graduated summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa in June 2004 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science. He graduated Harvard Law School cum laude in June 2007.

Exerpt from 2006 column:

‘The Democratic Party cannot be trusted with national security. This is a party more concerned with health care than terrorism, more concerned with global warming than Al Qaeda. They complain about President Bush’s use of wartime powers to order wiretapping on domestic to international phone calls between suspected terrorists, complaining that civil liberties are being violated. Democrats are more worried that the government will monitor calls between a mother and her daughter backpacking in Europe than that the government will ignore calls between deputies of Osama bin Laden and terrorists like Mohammed Atta. Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wisconsin) attempts to have President Bush censured for protecting the American people.

Meanwhile, Democrats continue to pander to those who cross the border illegally and block any concerted action to end illegal immigration. Senator Hillary Clinton (D-New York) thanks illegal immigrants protesting in New York and hopes that their protests will bring “out of the shadows the millions and millions of people who are here who make our economy work.” Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-Massachusetts) speaks similarly at a protest in Washington, D.C. It is no surprise that Democrats were recruiting voters at pro-illegal immigration rallies.

Democrats cannot be trusted to handle the war in Iraq. They are too busy claiming that the war has already been lost to notice that American casualties are declining dramatically; they are too impatient for Iraq to become Vietnam to wait for the development of democracy in a part of the world that has never seen democracy before. The Democrats are too busy gleefully pointing at body bags and Abu Ghraib to care that they are undermining the morale of our troops.

Democrats cannot be trusted to handle the economy. Unemployment is down, the stock market is up, home ownership is rising rapidly. Democrats would reverse all of these trends in order to grow entitlement programs and, by doing so, buy more votes. They would raise taxes dramatically and cut defense spending.

Democrats cannot be trusted to tolerate the viewpoints of religious people. It is Democrats across the country who seek to legitimize homosexual marriage; it is Democrats across the country who seek to keep the legal abomination of Roe v. Wade on the books so that ordinary Americans cannot vote on abortion; it is Democrats across the country who want God out of the public schools and courthouses.’

Gotta love this kid.

__________
More:

http://townhall.com/columnists/benshapiro/


93 posted on 03/21/2011 10:52:49 PM PDT by patriot08 (TEXAS GAL- born and bred and proud of it!)
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To: winstonwolf33; DollyCali; All
Better list than Part 1.


I've never been a great Leonardo DiCaprio fan, so I've never seen Titanic .

Completely agree with Chinatown . A long, drawn out, mediocre story with a rather small payoff.

Never got the hang of Fargo . The first American Foreign Language Film. A major disappointment along side of The Hudsucker Proxy . Especially after the Coen's excellent Blood Simple and Miller's Crossing .

American Beauty is a later generation's The Ice Storm . Pretentious and arrogant. Though it is fun watching Kevin Spacey chew up scenery.

Much prefer Mean Streets to Scorcese's later Raging Bull.

Positively thrilled that The Graduate achieved #1. What was considered risque back in the 60s barely raises an eyebrow today.

Still enjoy 2001, Pulp Fiction and The Usual Suspects. Some Like It Hot is a film I see about once a year. Wilder gets kudos for padding out a ten minute drag sketch and creating a minor classic.


Jack.
94 posted on 03/21/2011 10:56:06 PM PDT by Jack Deth (Knight Errant and Resident FReeper Kitty Poem /Haiku Guy)
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To: winstonwolf33
8. Chinatown: A good movie, but is it really the best script of all time?

No, but it is an outstanding script. Also a fine performance by Nicholson back when he still cared about his acting, John Huston providing a nearly perfect portrayal of a truly evil man, and a haunting soundtrack. One of the best films of the '70s, and that's saying a lot.

7. 2001: A Space Odyssey: 45 minutes of greatness, almost two hours of poop, including half an hour of monkeys hitting each other with sticks. Oh yeah, and there’s a monolith.

Glib and fairly mindless summation of a great movie.

5. Pulp Fiction: See my comments about Tarantino here. Pulp Fiction is typical Tarantino – moments of brilliance submerged in a sea of triviality.

Tarantino's best film, and still a lot of fun to watch. Breakout role for Samuel L. Jackson, killer dialogues, interesting presentation of several inter-linked storylines. The only bad note was Tarantino's idiotic cameo.

2. Raging Bull: Time for my rip of Scorcese. He picks out the most horrible characters imaginable, then asks us to follow them for hours on end. There is nothing to like about Jake LaMotta. Nothing.

Yeah, that's kind of the point. Many of the most compelling characters in movies were bad people - they can't all be Saturday morning cartoon figures. This was the best movie of the '80s and featured some of the finest acting of any decade by DeNiro in his prime.

Pretty silly list. I'm afraid to find out what this guy Ben Shapiro's best-movie list looks like.
95 posted on 03/21/2011 11:01:20 PM PDT by AnotherUnixGeek
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To: AnotherUnixGeek
The only bad note was Tarantino's idiotic cameo.

"But you know what's on my mind right now? It AIN'T the coffee in my kitchen, it's the dead n---er in my garage."

But notice that Tarantino gets away with using the N-word, because it's revealed later that his wife was black.

96 posted on 03/21/2011 11:06:19 PM PDT by dfwgator
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To: winstonwolf33

TITANIC One of the worst ever! The original, A Night to Remember was ungorgettable.
The Matrix was another major disappointment.


97 posted on 03/21/2011 11:18:32 PM PDT by Cincinna ( *** NOBAMA 2012 ***)
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To: winstonwolf33

My 20 overrated films:

1)Imitation of Life (1959)

2)Roman Holiday (1953)

3)The Fountainhead (1949)

4)Rope (1948)

5)The Sun Also Rises (1957)

6)The Last Tango in Paris (1973)

7)The Misfits (1960)

8)Sabrina (1954)

9)The Blue Lagoon (Brooke Shields)

10)The Rock (1996)

11)Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade

12)The Lost Weekend (1945)

13)1941

14)Double Jeopardy (Ashley Judd)

15)Congo

16)The Hot Rock

17)Foreign Correspondent (1940)

18)The Postman Always Rings Twice (1945)

19)Blind Date (Bruce Willis)

20)Reunion in France (1943)


98 posted on 03/21/2011 11:20:32 PM PDT by techno
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To: All

How about ‘guilty pleasures’?
(Ok, so you know they’re stupid but you just want to snuggle up with a snack and get your mind off things)

Some of mine are:
Feris Buehler’s Day Off
Jumpin’ Jack Flash
The Bird Cage (Robin Williams’ version)
Blast From The Past
Encino Man
Pretty In Pink


99 posted on 03/21/2011 11:25:52 PM PDT by patriot08 (TEXAS GAL- born and bred and proud of it!)
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To: DollyCali
Saw “Kill The Irishman” Friday with my father. Excellant film. As a Clevelandnder myself, I can remember bits and pieces of the story from when I was a kid. Gritty, violent, and mostly true.

Biggest problem was that it was filmed in Detroit. Cleveland never looked as bad as some of the areas of that film looked. Collinwood doesn't look that bad now.

However our former idiot Governor Ted ‘Loose a 1/2 million Jobs’ Strickland and the previous Dem run statehouse didn't want to give tax breaks to the movie.

100 posted on 03/21/2011 11:31:05 PM PDT by Jim from C-Town (The government is rarely benevolent, often malevolent and never benign!)
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