Heh.And; if you think you want to try it out there's always the 1984 Moroder-version...
I watched Pitch Black and Dark City off the recommendations in this thread. Pitch Black kind of sucked.
I've seen parts of the Kino release in certain classes, but never the whole thing. I suppose part of me is waiting for the (almost complete) version, and a part of just doesn't enjoy silent film all that much outside of the context of a theatre and live music. But there are exceptions to that rule (The Passion of Joan of Arc, with the "voices in light" score that was composed for it in the 1980s, being a notable example) so I should probably get my ass motivated and see the damned thing.
I watched Pitch Black and Dark City off the recommendations in this thread. Pitch Black kind of sucked.
Wow.
Just.....................WOW.
Well... it takes an interest in silent film, sure, but whether or not one is dependent on mood probably varies from person to person and film to film. Brand Upon the Brain is definitely a film I need to prepare myself for, but Metropolis is simply a fun movie I can watch anytime.It takes a certain mood to sit down and watch a /silent/ film or for that matter a /slow paced/ film...
Not everyone actually 'gets' it -same with 'comics'; some people don't want to read the /black & white/ ones.
Personally, I just feel sorry for those people... they loose out on a lot of the most fantastic of the genres!
Please tell me if I'm wrong!
I probably should have elaborated that I think Metropolis is the most accessible for sci-fi fans, which I'd indeed feel it is. Keaton, Lloyd, Chaplin et al are slapstick comedians, after all.Frankly, not all silents are slow or melodramatically acted in that overblown fashion like the lead in Metropolis.
You're not the only one, but we might be forgiven for thinkng so given that I've only just started to read this thread.Explorers; Not so much underrated as (so far as I can tell) unknown or overlooked. Seriously, sometimes I think I'm the only person that's ever seen this movie!
You're not the only one, but we might be forgiven for thinkng so given that I've only just started to read this thread.Explorers; Not so much underrated as (so far as I can tell) unknown or overlooked. Seriously, sometimes I think I'm the only person that's ever seen this movie!
But I love Explorers. I couldn't really say it's one of the ten best movies ever made... but it will always be one of my ten favourite movies.
It has heart, and hope, and despair. It make you remember what you were like when you where 10, and how you miss that 10 year old belief that you could still do anything.
It wasn't terrible, I just found it a forgettable and mediocre sci-fi action/horror flick. It's a bit like Supernova, Mission to Mars, Red Planet - sci-fi movies I saw as a young teenager which I just wasn't terribly impressed with and haven't seen since.Pitch Black (I'd love to see some arguments from those who think it sucked. Why do you think so?)
The most underrated SciFi movie, providing it is actually considered a SciFi movie (but it should - it is a fictional account of what might have happened in the future, and it was really based on science), is the 1984 BBC movie "Threads". It was a realistic SF - and one of the most frightening movies I've ever seen, exactly because it was realistic: it showed exactly what a nuclear war would look alike. I can only imagine how terrifying it might have been at the time when it was released, when a nuclear war was a very possible prospect. This movie is much stronger than "The Day After".
Some other candidates:
Alien III (undeservedly slammed, IMO)
Pitch Black (I'd love to see some arguments from those who think it sucked. Why do you think so?)
Dark City
Event Horizon
eXistenS (it wasn't as great as Videodrome or The Fly or even The Dead Zone, but it was still quite good)
12 Monkeys - one of my favorite movies, but I wasn't sure if I should put it under "underrated movies", since I thought it was pretty well rated. But maybe not well enough as it should?
On a similar note, someone mentioned Brazil - it's awesome, but I thought it was quite well rated?
Finally, Alejandro Amenabar's Abre los ojos (Open Your Eyes) would be on the top of my list, but it's not as much underrated, as it is just not as well known as it should be. Almost everyone who's seen it thinks it is a masterpiece, but unfortunately, many people only know the awful Cameron Crowe/Tom Cruise remake Vanilla Sky.![]()
It wasn't terrible, I just found it a forgettable and mediocre sci-fi action/horror flick. It's a bit like Supernova, Mission to Mars, Red Planet - sci-fi movies I saw as a young teenager which I just wasn't terribly impressed with and haven't seen since.Pitch Black (I'd love to see some arguments from those who think it sucked. Why do you think so?)
It was admittedly better than the movies I just mentioned, and also had Claudia Black, which are two points in its favour.
I'm the one who said that I thought Pitch Black sucked, so I guess I should defend my position a little.
I disagree that Vin Diesel's acting was any good. Honestly his character is completely ridiculous. He's just badass beyond all measure. It didn't make for an interesting character for me. I get that they tried to make him an anti-hero, but nothing about the dialogue or acting made it click as believable for me.
The special effects... kind of sucked. I know, it's a little old, and it was low budget. If I like the rest of the movie it's not a big deal, but if I don't then I just see it as another sub-par part of a sub-par film.
It was a cliche horror movie in a lot of ways. I didn't really care who would make it to the end.
I didn't expect there to be an airtight plot or anything, but the 'ecosystem' in the movie made such little sense that even with my brain in 'popcorn movie' mode I couldn't ignore how silly it seemed.
I'm going out on a limb, but I always liked "Android" from 1982..a No budget gem..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ubcEUr5ALJ0
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