Originally Posted by
tableplay
Originally Posted by
monet
I've got my hopes up for Ridley Scott and his version of Napoleon, but I wouldn't hold my breath.
I doubt it can outdo the Waterloo version with Rod Steiger as I have mentioned a few times in the past.
It makes no sense to watch it at the movie theater as the runtime will be about 2 and a half hours.
I have Apple TV and when it is released on Apple it will be the 4 and a half hour directors cut, so why would I go watch the watered-down version??
But I read that this will be an additional 2 hours about Josephine so that could drag on and get boring.
I would still rather watch the entire 4-and-a-half-hour version first to compare to the edited version.
Hopefully the 4.5 hour version will appear on putlocker so I can watch it, otherwise I will just watch the 2 hour version on putlocker - thanks for the heads up. I'm looking forward to Bladerunner 2099 since I thought Bladerunner 2049 was excellent. Luckily Ridley has enough clout to pace the movies he makes at early 80's levels rather than the fast-cut woke pace that younger directors either like to invoke or are forced to invoke by their studios.
I rented 3 movies from Redbox the other day.
The Call of the Wild:
This was more for the family because I knew that it was basically CGI and Woke.
We didn't make it too far before I turned it off.
Really bad version and I'm guessing Jack London is rolling around in his grave.
Strays:
Got this for the family again and thought we could laugh.
I did laugh throughout this movie.
It's a little woke where the white girl is bad but the black girl is good.
But the movie is raunchy.
Way too raunchy for a dog talking comedy.
I didn't understand why it had to be so vulgar and never-ending vulgarity throughout the movie.
Kind of ruined it for me but like I say... it had enough "funny" moments for one viewing.
I guess an argument could be made that they are Street Dogs and meant to be tough and vulgar.
The problem is that they were basically Fake Strays or Fake Street Tough... they were really just house dogs in the end.
Kandahar:
Figured this would be the best movie of the three.
It was ok but once again it was woke or diversified.
I skipped some of the long-drawn-out emotional parts that were unnecessary.
The other movie did it better that we already watched called The Covenant by Guy Ritchie.
The Covenant story and acting was far better and in my opinion, the stories are damn near identical.