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2003:
Bad Boys II — Director Micheal Bay is hated by mainstream film critic s, and the only reason why I can figure is that he makes action adventure summer blockbusters that the general public flocks to. I love his movies, including the much-maligned The Island. Anyway, this is an awesome action/comedy/buddy cop popcorn flick, better even than the first Bad Boys.
The Last Samurai — On the one hand, I do wonder how Hollywood can preach against racism with a straight face when they insist on making Caucasians the star of films about other ethnicities (see also The Windtalkers). But, this samurai film us awesome, and Cruise (couch-jumping wackiness aside) is, as always, an excellent actor.
Kill Bill vol 1 — You have to be a fan of Tarentino, Asian revenge films, and spaghetti westerns to really like this film series, I think, and since I am , I like it.
Open Range — An under-rated western, Kevin Costner and Robert Duvall star as open-range cattlemen finding themselves in a de-facto war with corrupt ranchers.
Underworld — Vampires fighting a war with werewolves with a human caught in the crossfire, plus Kate Beckinsdale in skin tight black leather.
21 Grams — Actually, I’ve never seen most of this movie, as I loathe Sean Penn. But, you do get to see Naomi Watts’ boobies (with nipples very much like traffic cones, I might add.)
Gigli — Dear God, am I kidding.
Bubba Ho Tep
- Elvis (Bruce Campbell) and JFK(Ozzie Davis- yes, the black one) both alive and in nursing homes, fight for the souls of their fellow residents as they battle an ancient Egyptian Mummy. Funny and actually touching and sad.2004:
Kill Bill vol 2 — Much more deliberate paced than vol 1.
Blade Trinity — The least of the Blade flicks, but Ryan Reynolds is Hi-Larious
Team America: World Police — The South Park dudes do marionettes. Skewers Hollywood big time. Hysterical.
Shaun of the Dead — A British comedy/zombie flick. Pure, unadulterated genius.
The Final Cut — Overlooked Robin Williams drama in which he plays a "cutter" — someone who takes the footage of a person’s life recorder through brain implants and makes memorials after their deaths. Williams plays it low key, and there is tension and atmosphere to spare.
2005:
The 40-Year Old Virgin — Raucously funny with a sweet heart behind the raunchy humor.
Sin City — By far THE most faithful adaptation of a comic book EVER, almost frame by frame. Awesome, over-the-top action with hard-boiled dialog and characters.
Grizzly Man — A fascinating look at a man who lived among grizzlies in the wold… until one ate him. If it weren’t a documentary using the man’s own footage, it would be modern-day Shakespeare.
2006:
The Departed
- Scorsese on top of his game. Cat and mouse, betrayal, secrets, casual yet shocking acts of brutality- this is crime drama as high art.Underworld: Evolution — Ups the ante in terms of plot and action.
Apocalypto — Maybe overlooked thanks to Mel Gibson’s drunken antics, but this movie is a heart-pumping adventure story set at the twilight of the Maya. Brutal, heart wrenching, then fist-pumping "Hell Yeah!" exciting.
2007:
300 — "SPARTAAANS!! PREPARE FOR GLORY!!"" Oh hell yes.
30 Days of Night — See my review.
Grindhouse — I include both movies here, as they should be watched together, like at the movies. Fun homage to b-movies.
Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon — Clever, original (yet flawed) deconstruction of the masked killer horror film archetype. The last act of the movie is a little bit of a let down from the rest of the flick, but worth watching nonetheless.
There are a lot of movies from the last couple of years that I haven’t seen yet, but that I am looking forward to, such as Wristcutters: A Love Story and The Assassination of Jesse James By the Coward, Robert Ford.