X, I want your opinions on the following 3 movies:
30 Days of Night
One of the better vampire films made in the last decade, though there are a few problems with the film. It's a mostly faithful adaptation though and I really enjoyed seeing it in theaters, especially for some of the more brutal gore. Actually I've still got the ticket stub for that film I think...yes, I'm so much of a nerd that I save all of my ticket stubs to the movies I see. I've got all three of my stubs for the Lord of the Rings trilogy still.
It's not a
great film, but it's very good. Probably around a 3 or 3.5 out of 5. Probably 3.5.
One of my guiltiest pleasures, especially as a kid. Like any other American child I loved Arnie (Predator is the greatest action film ever made god damnit) and Last Action Hero was one of my favorites. Probably because of the whole going-into-the-movie-with-Arnie thing, very cool. I haven't seen it in years, but I remember the last time I saw it it didn't really hold up as well. Still love it though.
The Doors (you know, with Val Kilmer as Jim Morrison)
Val Kilmer's performance is extraordinary, simply extraordinary. Really the performances by everyone involved are. Oliver Stone picked the absolute most perfect cast for the band. Val Kilmer's best role will always be as Morrison, I'm a HUGE fan of Kyle MacLachlan and he played Ray Manzarek to perfection (seriously had to question whether that was really Ray or not), Frank Whaley is another criminally underrated actor who was great as Robby Krieger, and finally Kevin Dillon as John Densmore, who I'm a huge fan of (his head-bashing scene in Platoon disturbs me more than 99% of horror films).
The film itself I consider to be pitch-perfect, probably the greatest biopic ever made. Stone perfectly captured all of the crazed and beautiful poetic mysticism of Morrison. The desert scene when they all eat peyote is probably one of my favorite scenes, ever. Probably because all of my first experiences with psychedelic drugs were set to that film, and we always seemed to begin tripping as soon as the desert scene came along.
Great film that's been unfairly criticized over the years. There will never be a better film on Morrison, ever. And that's coming from WZ's resident Morrison/Doors fanatic.