Like almost everyone else in the world, I am spending alot more time indoors lately. :? I have heard the adage that only boring people get bored but I don't think that is true, and as a way to combat boredom, thought that starting a thread with ideas and discussions about interesting movies and TV shows out there that are keeping us entertained during our respective locale's shelter-in-place orders.
-I just finished watching The Wave (2019), the psychedelic adventure that was mentioned by a few other members. I found it highly entertaining, even though the philosophy presented didn't always`land well with me. Regardless, it has some great performances, and the last part did have an emotional impact with me. I wouldn't mind talking about this movie, it has a ton of hidden stuff in it.
-Also watching Westworld season 3, and am on the fence with how it is developing, although like other seasons of the show, all the narrative chaos`will hopefully gel into some more cognitive-consciousness existential gnostic mindeffery. It could be shaping up to be the most disturbing season yet.I love WW so far... I'm also really digging the art design on the world outside the park's simulation, the sets and vehicles are really pretty cool and fascinating concepts.
-DEVS is another interesting show in it's first season involving a Google-like company screwing around with universal determinism on a quantum-level in the cause of re-constructing a lost past... Another pretty good show dealing with some pretty cool philosophical concepts. Even if at times it is pseudo-intellectual, showing characters playing mind-games to illustrate the gigantic fore-brains, it is fun and is still TV. The tech portrayed in it is pretty amazing too.
I found everything mentioned in this post on torrent, hypothetically one could download them for free.
-I'm a big fan of horror, and some of y'all might like Midsommar, if you haven't seen the College Kids Visiting a Nordic Mushroom Death Cult flick yet, it is pretty cool. Ari Aster who directed the occult masterpiece Hereditary, presented it as his sophomore effort, and while it plays with some safe directorial territory he developed with Hereditary, Midsommar is an evolution of his genre film-making, and I'm excited to see more. The way Midsommar brings the horror into bright sunlight is pretty well-done, as none of the terror in the story-line is hidden, and everything is in plain sight to the victims of tragedy from the very get-go, as is often the case in reality. Not as foreshadowing, but outright warning that is ignored for personal and usually selfish reasons.
-Speaking of occult horror (heh heh), if you have not seen Rosemary's Baby, you are missing out on the movie that may have inspired Hereditary. Watching it knowing what happened in real-life to Sharon Tate makes it more disturbing. A Dark Song, about a murdered boy's mother misguidedly seeking revenge through the working of an elaborate, weeks-long ritual (A filmic representation of the Abremelin Working) and the results, is a compelling film, and is probably both the best representation of mechanics of ceremonial magick (regardless of 'accuracy' ) and how it works. It seems the production ran out of money or simply had a lacking art/VFX team behind the conclusion, but it is still a very good meditation on giving oneself over to something entirely emotional without working through the consequences.
-And jeez, Nicholas Cage. What can I say, I used to hate him, but since Mandy I have become a fan of his new stuff at least.(Just watch it- if you need prodding: Satanic bikers genetically altered by "special" LSD kidnap Cage's girlfriend and mad colorful chaos ensues. Ultraviolence in ultraviolet- like an old Heavy Metal magazine on the brown acid.) . Color Out of Space (no 'u' ) succeeds on many levels, and is maybe the best Lovecraft movie since Reanimator, I can't wait for Dunwich Horror, if production on new films ever resumes.
So there's nine questionably useful ideas for home entertainment. Stay safe! Wash your darn hands!
Avoiding spoilers makes discussing movies difficult, but maybe if anyone is interested we could start a discussion thread that those who don't want spoilers can avoid?
-I just finished watching The Wave (2019), the psychedelic adventure that was mentioned by a few other members. I found it highly entertaining, even though the philosophy presented didn't always`land well with me. Regardless, it has some great performances, and the last part did have an emotional impact with me. I wouldn't mind talking about this movie, it has a ton of hidden stuff in it.
-Also watching Westworld season 3, and am on the fence with how it is developing, although like other seasons of the show, all the narrative chaos`will hopefully gel into some more cognitive-consciousness existential gnostic mindeffery. It could be shaping up to be the most disturbing season yet.I love WW so far... I'm also really digging the art design on the world outside the park's simulation, the sets and vehicles are really pretty cool and fascinating concepts.
-DEVS is another interesting show in it's first season involving a Google-like company screwing around with universal determinism on a quantum-level in the cause of re-constructing a lost past... Another pretty good show dealing with some pretty cool philosophical concepts. Even if at times it is pseudo-intellectual, showing characters playing mind-games to illustrate the gigantic fore-brains, it is fun and is still TV. The tech portrayed in it is pretty amazing too.
I found everything mentioned in this post on torrent, hypothetically one could download them for free.
-I'm a big fan of horror, and some of y'all might like Midsommar, if you haven't seen the College Kids Visiting a Nordic Mushroom Death Cult flick yet, it is pretty cool. Ari Aster who directed the occult masterpiece Hereditary, presented it as his sophomore effort, and while it plays with some safe directorial territory he developed with Hereditary, Midsommar is an evolution of his genre film-making, and I'm excited to see more. The way Midsommar brings the horror into bright sunlight is pretty well-done, as none of the terror in the story-line is hidden, and everything is in plain sight to the victims of tragedy from the very get-go, as is often the case in reality. Not as foreshadowing, but outright warning that is ignored for personal and usually selfish reasons.
-Speaking of occult horror (heh heh), if you have not seen Rosemary's Baby, you are missing out on the movie that may have inspired Hereditary. Watching it knowing what happened in real-life to Sharon Tate makes it more disturbing. A Dark Song, about a murdered boy's mother misguidedly seeking revenge through the working of an elaborate, weeks-long ritual (A filmic representation of the Abremelin Working) and the results, is a compelling film, and is probably both the best representation of mechanics of ceremonial magick (regardless of 'accuracy' ) and how it works. It seems the production ran out of money or simply had a lacking art/VFX team behind the conclusion, but it is still a very good meditation on giving oneself over to something entirely emotional without working through the consequences.
-And jeez, Nicholas Cage. What can I say, I used to hate him, but since Mandy I have become a fan of his new stuff at least.(Just watch it- if you need prodding: Satanic bikers genetically altered by "special" LSD kidnap Cage's girlfriend and mad colorful chaos ensues. Ultraviolence in ultraviolet- like an old Heavy Metal magazine on the brown acid.) . Color Out of Space (no 'u' ) succeeds on many levels, and is maybe the best Lovecraft movie since Reanimator, I can't wait for Dunwich Horror, if production on new films ever resumes.
So there's nine questionably useful ideas for home entertainment. Stay safe! Wash your darn hands!
Avoiding spoilers makes discussing movies difficult, but maybe if anyone is interested we could start a discussion thread that those who don't want spoilers can avoid?