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Everything posted by Jade Bahr
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The eternal beauty has left the building đ«
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Controversial but jeez he was drop dead gorgeous @Lilja K
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In dedication of his yesterdays birthday I re watched ...still felt too long overall.
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Leonardo DiCaprio - (Please Read First Post Prior to Posting)
Jade Bahr replied to moiselles's topic in Male Actors
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Pretty sure not a movie for everyone but I really liked it. Margaret Qualley and Joe Alwyn are so hot đ»
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Joe Alwyn is also in this movie? Ok I'm officially fainting
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So how about a movie ranking for the handsome birthday boy? @Lilja K o1.) Elvis (maybe not the best take on Elvis ever made but like most Baz movies the visuals are stunning and Austins performance is a force of nature. I was blown away in cinema. truly a performance for the ages or movie magic at it's finest. It was like watching a movie star born ) o2.) Dune part 2 (not entirely sure if the intention of the director or Austin was to make us turned on by a bald crazy psycho but here we are. His "knife" is welcome to stab me any day another great intense sometimes frightening performance) o3.) Once Upon A Time in Hollywood (I love this movie too much to put it lower even though Austin is just a side character here. It's also easily my most watched movie of him. I also love the fact that he's so versatile. I mean look at these 3 totally different characters. He's so much more than just "a pretty face") o4.) The Bikeriders (good lord he's pretty in this movie it's almost absurd đ€Ł I know I claimed the exact opposite right above but this movie is like a montage of him being gorgeous at all angles. It's a feat for the eyes and his beauty owns the screen completely sucks you in makes you stare at him like a needy idiot ) o5.) Masters of the Air (he even makes sniffing on a letter so damn sexy đ» I don't know what to say more. It's really hard to stay focus on his perfomance -or anything else- when he looks like this but overall I really enjoyed this show) o6.) Dude (more a cameo but he ripped me apart and his presence is felt during the whole movie even when he isn't visible đ also love long haired Austin sayin things like this so dreamy ) on my watchlist: The Carrie Diaries (nowhere to find sadly đ), The Shannara Chronicles, The Dead Don't Die
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Leonardo DiCaprio - (Please Read First Post Prior to Posting)
Jade Bahr replied to moiselles's topic in Male Actors
More lists of 2000s movies this time from directors/indie filmmakers. Feel free to ignore them! Joe Dante (director: âGremlinsâ) No order âMulholland Driveâ âChildren of Menâ âPanâs Labyrinthâ âIdiocracyâ âSpeed Racerâ âShaun of the Deadâ âInglorious Basterdsâ âRatatouilleâ âBattle Royaleâ âGangs of New Yorkâ Parker Finn (writer/director: âSmileâ) âRequiem for a Dreamâ âCatch Me If You Canâ (Spielberg firing on all cylinders â about as close as you can get to a perfect movie.) âThe Ringâ â24 Hour Party Peopleâ âA Tale of Two Sistersâ âChildren of Menâ âZodiacâ âThere Will Be Bloodâ âRachel Getting Marriedâ âEnter the Voidâ Michael Felker (writer/director: âThings Will Be Differentâ) âTHE AVIATORâ Saw this in theaters with my dad. I distinctly remember him whispering to me before it started, âAny time you see a Martin Scorsese movie, you may be seeing the greatest movie ever made.â And for awhile, this was the greatest. Everything I learned about crafting a compelling but flawed protagonist came from this film. The brief white flashes into Howard Hughesâ obsessive psyche and crippling anxiety genuinely still move me to this day. Nora Finghschneidt (writer/director âThe Outrunâ) Other films of that decade that cannot go unmentioned: REPRISE (Joachim Trier, 2006), THE RETURN (Andrei Petrowitsch Swjaginzew, 2003) , I KILLED MY MOTHER (Xavier Dolan, 2009), THE WHITE RIBBON (Michael Haneke, 2009), THE SQUID & THE WHALE (Noah Baumbach, 2005), THE DEPARTED (Martin Scorsese, 2006) Annie Hamilton (actor: âBetween the Templesâ) âThe Gangs of New Yorkâ/âThe Aviatorâ Can watch these two cuties any day any time. Gorgeous gorgeous gorgeous entertainment. I had a great âAviatorâ poster, but I wasnât allowed to hang posters in my room, so I kept it under my bed and would pull it out to view it before I went to sleep. âCatch Me If You Canâ should be on here too â I know Iâm cheating â but I cant put it on the header cus itâs Spielbergâs not Scorseseâs. My friends like to joke that itâs the only movie Iâve ever seen start to finish (at one point, this mightâve been true..) Robert Kolodny (director: âThe Featherweightâ) 11. âThe Aviatorâ (Scorsese) Spiritually, Scorsese is my personal saint of cinema and it would be disingenuous to not include him here. âThe Aviatorâ is a staggering film in so many ways, so fully grandiose and echoing with adoration for the history of cinema. It also belongs to a personal favorite sub-genre of âpower hungry eccentric geniuses going over the edgeâ. Other entries in that genre include: âThe Red Shoes,â âThere Will be Blood,â âTĂĄr,â and âCitzen Kane.â Joe Lynch (director: âSuitable Fleshâ) âTHE DEPARTEDâ (Martin Scorsese, 2006) â At the time I thought the film was lower-key Marty, itself a remake of the fantastic Japanese thriller INFERNAL AFFAIRS. But itâs that moment when he and editor Thelma Schoonmaker abruptly cut the iconic Dropkick Murphyâs track after a montage to start a casual conversation with an old lady at a doorstep, I knew they were taking the studio star-vehicle potboiler to avant-garde heights only Scorsese could get away with. Seriously, any other director making the shot and edit choices he does in this would have been kicked off the lot or kicked out of the edit room. Itâs a Hollywood âOne For Themâ that kinda backfired in that he made one of my favorite films in his filmography. Of the movies Scorsese directed in the 00âs, this is the one I revisit at least once a year. Neil Marshall (co-writer/director: âDuchessâ) INCEPTION Perhaps the first intellectual blockbuster of the modern age. Christopher Nolan dared to try something new, dense and complex, challenging audiences to think for themselves in a time of largely being spoon-fed. And they loved him for it. McG (director: âUgliesâ) In no particular orderâŠ. âThe Dark Knightâ âAmĂ©lieâ âGladiatorâ âThe Royal Tenenbaumsâ âThere Will Be Bloodâ âCasino Royaleâ âSnatchâ âThe Incrediblesâ âThe Departedâ âSlumdog Millionaireâ Alex Saks (producer: âIt Ends with Usâ) 3. âThe Departedâ Watch this film every Christmas, by myself, since it came out. Canât explain why. Do not read into that. ALTERNATES!!! Devil Wears Prada Training Day Michael Clayton You Can Count on Me Legally Blonde Oceans 11 Big Fish Anchorman My Big Fat Greek Wedding Little Miss Sunshine Chicago Blood Diamond Children of Men There Will Be Blood Diving Bell and the Butterfly Dark Knight Curious Case of Benjamin Button Wedding Crashers Wall-E An Education Rob Savage (director: âThe Boogeymanâ) Ginger Snaps (John Fawcett, 2000) Werckmeister Harmonies (BĂ©la Tarr, 2000) Unbreakable (M. Night Shyamalan, 2000) Bully (Larry Clark, 2001) Metropolis (Rintaro, 2001) Solaris (Steven Soderbergh, 2002) Lilya 4-Ever (Lukas Moodysson, 2002) Morvern Callar (Lynne Ramsay, 2002) In This World (Michael Winterbottom, 2002) Sweet Sixteen (Ken Loach, 2002) The Triplets of Belleville (Sylvain Chomet, 2003) The Return (Andrey Zvyagintsev, 2003) The Aviator (Martin Scorsese, 2004) Mysterious Skin (Gregg Araki, 2004) Cache (Michael Haneke, 2005) Lady Vengeance (Park Chan-wook, 2005) Wolf Creek (Greg McLean, 2005) The Hills Have Eyes (Alexandre Aja, 2006) Red Road (Andrea Arnold, 2006) Requiem (Hans-Christian Schmid, 2006) Silent Light (Carlos Reygadas, 2007) The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford (Andrew Dominik, 2007) Rec (Jaume BalaguerĂł, Paco Plaza, 2007) Lake Mungo (Joel Anderson, 2008) Where the Wild Things Are (Spike Jonze, 2009) Jessica M. Thompson (director: âThe Invitationâ) âA Beautiful Mindâ (2001) â I feel this kicked off a feverish run of biopics (âRayâ, âWalk the Lineâ, âThe Aviatorâ, âThe Queenâ, âLa Vie en Roseâ, âMilkâ all quickly followed), and I am here for every single one of them. This was such an illuminating and searing insight into the fractured mind of a genius. (Also, what a one-two Russell Crowe had!) Jeff Wadlow (co-writer/director âImaginaryâ) âTHE DEPARTEDâ (2006) I love Martin Scorsese, but I have a slightly controversial opinion â this is his best movie. Donât get me wrong, Iâm a huge fan of GOODFELLAS, TAXI DRIVER, RAGING BULL (the list goes on and on), but if I had to pick one to re-watch right now, it would be THE DEPARTED. Itâs just such an amazing concept (based on 2002âs INFERNAL AFFAIRS) and Scorese is at the top of his game. You can feel him bringing to bear all the tools heâs had as a filmmaker over the years, and he assembled a truly jaw-dropping cast. From Leonard DiCaprio giving one of his best performances, to Matt Damonâs awesome turn as a villain (what other director could get Damon to do that?), to all the supporting players (Vera Farmiga, Martin Sheen, Alec Baldwin, Mark Wahlberg â and so many more), and to finally Jack Nicholson, giving arguably his final iconic performance (apologies to THE BUCKET LIST, which came out a year later) â this is Scorsese at his best. Source -
Leonardo DiCaprio - (Please Read First Post Prior to Posting)
Jade Bahr replied to moiselles's topic in Male Actors
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by Roger Rich for Zoo magazine 2017
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the hollywood reporter 2016
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the London Evening Standard 2017
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by Sebastian Nevols for Jackal Magazine 2018