...and yet another recently released movie we didn't like (that got good reviews) - Quartet
We are on a movie cold streak!
We've just not at all enjoyed the following recent DVD rentals - Quartet (predictable, silly, boring), Anna Karenina (WTF?), Silver Linings Playbook (WTF again?), A Late Quartet (words fail me), Life of Pi (so inferior to the book), We Bought a Zoo (our daughter warned us about this one), The Master (Yuck yet again), The Perks of Being a Wallflower (zzzzzzzzzzzzzz - and predictable, and annoying), War Horse (so so boring).
There are a few recent releases we did like - Moonrise Kingdom, Samsara, Searching for Sugarman, Another Year, Incendies, Chicken with Plums, The Sessions, In a Better World, Hitchcock, Zero Dark Thirty, Argo....
I think our tastes are a bit "too out there" for mass production or blockbuster types and we best stick to the minefield (but often rewarding) independent releases!
Lydia Leftcoast
(48,217 posts)as well as another Francophone Canadian film, "Monsieur Lazhare."
I enjoy foreign movies more than most Hollywood products these days. Even the indies can be boring and self-indulged. (I'm looking at YOU, "Killing Them Softly."
Merlot
(9,696 posts)I used to LOVE movies, almost all types, and went to a few indie film festivals. That was in the mid to late 90's through the early 2000's - maybe about 10 years. All the great indie flix, and Miramax movies. Maybe it was Miramax getting swallowed up by disney, who knows? Then I started watching HBO series like Sopranos, The Wire, Madmen, etc and really haven't enjoyed movies as much since.
There are a lot of British series on Netflix that I would never have seen which have been really good. At this point I'm out of series, and may have to start watching movies...it's so much work to find a good movie!
NRaleighLiberal
(60,016 posts)we are just finishing up Six Feet Under (for the second time), been through The Sopranos twice - eagerly awaiting Boardwalk Empire and Mad Men's latest on Netflix.
It is indeed such work to find a great movie!
Lydia Leftcoast
(48,217 posts)1. Acorn TV: It costs about $30 a year, and while many of the series have been on PBS, others are completely new to American audiences. They also show some fine Canadian, Irish, and Australian series.
2. Hulu Plus: They've been getting foreign series of all kinds.
3. MHz Worldview shows mostly continental European series, but some of them are quite good.
I also recommend getting a region-free DVD player (available online for only $20 more than a regular one) so that you can order DVDs from Amazon UK. Many fine series were shown only briefly on U.S. cable (e.g. Dalziel and Pascoe, Silent Witness, Life on Mars/Ashes to Ashes) and others have never been here. If you want complete sets of older series like Morse or Prime Suspect, this is the bargain place to buy them.