Spekulatius Posted December 17, 2024 Posted December 17, 2024 Watched King of New York for the first time. Not the best script, but has outstanding cast (Christopher Walken, Buscemi, Fishburne etc) and some great performances. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0099939/
rkbabang Posted December 17, 2024 Posted December 17, 2024 Finished “The Kings of Tupelo: A Southern Crime Saga” on Netflix. It’s a crazy story with crazy people. Of course it is a documentary, because fiction needs to be credible. Recommended.
Xerxes Posted December 18, 2024 Posted December 18, 2024 On 12/17/2024 at 7:08 AM, Spekulatius said: Watched King of New York for the first time. Not the best script, but has outstanding cast (Christopher Walken, Buscemi, Fishburne etc) and some great performances. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0099939/ that is one hell of boring 1980-90s movie with an overacting Christopher Walken of which I no longer have any recollection
Liberty Posted December 20, 2024 Author Posted December 20, 2024 Counterpart is worth a watch. 2017 show with J.K. Simmons. It was canceled after just two seasons, unfortunately. Season 1 is very strong. S2 is weaker, but still good.
weighingmachine Posted December 20, 2024 Posted December 20, 2024 Bad Sisters season 2 is about as good as the excellent first season. Acting, writing, scenery top notch. Sharon Horgan is a real talent.
Parsad Posted January 3 Posted January 3 Eddie Redmayne in "The Day of the Jackal", a series created based on the book has been fantastic...hints of Bond, Jason Bourne, 24, etc. Beautiful and lots of fun! Terrific soundtrack as well! Cheers!
benchmark Posted January 3 Posted January 3 2 hours ago, Parsad said: Eddie Redmayne in "The Day of the Jackal", a series created based on the book has been fantastic...hints of Bond, Jason Bourne, 24, etc. Beautiful and lots of fun! Terrific soundtrack as well! Cheers! +1, the sound tracks are just awesome.
formthirteen Posted January 3 Posted January 3 5 hours ago, Parsad said: Eddie Redmayne in "The Day of the Jackal", a series created based on the book has been fantastic...hints of Bond, Jason Bourne, 24, etc. Beautiful and lots of fun! Terrific soundtrack as well! Cheers! Yes, The Jackal was a very good show and beautifully done on a budget of £100 million.
buylowersellhigh Posted January 3 Posted January 3 7 hours ago, formthirteen said: Yes, The Jackal was a very good show and beautifully done on a budget of £100 million. Was enjoyable to watch!
Pelagic Posted January 3 Posted January 3 Really enjoyed this, a glimpse at one of the second world war's forgotten theaters.
formthirteen Posted January 3 Posted January 3 12 minutes ago, Pelagic said: Really enjoyed this, a glimpse at one of the second world war's forgotten theaters. War Sailor was also excellent: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt17633184/
nsx5200 Posted January 5 Posted January 5 I really enjoy That Built Series from the history channel. It provides a lot of the origin stories for many brands and things we commonly see and use every day.
buylowersellhigh Posted 17 hours ago Posted 17 hours ago Watching Shogun right now. I find it to be excellent.
ACooke Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago On 10/9/2024 at 3:15 PM, UK said: I am not sure about War and Peace or other aurhors, but almost certain you can read Dostoevsky in your own language and it will still beat like 80 percent or more of original language alternatives. I also read same book by Bulgakov in both languages and translated version was not bad either. Yeah, I've read a few by both Tolstoy and Dostoevsky and found they were great in English. I'm sure they're much better in Russian but as someone above stated; there's simply too much time involved in learning a new language for a few specific authors - particularly when there's so many very worthy authors outside of the Russian language, as well. I've listened pretty extensively to people who've read 'the greats' in both English and their native language; most say they are indeed, by far the best in their native language (of course) but are still extremely good (depending on the specific translation) in English. I would guess it comes down to how 'poetic' they are and aim to be, as words with specific meanings and feelings, often simply don't exist in alternate languages. Anyway - that's not a judgement I can, or will ever be able to personally make.
nafregnum Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago 4 minutes ago, ACooke said: Yeah, I've read a few by both Tolstoy and Dostoevsky and found they were great in English. I'm sure they're much better in Russian but as someone above stated; there's simply too much time involved in learning a new language for a few specific authors - particularly when there's so many very worthy authors outside of the Russian language, as well. I've listened pretty extensively to people who've read 'the greats' in both English and their native language; most say they are indeed, by far the best in their native language (of course) but are still extremely good (depending on the specific translation) in English. I would guess it comes down to how 'poetic' they are and aim to be, as words with specific meanings and feelings, often simply don't exist in alternate languages. Anyway - that's not a judgement I can, or will ever be able to personally make. Dostoevky's best English translators are a married couple, Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky. They're fantastic, very much worth seeking out their versions over earlier translators: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Pevear_and_Larissa_Volokhonsky#Translations_credited_to_Pevear_and_Volokhonsky
formthirteen Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago (edited) Primeval America on Netflix has everything (). Edited 6 hours ago by formthirteen
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