Joined August 2023
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My love letter to 80s cinema—A Sting Original. Thank you for a decade of unforgettable films.
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Jean-Claude Van Damme showing up as an enthusiastic background dancer in cult classic Breakin’ (1984) will never not be funny. 🤣😂
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It’s the 40th anniversary of Back to School, which features one of the best meta jokes ever. Rodney Dangerfield hires Kurt Vonnegut to write a paper about Kurt Vonnegut… and Sally Kellerman gives it an F, saying the writer “doesn’t know the first thing about Kurt Vonnegut.”
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Is this helicopter real or CGI? I was watching Your Friends & Neighbours and Jon Hamm and his mates got in this helicopter, and it did THIS. One of the coolest things I’ve ever seen. I think I’ve just become a mechanophiliac, and I didn't even know that was a thing.
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The Valley of Gwangi (1969) is a “Dinosaur/Western”, a niche genre, to say the least. It was Ray Harryhausen’s final dinosaur film, and with over 300 stop-motion cuts, it set a personal record for the effects legend. The famous lasso scene alone took 2.5 months to complete.
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Raquel Welch pegging a guy, intercut with suggestive old clips, is one of cinema’s most infamous moments. If someone calls one of my posts “Worst film I’ve ever seen,” I only assume they haven’t endured Myra Breckinridge (1970). Brace yourselves!
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I used to LOVE 80s cop show Hunter. Fred Dryer doing his best Clint Eastwood/Dirty Harry riff is even funnier now than it was then. And I definitely had a crush on Stephanie Kramer.
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Tomorrow Never Dies tower jump: storyboard vs final cut. Storyboard sells it as one continuous, rappel down a glass wall. The film chops it into quick cuts, masking the height, body doubles and two locations, then caps it with a joke: “Next time I’ll take the elevator.”
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Raiders of the Lost Ark turns 45 today - The Truck Chase Watching Indy make it up as he goes, is exhilarating. A gold standard for action pacing and editing: Michael Kahn cuts it like a heartbeat, rapid and tight in danger, then a wider breath when Indy gets a second to recover
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I keep seeing “Disclosure Day is shit” and “Spielberg should retire” takes all over X. At this point, it’s hard to tell what’s authentic vs. engagement bait. Some of these accounts post every 12 minutes, 18 hours a day, yet somehow managed to squeeze in a 2h 25m movie.
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"Is it safe?" Laurence Olivier, Dustin Hoffman, and one of cinema’s most unforgettable sequences of psychological dread. The 70s is packed with dark, paranoid, cynical masterpieces, and Marathon Man ranks right alongside the best.
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Haven’t watched Shia LaBeouf (40 today) vine-swinging with monkeys in Indiana Jones and the Crystal Skull in 18 years, and somehow it’s even worse than I remember. It feels like Spielberg had a brain fart, then made us sit through it.
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Escape to Victory (1981) is a gloriously weird, star-studded blend of Hollywood and football royalty. Sir Michael Caine said he took the part mainly to work with Pelé, whom he saw as a legend. Pelé agreed to do the famous bicycle kick just once, and once was enough.
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"My dear boy, why don't you try acting?"
To play a ping pong hustler, Timothée Chalamet wore contact lenses that blurred his eyesight on purpose. Then he put glasses over them to cancel the blur out. When the glasses slipped, he could barely see. He told Theo Von on his podcast that his vision stayed messed up until a day before they talked. The director, Josh Safdie, wanted the character's eyes to look small. So an eye doctor gave Chalamet strong contacts and matching glasses that worked against each other. The real player he based the role on, a 1950s American champion named Marty Reisman, actually needed thick glasses. Chalamet does not. He just wanted the glasses to feel real. The eyesight part came last. The ping pong came first, and it took years. He started in 2018, when he was 22 and the film was only a rumor that nobody had approved yet. He brought a table into the desert while filming Dune. He practiced on the set of Wonka. He kept playing between guitar lessons for the Bob Dylan movie. By the time filming started in New York in 2024, that was six years of training for a role that mostly did not exist yet. Two coaches got him ready at the end. Diego Schaaf, a Swiss coach who once worked on Forrest Gump, and his wife Wei Wang, who used to play for the US Olympic team. They watched him hit for a couple of minutes in June 2024 and decided he was athletic enough to pass as a pro. The crew filled the set with real table tennis champions and about 140 people who were not actors, including the tightrope walker Philippe Petit and the magician Penn Jillette. He played every ping pong shot himself, with no stunt double. Some of the longer rallies were planned out and touched up with computer effects later, but the swing and the footwork and the stance were all him. He won the Golden Globe for it. The Oscar went to Michael B. Jordan for Sinners. The people calling it a snub mostly saw the two hours on screen, not the six years it took to make them look easy.
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E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial turns 44 today. Spielberg’s not-so-secret weapon is John Williams. He loves building sequences that allows the score to do the heavy lifting, like this three-minute bike chase. Four decades later, it still gives me chills.
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Took me 6 hours to make this 2 minute montage. Just thought you should know 😉
100 Guest Stars in Tales From the Crypt! Tales From the Crypt premiered on this day in 1989. Hollywood legends, rock icons, a Terminator or two, Oscar winners, past and future James Bonds, and even a couple of adult stars all signed up for a twisted date with the Crypt Keeper.
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Some of the greatest films ever made are in these recommendations. The 70s really was a golden age for cinema, and it’s so inspiring to see how much love there still is for it. Thank you to everyone who took part, you really are the best.
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32 years ago today, Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock launched a bus over a 50‑foot gap in Speed. SFX supervisor, John Frazier, said it was the one stunt director Jan de Bont wasn’t happy with: “He didn’t want it to land like a 747.”
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