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Valkyrie

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  • CleanAzzE30z
    replied
    Maluco you need to reduce the size of your sig. Please.... for me....



    Mariano

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  • Kruzen
    replied
    I want to see defiance, I just saw valkyrie the other day. Half decent movie.

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  • Maluco
    replied
    finally watched Defiance last night, amazing story...

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  • CleanAzzE30z
    replied
    Fucking wierdo.


    Mariano

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  • Maluco
    replied

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  • xLibelle
    replied

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  • xLibelle
    replied
    Originally posted by h0lmes View Post
    Huh? I didn't see a mic or unreadable translations.
    Apparently movies contain footage of extreme peripherals. The projector was angled a couple of degrees low and we could see the mic boom and digital file data. Something that is not supposed to be seen except by the theater projector coordinator alone. It took them 20 minutes to get it right. Hugely distracting.


    It must have been editing because the dates for the first part of the movie were all around august, september and october of 08.

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  • chucker
    replied
    Kinda wish those blanks at the end of the flick would have been real live ammo. We be rid of that prick scientologists for good then.

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  • der affe
    replied
    they did a better german accent here then tom did in the movie!



    better acting too

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  • h0lmes
    Guest replied
    Originally posted by xLibelle View Post
    Forgot to mention, for the first quarter of the movie, we were distracted by the mic hanging into all the shots and the file and date stamps across the top of the screen. We could see when the film was either edited or filmed. The other down side was that the english translations were way down on the dark wall, really hard to read... not that it really mattered anyhow.
    Huh? I didn't see a mic or unreadable translations.

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  • der affe
    replied
    it mattered because that is the only time tom had a german accent!!!

    snet you a pm too.

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  • xLibelle
    replied
    Forgot to mention, for the first quarter of the movie, we were distracted by the mic hanging into all the shots and the file and date stamps across the top of the screen. We could see when the film was either edited or filmed. The other down side was that the english translations were way down on the dark wall, really hard to read... not that it really mattered anyhow.

    Leave a comment:


  • Ral
    replied
    I met some people who were actively involved in filming Top Gun (one of the pilots in the movie was my friend's dad) and everything I have heard was that he was short, rude, and really sucked. They put him through the water survival course, which was not a picnic but not terribly hard, and he really struggled with it then got mad at people who jumped in to save his ass.

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  • Maluco
    replied
    German critics maul Cruise as anti-Hitler hero

    German critics savaged Tom Cruise's portrayal of Adolf Hitler's would-be killer in "Valkyrie" ahead of the film's release here this week, but relished a homegrown hero getting the Hollywood treatment.

    "Valkyrie" has been one of the most keenly awaited new releases in Germany this winter, thanks to the legendary status of its subject -- Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg -- and a string of controversies during its production.
    Although expectations were low here for Cruise in the role of the Prussian aristocrat who dared to make an attempt on the Fuehrer's life, several critics said even those modest hopes were disappointed.
    "Cruise forms the flat, expressionless centre of the film around which the input of the remaining cast and crew fades away like a spectre -- and it is not the fault of the eye patch that the wounded Stauffenberg wears," the chief critic of Berlin's daily Tagesspiegel, Jan Schulz-Ojala, wrote.
    "The efforts of the other actors seem well-nigh grotesque next to the stony-faced acting of the film's star."
    Cruise donned a Nazi officer's uniform in the US-German production to play Stauffenberg, who placed a bomb under a table in Hitler's eastern headquarters in East Prussia on July 20, 1944 in a failed bid to end the disastrous war.
    The Nazi leader escaped with slight injuries because the briefcase carrying the explosives was moved behind a sturdy leg of the oak table by an unwitting aide.
    Stauffenberg and other conspirators were rounded up and executed, making them martyrs of the German resistance whose memory has been carefully tended in the postwar years.
    However a descendant of Stauffenberg called Cruise, who will attend the Berlin premiere Tuesday, too stiff, too short and too dull to play the real-life plotter.
    "Tom Cruise seems terribly cautious, almost as if he were afraid of playing the role. He tries to seem elegant but comes across as extremely stiff," Franz von Stauffenberg told the Welt am Sonntag newspaper.
    "He seems not at all decisive in the role and above all not charismatic enough. On the whole he just seems too small."
    The makers of "Valkyrie" ran into resistance when they tried to film in Germany because of Cruise's membership of the Church of Scientology, which is seen here as a dangerous sect.
    Authorities initially denied the cast and crew permission to film at the Bendlerblock, a complex of buildings in Berlin where Operation Valkyrie was planned and where Stauffenberg and other conspirators were executed.
    But they eventually acquiesced after a number of high-profile commentators noted the image-building potential of a global star portraying a dashing German who dared to face down the Nazis.
    "If you read the reviews from America ...you see precisely what a risk a Hollywood star is taking by putting on a Wehrmacht uniform and occasionally, albeit under duress, lifting his arm and saying 'Heil Hitler'," the Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung said in a full-page, largely positive review.
    The respected daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung was also pleasantly surprised by the movie.
    "Based on everything the film was accused of and how much could have gone wrong, you could almost call it a triumph," it said.
    Culture minister Bernd Neumann hailed the film as "successfully helping a chapter of German history that is little-known abroad becoming common knowledge". Berlin even subsidised the film to the tune of 4.8 million euros (6.3 million dollars).
    But a conservative MP refused to let the Scientology issue die quietly, calling for a boycott of the premiere over Cruise's membership in the "sect", in a letter to fellow deputies obtained by the daily Die Welt.
    The politician, Michael Brand, said Stauffenberg was "a globally recognised symbolic figure against the totalitarianism of the Nazis" while Cruise was "a top figure in a totalitarian, anti-democratic organisation."
    "Stauffenberg himself, I am fairly sure, would have resisted" the hype over the film, Brand wrote.
    The film has drawn mixed reviews in the United States but clocked up respectable box office receipts of nearly 72 million dollars since its release last month.

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  • jflip2002
    replied
    Really gets into each role.. yet has no German accent in the move. Right.

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