Grave of the Fireflies by Studio Ghibli. I love Ghibli movies, and this one was very moving, but if you’ve seen it you know why I won’t watch it again. Very powerful.
That was the single most impactful movie that I’ve ever seen in my life. It changed how I view the world, war, poverty, etc. But it is so heartbreakingly painful to watch, I’m not sure if I ever want to watch it again. Especially because my, at the time, 4 year old son was asleep in the room with me while I watched. After a certain point, I just paused the film, held him in my arms, and wept.
It’s the best movie you’ll watch once and never again.
Nope. No thanks.
Saw it twenty five years ago. Never again.
The Fountain, it’s one of those movies that just absolutely blew me away and I had to have it but I’m just never quite in the emotional state to revisit yet I still recommend. It’s breathtakingly beautiful and devastating. What Dreams May Come is a very close second, but I feel like after Robin Williams’ death it’s even more so, but the movie itself is just so beautifully done and heart wrenching.
I loved the fountain, too. It is so incredibly beautiful, and I’m glad to own it for the same reasons. I also can’t imagine when I’ll want to watch it again…
The Fountain is one of my all time favorite movies.
The most intense movie I’ve ever seen
The Whale.
Very happy to own it, watched it in 4k. Will keep it forever. It will be a very long time until I watch it again. It was amazing, but if you’ve watched it you know why.
Do you have a teenage daughter? I think that was one of many reasons that movie fucking killed me. I was sobbing on the plane watching it
“They Shall Never Grow Old” is one I can’t watch because I’ll just cry the entire time, but I still bought it.
Metalocalypse:The army of the doomstar.
I watched a ton of metalocalypse when I was younger, and was really annoyed when it got canceled on a cliff hanger. Cut to just a while ago, they finally made an end movie, which I watched as soon as it was available, yohohoho. I went ahead and bought the Blu-ray, just because I am so glad that they could get it financed and wanted to make sure that stuff like that would continue to be encouraged. I’m not gonna say it is the most intellectually stimulating plot, but it has played a part in shaping my darker humor.The thing I cans’t nots the least is hate Dethklok but always love it.
I’ve got a solid one. Source code (2011), with Jake Gyllenhaal. And there’s a really specific reason for it. Because I really do love that movie and definitely crack a smile when I see it in my libary. It’s that I just end up watching Inception instead.
I’ve got The Room on DVD that sits proudly on my shelf
The animated LotR
How often do you need to watch the same movies for ‘dont really watch’ to be a category?
I never watch a movie more than once unless it’s just happens to be already playing, and even then it depends if it’s actually worth watching a second time.
If it’s easier. You can think of the scenario being when browsing you have this reaction. “Yup! That’s a good ass movie” Skips to the next one everytime you see it.
This Tamil movie called Chittha that I watched recently. It’s a heavy subject (child abduction, implied child SA, and more), and most of the people I know skipped the movie including my wife and my parents (The movie actually kind of bombed at the box office because of how many people skipped it), but it was a damn good movie. As a father of an 8yo myself, it was a sobering must watch for me that I probably would never watch again.
in therms of a physical shelf, i have the back to the future trilogy i picked up for like 5€ in a yard sale. also the only movies i own on disk.
on my NAS, there are a lot of funky movies. i’m proud of all the shitty movies i watched just for fun, many of them will continue gathering dust on my hard drive.
maybe i’ll watch mortal engines again.
I watched mortal engines. I remember absolutely nothing. maybe I’ll watch too
Dogma (1999). It’s a silly movie with a rubber poop monster.
But I’m a fucking demon. Love Jason Lee in that…and Alan Rickman RIP
Empire of The Sun and Fiddler on The Roof. Two classics, one with young Christian Bale, stupidity of war when people stop being humans, and second about dark Europe history but also love, family, getting older.
Two absolute essentials.
Schindler’s List - incredible movie, beautiful case, no way I want to rewatch it any time soon.
Black Dynamite.
It’s one of the funniest movies of all time, but I don’t have a DVD player.
“I’m declaring war on anyone who sells drugs to the community.”
“But Black Dynamite, I sell drugs to the community!”
This is one of the greatest lines in cinematic history, hands down.
HA! I THREW THAT BEFORE I LEFT THE MOON!
Have you ever seen the Dolomite movies? They’re CLASSIC blaxsploitation and are definitely a big inspiration for Black Dynamite. I’m deeply in love with all of them.
I never saw them but I’ll look them up. Which is the best one?
There’s 4 generally that are the big ones. The Human Tornado is a sequel to Dolomite but otherwise they can be watched in any order that you feel like.
Dolemite - An absolute classic but can be hard to watch given how extremely cheap it is. Some of the funniest moments of the whole series though they’re mostly unintentional.
The Human Tornado - Basically Dolemite if it had a good budget. The jokes hit so good on purpose this time. Notably, both Dolemite movies are also a critique on how racist cops are, including commentary on planting drugs and assuming every black guy with money got it illegally.
Petey Wheetstraw: The Devil’s Son in Law - A straight up comedy through and through. Absolutely nothing deeper on this one. Petey Wheetstraw makes a deal with the devil and spends the 2nd half of the movie trying to get out of it. Purely stupid fun.
Disco Godfather - A weirdly intense yet still funny breakdown on inner city drug problems and how rich people will poison local cities with drugs for their own benefit.
One really funny thing about all of these movies is that the main actor Rudy Ray Moore owns a night club in every single one and half of them include multiple minutes of his actual stand up routines.