JontheLobsterLover
Joined May 2012
Welcome to the new profile
Our updates are still in development. While the previous version of the profile is no longer accessible, we're actively working on improvements, and some of the missing features will be returning soon! Stay tuned for their return. In the meantime, the Ratings Analysis is still available on our iOS and Android apps, found on the profile page. To view your Rating Distribution(s) by Year and Genre, please refer to our new Help guide.
Badges2
To learn how to earn badges, go to the badges help page.
Ratings523
JontheLobsterLover's rating
Reviews53
JontheLobsterLover's rating
Saint Maud is a movie that requires you to really pay attention, and not only because some of the dialogue can be very quiet. It is a movie with a message, albeit a messed up one, and it is also the kind of movie that is fun to dissect and talk about for hours after viewing. The subject matter is something that can be easily based in reality, and that makes it all the more horrific. The visuals are beautiful. The acting is good. Morfydd Clark (Maud) was amazing at playing the creepy quiet type. The volume drove me a little bit crazy. During moments of dialogue it would be very quiet, than the next scene would have a BOOMING score. Overall the movie was good, not great, and is definitely one for those people who love to really analyze the meanings behind movies.
The title is not an exaggeration. I think most will agree that, even though not all the DC movies are bad, most of them are. Birds of Prey is over the top, fun, funny, and just such a fun watch.
The movie is very similar to the Deadpool movie. They are both told through a nonlinear narrative; both movies are over the top violent; both movies break the fourth wall in spots; and both movies will have you laughing at the crazy things you're seeing on screen.
Margot Robbie was born to play this character. The way she portrays Harley is exactly how you would expect a live action version of the character to be.
All the actors and actresses do phenomenal jobs portraying their respective characters, except for Victor Zsazz. This interpretation was just weird.
Don't be thrown off by all the bad reviews. This movie is a genuine good time.
The movie is very similar to the Deadpool movie. They are both told through a nonlinear narrative; both movies are over the top violent; both movies break the fourth wall in spots; and both movies will have you laughing at the crazy things you're seeing on screen.
Margot Robbie was born to play this character. The way she portrays Harley is exactly how you would expect a live action version of the character to be.
All the actors and actresses do phenomenal jobs portraying their respective characters, except for Victor Zsazz. This interpretation was just weird.
Don't be thrown off by all the bad reviews. This movie is a genuine good time.
Advertised as the "darkest chapter in the Conjuring series", the movie didn't deliver on that promise.
The story was good, but the execution was poor. This movie failed to find a balance between having subtle scares and jump scares. The subtle scares, the ones that really build tension, were few and in between. They were scary, but the scenes didn't last long enough to leave any lasting tension. The jump scares happened way to often, and it's one of the bullets in the gun that killed this movie. A character like The Nun needs to stay in the shadows, creep behind your back, and be the presence that you feel less than you see.
Movies like this also need some sort of comic relief, but the comedy was just a tad too much. It released too much tension. If you want to make a true scary movie, don't give people time to recover from one scene to another. Or, give people false hope and then lay it on them again. This movie felt like it was made for people who want to see a scary movie, but don't love being scared.
The acting was good, and so was the story. In the end though it failed to deliver the one major thing it was supposed to: Scares.
The story was good, but the execution was poor. This movie failed to find a balance between having subtle scares and jump scares. The subtle scares, the ones that really build tension, were few and in between. They were scary, but the scenes didn't last long enough to leave any lasting tension. The jump scares happened way to often, and it's one of the bullets in the gun that killed this movie. A character like The Nun needs to stay in the shadows, creep behind your back, and be the presence that you feel less than you see.
Movies like this also need some sort of comic relief, but the comedy was just a tad too much. It released too much tension. If you want to make a true scary movie, don't give people time to recover from one scene to another. Or, give people false hope and then lay it on them again. This movie felt like it was made for people who want to see a scary movie, but don't love being scared.
The acting was good, and so was the story. In the end though it failed to deliver the one major thing it was supposed to: Scares.