Entry tags:
Day #20 - of the 30 Day Film Challenge
Day #20 - of the 30 Day Film Challenge.
A Film That Changed Your Life - is the prompt.
Ugh. I don't know. Films don't change my life. I don't give my entertainment that level of importance. I mean I guess you could say "Star Wars" changed my life in some respects, but not really. I'd still be me if it didn't exist.
So, if like me, you are drawing a blank on this one? I'm providing an alternate prompt.
A Non-Animated Live Action film that has an animal as the lead character
I remember seeing this as a little girl in 1974 - I adored it. So much that I also wanted the book. Did it change my life, no. But I did love it back then.
A Film That Changed Your Life - is the prompt.
Ugh. I don't know. Films don't change my life. I don't give my entertainment that level of importance. I mean I guess you could say "Star Wars" changed my life in some respects, but not really. I'd still be me if it didn't exist.
So, if like me, you are drawing a blank on this one? I'm providing an alternate prompt.
A Non-Animated Live Action film that has an animal as the lead character
I remember seeing this as a little girl in 1974 - I adored it. So much that I also wanted the book. Did it change my life, no. But I did love it back then.
no subject
no subject
no subject
Most of these seem to be from decades ago. And in most the animal was a central character, but maybe not *the* lead, which was usually a kid like in this one:
Free Willy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xk0XY83eEuM
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
You're correct though there's a lot in which it's really a kid. Where the Red Fern Grows, and Old Yeller = kids. As did Free Willy and The Yearling.
But I'll count them, considering I let cjlasky use a horror film about killer bunny rabbits.
I rather liked Free Willy.
no subject
But no.
The whole family recently sat down to the 1972 classic horror movie, Night of the Lepus (dir. by William Claxton), in which giant killer bunny rabbits run wild through the American southwest.
(Maybe I use the word "classic" too loosely.)
Stars Stuart Whitman, Janet Leigh, and DeForest Kelley (yes, "Bones" McCoy himself) watch in terror as rabbits stomp through scale model sets and giant rabbit puppets are hurled at helpless citizens, their fangs dripping with ketchup. (The rabbits, not the citizens.)
For bad cinema connoisseurs, this one is a must:
https://youtu.be/AfDDTZhQxso
no subject
Wait...you forgot to mention that it has Rory Calhoun in it. Rory Calhoun - Western Star. (You know old obscure horror films, I know old obscure Western films...mother who adores Westerns.)
You should look up Tremors - that is possibly the best low-budget bad horror movie that I've ever seen.
Certainly better pick than A Dog's Purpose...which...the commercials annoyed me, well that and various co-workers would not stop going on about it as the best thing ever. LOL!
no subject
Yes, Rory Calhoun does co-star in this movie, too. It should be noted that director William Claxton helmed dozens of episodes of Bonanza and High Chaparral, which made him a good choice for the movie's setting (but not for the horror).
Tremors is not a great "bad" movie. It's a good movie, period! (Don't say anything bad about Kevin Bacon with my wife in the room...)
no subject
1. Tremors is a low-budget horror film, that is poorly written, and while it contains excellent actors - actually my favorite actor in the film is Fred Ward, an underrated character actor - it is cult horror flick, which is basically a B movie or possibly a C movie depending on your point of view. In comparison to Night of the Lepus - definitely a B, since Lepus is an F. But in comparison to Jaws - definitely a C.
Again may not be fair to compare at all. I'd say B horror movie. You love C horror flicks...so...LOL!
2. Your wife is not in the room and even if she was - how does this apply? I love Kevin Bacon, but he has done quite a few bad horror flicks and movies in his lifetime, all actors have - it's the nature of the business. Hello.
no subject
Yeah, thought so!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-PPSIwe7sb8
Hmmm... wonder how the Planet of the Apes flicks would fit in here?
Discuss!
:-)
no subject
Yours fits with Cactuswatcher's choice - which does kind of work.
Also, I liked the movie.
You guys honestly can't come up with a movie where the animal is the lead and not supporting to humans? Really?
Am I the only person who has watched a lot of nature programs in my lifetime? Granted I picked Benji - but even that is mainly on the dog, the humans are all supporting.