Heyo
Veteran Member
You're giving away your age.
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You're giving away your age.
In her defense, she was quite young when that movie premiered.You're giving away your age.
And it seems that The Walking Dead really sparkedNight of the Living Dead
While the zombie craze has died down a little over the last few years, Romero's take on the undead sparked off an entire genre.
There's a new series in the HP universe which you overlooked.Two movies started a revolution limited to the series they spawned.
Harry Potter & The Philosopher's Stone (1997)
Lord Of The Rings, The Fellowship Of The Ring (2001)
Yes, that too was ground breaking in that it was the first humorous sci-fi series, again on radio. We subsequently had Red Dwarf on UK TV, which was also very funny indeed.I remember sometime around 1980, working for a small aerospace
company near Columbia MD, I was able to listen to the radio while working.
I heard a new show called The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy.
To this day, I still celebrate Towel Day every May 25th.
Anyway, this was different from any western I'd ever seen.
I knew immediately that this was how they should be.
Damn you I was going to post this!
Forget Scarlett Johannsens Ghost in the Shell garbage. This was one of the most influential animations in Western film because people realised how deep narratives could be portrayed in animation. Apparently people never saw something like this before. Masemune Shirow, the creator, was influenced by Blade Runner which was based off Isaac Asimov's "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep". In turn, Ghost in the Shell, was the main influence of The Matrix.
You're giving away your age.
Damn you I was going to post this!
First movie I remember seeing at the theatre was
(I had seen some fairy tales before as a child, but I don't remember those.)
Enter the Dragon was officially rated "adult" (18+) but it was a flop at the time and the theatre was happy to take our money even though we weren't even 14.
Bruce Lee is now considered the trailblazer of martial arts in films.
Of course that really is this movie:
Oh. shoot!...you jiggled the handle on one of memories. "Deliverance" was the first movie I saw with the woman who would still be my wife almost fifty years later.
Congrats to you both, D and K.
You may recall sharing some personal info with me when we discovered that we are both enthusiastic amateur musicians who perform publicly in coffeehouses (such as the 3rd Street one, from whence you shared a photo of your band) with our wives.
I hope you're no creeped out that I remembered that. And as always, your confidence is respected.
To the OP: The movies I liked best were when I was a teen in the late sixties: Cool Hand Luke and Bonnie and Clyde. But they didn't change my life.