The Fellowship of the Ring. Probably the other two movies as well but this one stands out in my mind.
The first Pirates of the Caribbean as well. Back before they turned it into a franchise. Such a fun adventure movie.
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The Fellowship of the Ring. Probably the other two movies as well but this one stands out in my mind.
The first Pirates of the Caribbean as well. Back before they turned it into a franchise. Such a fun adventure movie.
I have a huge soft spot for the second and third pirates films. I think looking at the first and thinking it could make a great trilogy is totally valid and although they're definitely much more long winded than the first with less lovable characters, they're good films and if I ever revisit the first, I generally revisit the second and third too.
I watched the Dungeons and Dragons movie when it came out and really enjoyed it, but it definitely felt like I was watching a marvel movie, albeit a well written one, Pirates may be the last YA action adventure franchise that isn't just the re-skinned marvel formula, which makes it far more watchable than 80% of the genre since.
Also Pirates 3 is basically the creator of the horrible pressure CGI artists have suffered under for the past 15 years, so take that as you may.
While I enjoy the Pirates trilogy, I feel like they could just as easily have kept it a single movie. It was fine, the story was conclusive enough to satisfy and open ended enough to tickle the imagination.
Not everything has to be turned into a franchise or a βverse.
Avengers: Endgame
The buildup to this movie was basically the perfect storm. And boy did it deliver. I doubt Marvel will ever be this good again. And actually, the fact that their trying to make every movie now an "Avengers" movie is exactly the reason it's going downhill, in my opinion. Feels like almost every recent Marvel movie (Black Panther 2, Ant-Man Quantumania, Black Widow), they all have to be huge wars with multiple superheroes coming in to save the day. They cant just make a smaller scale superhero movie anymore. There have been a few exceptions, like Shang-Chi, and that one was way better. Avengers Endgame was so amazing in theaters because it was made on a decade of buildup.
matrix I, skipped classes and watch it more than ten times in cinema.
Follow the white rabbit.
Man I remember the marketing campaign for that movie was incredible too.
The marketing was incredible because it leaned heavily into "What is the Matrix?" and didn't spoil the plot. It made the movie itself amazing, because you had no idea what to expect.
I cringe just thinking about how that movie would be marketed today. The trailer would probably start off with all the action scenes voiced over by Morpheus explaining exactly what the Matrix was, followed by Agent Smith monologuing about how humans are a virus that needs to be wiped out.
Yes yes 1000 times yes. It was so incredible and there were so many great lines in the film talking about what the Matrix was without actually revealing the mystery. "The matrix is all around you" etc.
Absolute master class in building hype for a movie and as you say, puts modern marketing campaigns absolutely to shame. Although to be fair they did have solid gold to work with.
Bladerunner 2049. I saw it five or so times in IMAX.
At the time the release flew under my radar so I completely missed it in cinemas, if I could I would go at least twice.
Inception. I saw it 4 times in theaters. Every time, I noticed new details. It was such a unique and original story, and it was executed incredibly well. I had never seen a movie where the score was so essential to the storytelling. It's such a dense movie that despite being 2.5 hours, I don't think I could cut 2 minutes out of it without really hurting the pacing or missing necessary moments. Inception is the reason I can understand and appreciate both filmmaking and the composition and arrangement of instrumental music.
Same here. But even after rewatching it so many times, I never realized that the iconic Inception BWAAAH is actually a super-slowed down version of the dream world cue song (Edith Piaf's Non, je ne regrette rien). Thereβs a really neat analysis done by Rutgersβ Christopher Doll, which explains how Zimmer uses the slowed down motif to signal which dreamscape we are in as the viewer while watching the movie. Link here.
Inglorious Basterds. Christopher Waltz is just so good in that role.
I dunno why someone downvoted you for this one - Christoph Waltz is amazing in everything.
The glass of milk scene is one of my top two most tense scenes in all of cinema that I've seen. The other being the coin toss in No Country For Old Men.
Dune is the only movie I willingly rewatched at the cinema. Looking forward to the second part.
Star Wars.
Watched the matinee every day for a week when it first came to our local cinema.
The Matrix. I saw it at least four times in the theater.
Barbie. The details in the background of the movie (side comments, set, clothes etc.) capture the female experience better than anything else I've seen.
I actually walked out of Schindlers List and bough a ticket for the very next screening.
Bleak as hell but Iβd never seen a film that locked me in the way that film did.
The first Spiderverse. Saw it with the girlfriend then again with a buddy. I maintain that these are the best movies ever made.
Original Star Wars as a kid. The whole summer. 13 times. Have probably watched it more times since on streaming.
Nostalgia is a drug.
I skipped school (and got away with it) to watch lotr:2towers 3 times in one day at the theater
I went to Pulp Fiction 3 times on opening weekend.
That was a good weekend.
I went to see the original Avatar movie 3 times. First time I unknowingly watched it in 2D. Then I thought βthis would be amazing in 3Dβ. Then I saw it in 3D and it was so fantastic that, a few weeks later, I watched in 3D again. No regerts.
Hey, came here to say the same thing. Watched it once in 2D and two times more in 3D. Awesome experience!
When I was a kid, Nightmare Before Christmas. Must've convinced my parents to take me to see it at least eight times. I've watched it at least once every year since then, and it stayed my favorite movie for most of my life, until Everything Everywhere All at Once finally usurped it almost 30 years later. Saw that in theaters four times.
Oh, and Lord of the Rings. Saw all three in theaters at least three times each. And, for some reason, Superbad. Went to five showings of that.
Odd, Superbad is the only movie I've ever seen twice (or more) in the theaters.
I saw it and thought it was the funniest movie I'd ever seen, then a couple weeks later my buddy wanted to see a movie so I saw it a second time with him. No regrets.
RHPS doesn't really count imo as it's more of a musical or social event than a movie... it's honestly on a completely different level.
Multiple cinema tickets for the same film? What am I, made of money?
The Lord of the Rings / The Hobbit movies. If I could manage it usually would head up to the theater to re-watch every 1-2 weeks.
They were all movies released in December. I still distinctly remember heading up to the IMAX in Manhattan late night after work so the movie would finish up around midnight(?). After watching these movies I'd walk out of the theater into a cold and snowy NYC. Felt a bit surreal, especially after the last 2 Hobbit movies where most of the movies were centered around cold climates.
I saw 300 twice. It was such a fun movie at the time.
Spirited Away. Before it won the Oscar it was in limited release in the US. A friend drove me nearly three hours to the closest showing. After the Oscar it came to most theatres. I took other friends to see it on two separate occasions.
I watched "Lord of the Rings: Return of the King" a total of 6 times in cinema (and the extended edition countless times on DVD since then) and still think very fondly of the experience. Just experiencing the awe when the beacons were lit and the camera flew through the mountains and the mind blowing moment when the Riders of Rohan appear on the horizon.
When the extended edition came out on dvd, i watched the whole trilogy at least once a year
Flash Gordon is the one I've seen most in the cinema. I was absolutely captivated by it as a kid. It must have had a decent run in the cinema as I was very young when it was released.
Related story - My folks were picking someone up at the airport around that time. After they met they went for a drink in the airport bar right next to arrivals and I absolutely traumatised every single patron by playing the theme tune by Queen on repeat with my pocket money until it ran out.
edit: To be clear, the damage was done before my folks realised what was going on. Money. Select. Money. Select. They were quite embarrassed.
Dark Knight, Fury Road, and... Hellboy 2019.
I feel like Hellboy is a hot take. It bombed and even other Hellboy fans seem to hate it.
The Big Lebowski, Oh Brother Where Art Thou and Pulp Fiction, among a few others but I was a huge film nerd in the late 90s/early 2000s
The big lebowski is worth a few rewatchs
Dang. Upon thinking about it, I donβt think Iβve ever actually done this. Recently, I did rent Beau Is Afraid for 48 hours and watched it 2 nights in a row because it was such a mindf*ck
The Mummy (Brandon Fraser)
Shawn of the Dead
Heat. That shootout scene in particular is so much better on the big screen.
(The original) Fantasia in a cinema with a decent sound system.
Lawrence of Arabia. Saw the restored version three times in the theater
Fight club