Such wonderfully awkward scenes that made me laugh and quote later on. With most Rom Com's, the plot was predictable, but it barely took away from the experience.
The film was very hard to watch not because the acting was bad (in fact, it was phenomenal), but because of the gritty story. Not for the light of heart.
It was made in the 70's so horror films were different back then. The amount of screaming the last remaining character (Sally) did drove me crazy. It wasn't scary but there were a few disturbing parts.
Done in a 'Cloverfield' style with a cameraman involved in the story and an unknown disease infecting people, Quarantine gets four stars because it actually makes sense!
Hancock touches some subjects on a deeper level and I was surprised and glad that it didn't focus solely on the recovering alcoholic/deadbeat super hero. And, just because I notice these things, the score by John Powell was amazing.
I've never seen a movie with Audrey Hepburn before and I'm glad I picked this one. Her character is definitely interesting and I sympathized a lot with George Peppard's great character, Paul.
This is a brilliant thriller/horror movie. The atmosphere is so eerie and the house that they used was beautifully old and added that much more. The fact that it was subtitled didn't take away from it at all.
It had its funny moments but I didn't enjoy the movie like I thought I would. Good to see Zac Efron in something other than a musical though he IS still playing basketball.
It had most elements of Bond film but it missed a few crucial ones that anyone who has watched a few Bond movies would know. It's nice that Bond has moved on from Vesper. There was so much action in the beginning I was wondering when someone was going to hold a conversation, but the rest of the film was just fine.