just discovered your channel and it’s so refreshing to see a zen aesthetic in a video. wow.
@mattkean1128Ай бұрын
💜 The Vanishing is so good 🙈
@manoeksbooknookАй бұрын
I love Marcel and Paddington so much, true comfort movies 💜
@YTLawnGnomeАй бұрын
I agree with you regaring Coraline. I was not a big fan either.
@JayGTheAwkwardBookwormАй бұрын
Ooo okay need to watch speak now evil 😱
@sdtoxlaj9141Ай бұрын
Love Bill & Pedro too. 🥰 Interesting. It may be writing. His tv shows are extremely good! Movies he’s in have kinda fallen short. 🤔TV in general has started one-upping lots of movies of today.
@StoriesForCoffeeАй бұрын
I agree ! His shows are fantastic
@iriewayz16Ай бұрын
those realistic horrors are so scary girl
@julianalfarochacon3842Ай бұрын
💜
@huey6248Ай бұрын
the coraline rating breaks my heart
@BaileeWalshАй бұрын
Marlene is pronounced like Marlena / mar-lay-nuh. ooof I'm totally the type of person to see someone's star rating of something and react: "why!?" -not that I necessarily comment it to them. It doesn't even have to be a divisive or extreme rating, but if it's for something that I really love or am really into, I'd of course want to know people's further thoughts. I don't conflate liking and goodness, though. I think that's another reason why I wonder about people's meaning of their star ratings; we all have our own system, whether it be simple or more complex. Based on the way you talk about Dead Poets Society, I'd agree with your thinking that you would have liked it more had you seen it when you were younger. I say that because being older now and with that comparison of The Holdovers you maybe went into it with an inclination of being more attached to the older character(s). But of course it's Todd and Neil who are the main characters, it's more so their story. I rewatched Dead Poets Society a handful of years ago and I had a total re-evaluation of it. It was an instant new favorite film of mine even though I had already seen it a few times before. I felt like watching it because we had just gone to the apple orchard and got cider and donuts, so I wanted an autumnal film to watch while eating my donuts and drinking my apple cider. I had completely forgotten Neil's story in the second half of the film, though! I was absolutely crushed! devastated! And because I've always thought of Mr. Keating as a supporting character, I was more focused and invested in Neil and Todd. This is actually one of the reasons I didn't like The Holdovers much- it felt a little too focused on the teacher to me compared to the kid. Through the premises there's the instant comparison and when it came out I kept hearing people reiterate that, but for me DPS had much more of an impact, and relatability. I ended up feeling like The Holdovers was fine, especially in hindsight. In the moment I was like, 'yeah, that was really good,' but the more removed I get from it, plus hearing other people praising it, I'm like, 'no, I didn't get that.' THOUGH, that's also kind of why DPS became a favorite- lol, I'm going back and forth here instead of splitting this into a DPS section and a Holdovers section. But, in the few years prior to that DPS rewatch, I noticed an influx of people around my age and a handful of years younger watch the movie for the first time and loving it. It was very prominent on my social media across the board, particularly KZbin and tumblr, and becoming quite hyped up. And at the time I was like, 'yeah it's good but it's not _that_ good.' So I had it lowered in my mind going into it. I wasn't expecting something so excellent but then that's how my experience watching the film again ended up being. Plus, I noticed a lot more in terms of the filmmaking compared to previous watches.