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2 hours ago, AnatasiaSteele82 said:@Jade Bahr @Lilja KIt is time to watch his films. What are your recommendations?
Gattaca 1997
Existenz 1999
The Talented Mr Ripley 1999
Cold Mountain 2004
Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow 2004
Alfie 2004
Closer 2004
My Blueberry Nights 2007
Sleuth 2007
Sherlock Holmes 2009
Repo Man 2010
The Young Pope 2016 and The New Pope 2020
King Arthur 2017

my faves of him:
o1. Cold Mountain (this movie and his performance made me a sobbing mess INMAN MY POOR BABY he deserved so much better 💔😭)
o2. The talented Mr. Ripley (iconic lord he's gorgeous
)
o3. Anna Karenina (2012) - it also has Aaron Taylor Johnson @Lilja K how is it NOT in your list????????????
o4. Alfie (2004)
o5. Breaking & Entering (THIS MOVIE IS SO UNDERRATED PLS WATCH IT!!! he's surrounded by great women here like Vera Farmiga, Robin Wright & Juliette Binoche. he's also VERY gorgous in this movie
even though his character is a bit... complicated to put it nicely)
o6. My Blueberry Nights (so lovely; also him and Natalie Portman in their 3rd movie 💞)
o7. King Arthur (he's one of the best underrated villains EVER still crying over the missed potential of this franchise 😭 also him vs Charlie again what's not to love??? hotness overload 🔥)
o8. The Holidays (watched this movie countless times)
o9. Captain Marvel (love the 90s vibes in this movie)
1o. Closer (incredible cast Jude Law snuggeling 2 of the most beautiful women ever)
11. The Wisdom of Crocodiles (very strange and very underrated guess what he's playing? a vampire @Lilja K 😊)
12. Contagion (him and Kate Winslet again
even though I don't think they have a scene together lol)
13. The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus (love that he stepped in for Heath 😭 I won't ever recover from this movies history 💔)
14. Side Effects (good thriller even better cast)
15. Genius (one of his more recent movies I liked it's him and Nicole again
)
16. Enemy at the Gates
17. Gattaca
Have watched those movies but don't really remember: A.I. Artificial Intelligence, eXistenZ
(how did I forgot this???)
disappointing: Peter Pan & Wendy
on my watchlist: I love you I love you not, Oscar Wilde, Repo Men, Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald, Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore, Firebrand
I swear he's one of the the hottest kisser on this planet![]()
Bonus:

28 minutes ago, Jade Bahr said:o3. Anna Karenina (2012) - it also has Aaron Taylor Johnson @Lilja K how is it NOT in your list????????????
I didn't really like the book either🤷🏼♀️

12 minutes ago, Lilja K said:I didn't really like the book either🤷🏼♀️
Believe me when I say it's worth the watch!!!

13 minutes ago, AnatasiaSteele82 said:
I did not watch it
Every movie you don't watch is your loss.

New project.


30 minutes ago, Jade Bahr said:
So damn fine

Crazy we love right?
@Lilja K
Critics seem to be split on Ron Howard’s “Eden,” which, I’m not kidding, is the filmmaker’s bleakest and darkest film to date. In his positive review for Vulture, Bilge Ebiri says, “Howard has finally lost his mind.” Howard has finally turned to the dark side.
At least some people get it. The Wrap, IndieWire, and New York Post are pro-“Eden”, acknowledging the camp and how thoroughly entertaining the whole thing turns out to be.
Howard and screenwriter Noah Pink set their film in 1930’s Floreana, a then-uninhabited island in the Galapagos. During the start of Hitler’s rise to power, a German couple, Dr. Friedrich Ritter (Jude Law) and his wife Dora (Vanessa Kirby), escape from the chaos, abandon civilization and permanently settle down on the island.
Word soon spreads of the mysterious Ritter in European newspapers, and that leads to Heinz Wittmer (Daniel Brühl), young bride Margaret (Sydney Sweeney) and their son Harry (Jonathan Tittel) arriving on the island; They too want to escape the fascism building up in their country.
“Eden” is driven by great talent; De Armas, a total scene stealer, might be best in show as the repulsive, manipulating and spoiled baroness who, with the help of her two male servants, attempts to take over the island by trying to turn it into a vacation hotspot. This rubs Wittmer and Ritter the wrong way, and together they plot to get rid of her.
Alliances get forged, sex partners get swapped, and severe threats get dished out. Everybody hates everybody. Howard depicts the worst of humanity in “Eden,” which, at times, reminded me of an episode of “Survivor,” only set in the ‘30s. It’s even more surprising to learn that the film is actually based on a true story.
Regardless, it’s great to see Howard embracing pitch black drama with a violent, pulpy film that defies anything he’s done before. “Eden” currently has no U.S. distributor, and it’s a film that would play like gangbusters for a streaming audience. Don’t be surprised if Netflix or Amazon picks this one up.





