Atria35 (post: 1487119) wrote:You mean Miyazaki? Someone hasn't seen Grave of the Fireflies, then. Some of his movies are overrated, I think, but not all of them.
Miyazaki-san didn't direct Grave of the Fireflies, y'know. Isao Takahata did. It's Studio Ghibli, but not Miyazaki.
Definitely Titanic. I've heard so many people go on and on about how wonderful it is, how much they cried at the end, blah blah blah. You wanna know the only part where I teared up? When that priest is clutching onto the ship as it's tilting upwards, and everyone's crowding around him while he's reading out of Revelations: "And every tear shall be wiped from their eyes...." Do you realize how utterly terrifying it would have been to be one of those people? But psssh, who cares about those two idiot lovebirds? They got their heads in the clouds and weren't living in the real world. I couldn't relate, and I didn't even have the satisfaction of thinking that Leonardo DiCaprio looked cute like every other girl on the planet seemed to think
And I certainly agree with Akira. Maybe I would have enjoyed it more if the Japanese audio track had worked on the DVD I saw, but I kind of doubt it. There's a difference between appreciating what a work has done for its successors, and being willing to watch it ever again.
Donny Darko - WHAT IS THIS I DON'T EVEN
Also, much as I love most Miyazaki movies, Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind. I don't care how many times you tell me it's a classic or that it's not awfully similar to Princess Mononoke. I'll never like it.
And to my own astonishment, I'll disagree with Twilight, because you can laugh at things like Kristen Stewart's acting or Edward's body-glitter. And the movie is actually better than the book, if you ask me