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Author Topic: WAR HORSE
Colin Auty
Film Handler

Posts: 70
From: Morecambe Lancashire England
Registered: Jun 2004


 - posted February 08, 2012 12:09 PM      Profile for Colin Auty     Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Finally got to see "War Horse " at our local Apollo Cinema yesterday -the movie is set against a sweeping landscape of rural England and Europe during the First World War- the Sony digital cinema 4k presentation complimented the gorgeously shot Cinematography of this drama, action and adventure epic( 2hrs 26 mins!)
Synopsis - the remarkable friendship between a horse named Joey and a young lad Albert,the extrodinary journey of the horse through the War , changing and inspiring the lives of all those he meets.
Spielberg directs this in an episodic style (6 stories)which in my opinion lags in the middle, it tugs at our heart strings and is a true family film from the Disney stable - (but just a tag too long ...)

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Thomas Dafnides
Expert Film Handler

Posts: 247
From: St. Louis, Missouri USA
Registered: Dec 2009


 - posted February 08, 2012 07:49 PM      Profile for Thomas Dafnides     Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
"just a tag to long" ... I find that true about most films today.
Somehow filmmakers assume quantity translates into quality.

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Colin Robert Hunt
Expert Film Handler

Posts: 226
From: Milton Keynes Buckinghamshire
Registered: Aug 2005


 - posted February 09, 2012 02:54 PM      Profile for Colin Robert Hunt   Author's Homepage   Email Colin Robert Hunt   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
What hapened to the intermissions. Most films had a break on this length of film. I for one find this too long to watch in one long go. Producers shoulld schedule a break scene and then it would be much more workable. They have lost the art of showmanship, and think of the sales at the kiosk rhis would bring.

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Tommy Woods
Expert Film Handler

Posts: 146
From: Scouser
Registered: Feb 2011


 - posted February 09, 2012 04:17 PM      Profile for Tommy Woods   Email Tommy Woods   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Sat all the way thru this,cinematically stunning,however, what started out as very promising became tiresome and predictable,not for me I'm afraid.

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Let there be light,so god created the projector

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Douglas Meltzer
Moderator

Posts: 4554
From: New York, NY, USA
Registered: Jun 2003


 - posted February 09, 2012 04:34 PM      Profile for Douglas Meltzer   Email Douglas Meltzer   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
I enjoyed the film immensely and thought John Williams's score was brilliant.

The real stunner though is to see the stage adaptation of Michael Morpurgo's book. After ten minutes you're no longer looking at life size puppets. They become vivid, real characters.

Doug

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I think there's room for just one more film.....

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David Park
Master Film Handler

Posts: 346
From: UK
Registered: Nov 2003


 - posted February 10, 2012 04:44 AM      Profile for David Park   Email David Park   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
First Colin how did you know it was a 4K projector and a 4K presentation and not the usual 2K?
My local cinema recently upgraded to a 4K projector from the 2K one, but they have not said if any 4k presentations being made.
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Second Colin I doubt if the younger cinema goers with thier mobile phones and popcorn would appreciate intermissions in movie.
I loved the Roadshow presentations back in the 50's/60's of the epic type films and musicals with special prints with overature before the film, intermission and then more music and second half of the movie and then the walk out music.
You booked in advance like a theatre and changed clothes before going really was a night out.

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Regards,
David

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John Davis
Master Film Handler

Posts: 286
From: Dunfermline, Fife, UK
Registered: Jun 2008


 - posted February 10, 2012 04:52 PM      Profile for John Davis   Email John Davis   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
The last time I remember an intermission was during Mel Gibson's Braveheart watched at the Robins cinema in Dunfermline. Unfortunately after the intermission the projector failed to start and everyone was given refunds or tickets for the following night.
From a Scotsman's point of view it would have been a good idea to take the refund because up to the intermission Scotland was winning!

I saw Warhorse at our, now all digital, Odeon. I thought digital would avoid focus, scratches, loss of loop and other real film hazards.

We had to ask the cinema to switch the image on rather than just the audio! Modern multiplexes do not seem to have a clue.

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