http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081121/ap_en_mo/on_the_net_little_movies (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081121/ap_en_mo/on_the_net_little_movies)
Personally, I don't think any feature-length films should be watched on youtube or the like, unless there's no other option. I'd rather pay a dollar or two for the rental and watch them on a nice screen with a decent sound system.
2001: A Space Odessy. Really, this film should only be seen in the theater on the big screen. I love the shos of the outside of the spaceship.
Quote from: Rev. Powell on November 21, 2008, 02:25:28 PM
Personally, I don't think any feature-length films should be watched on youtube or the like, unless there's no other option. I'd rather pay a dollar or two for the rental and watch them on a nice screen with a decent sound system.
More importantly is the lousy quality.
For myself though, it's relatively easy to connect my laptop to my projector to watch streaming movies online. I watched Killing Spree and Out For Justice this way, through NetFlix streaming. Ok, not exactly Lawrence of Arabia is cinematography and big screen images, but still, watched em on a big screen.
No.
Size and sound are killed by the computer. Thats what big screen tv is all about!
wow, i'm surprised that no one has posted the "david lynch on iphone (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKiIroiCvZ0)" video...
Quote from: ToyMan on November 30, 2008, 03:23:13 AM
wow, i'm surprised that no one has posted the "david lynch on iphone (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKiIroiCvZ0)" video...
I'd never seen it before... but those are my feelings exactly.
I've watched my share on movies on my laptop which doesn't do much justice overall, but when I was bored at work, it was a decent way to pass the time, even though it was just through my headphones and not a good surround sound system like I wanted to listen it to. The only thing I would watch on a computer is a TV show that doesn't have a lot of if any explosions, or something very loud like gun fire or such.
Sigh* I'm so sick of lists by people who clearly stopped enjoying new movies after a certain era. I'm an 80s kid, so I can feel that nostalgic curmudgeon creeping in, but damn him, I won't be that guy.
Top 10 21st century movies that must be seen on a big screen:
I could have included LOTR, but it would have been too easy.
10.) Cloverfield
Disclaimer: I hadn't done this since my early teens, but I snuck in about 20-30 minutes after it started, so I skipped over the annoying banter and the ticket price. The handheld camera effect will either work for you or it wont. If it does work, I can't imagine watching it on a small screen. You might as well watch it on youtube.
9.) Transformers
Yes, the movie was corny. Newsflash! So was the cartoon. Over and underdone in many places, but rarely enough to destract from the GIANT FIGHTING ROBOTS! :twirl:
8.) The Cell
See also 'The Fall.' Frankly, they are both some of the coolest things, movies or other medium, that I have ever seen. I liked them, but to be fair, they are definitely for the foreign/art film crowd.
7.) The Incredibles
I won't see Cars, and I haven't seen Ratatoille, but as much as Pixar really does good work, the comic book geek in me just gushes for the rare well-done superhero story.
6.) The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy:
Not since Jurrasic Park had I seen such a masterful blend of puppetry and CGI, and I waited a long time to see it again...
5.) Hellboy 2: The Golden Army
...but I'll say it again: there are major flatfalling and wtf moments in the script, but the jaw-dropping visuals actually made up for it.
4.) Paprika
"Ugh, but Anime is so annoying."
Your loss.
"Eh, I'll watch it on my laptop."
Eyesight was wasted on you.
3.) Let The Right One In
A wonderful Swedish vampire film and a must see before the cheap American rip off comes along, but moreso a must see on a screen that captures the eerieness of vast silent winter landscapes.
2.) There Will Be Blood
As good as No Country for Old Men was, and it was very very good, it had a lot to make it good. TWBB did a lot with what was really very little. Everything overwhelming was somehow understated and it deserves to be treated like a film.
1.) Freddy Got Fingered
If you ever watched MTV or spent time on a pop culture list, you deserve to have this dominate your field of vision. :tongueout:
I watched Return of the Living Dead on You Tube.
I won't be doing that again.
Quote from: Flangepart on November 28, 2008, 12:21:24 PM
No.
Size and sound are killed by the computer. Thats what big screen tv is all about!
If you search you can find decent videos and you can hook up your PC to the TV, may cost you a bit in extra connector perhaps easier to get a projector.
Quote from: doggett on December 16, 2008, 02:37:48 PM
I watched Return of the Living Dead on You Tube.
I won't be doing that again.
I enjoyed Return of the killer Tomatoes on you tube...I guess I'm an idiot.
Quote from: doggett on January 05, 2009, 03:57:59 PM
Quote from: doggett on December 16, 2008, 02:37:48 PM
I watched Return of the Living Dead on You Tube.
I won't be doing that again.
I enjoyed Return of the killer Tomatoes on you tube...I guess I'm an idiot.
No it depends on the film. Troll 2 was enjoyable to stream on youtube.
I watch a lot of films on Netflix, most are decent especially the older b-movies films that the quality isn't that good in the first place.
Another note I have to add is that it's REALLY easy to connect current TVs to computers now. I mean, the damn things have DVI and VGA ports built in, and support standard computer resolutions! They practically ARE computer monitors, excepting the type of colors they use.
It isn't so much watching them online, as it is you shouldn't watch them in crap quality (youtube) on a small monitor. I do feel there is a difference.