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1313ed01 24 hours ago [-]
RIP. Here in Sweden the headlines mention primarily his role in Ivanhoe, a movie that has aired on Swedish TV almost every New Years for over 40 years.
SWEDEN ! I have strapped on my body armor, renewed my courage, got my evils back, and am braced once again to Sweden's MOST HATED. And this year I WILL WIN . #HappyNewYear2019 #Ivanhoe
Yes, my annual disemboweling seems to please Swedes every year. #Ivanhoe
Etc, going back to 2015.
bovermyer 22 hours ago [-]
I have only ever seen the 1950s Ivanhoe film and part of a... I think it was a 1990s TV miniseries. I'll have to watch this.
az226 22 hours ago [-]
I watched it every Jan 1 with some pizza
firmretention 21 hours ago [-]
Ivanhoe is a story about a Russian farmer and his tool.
mindcrash 24 hours ago [-]
Jurassic Park was the first movie I saw as a twelve year old boy at the cinema, and it not only made me a huge fan of the series but as a boy I was really into dinosaurs and it was really something to see them being "real" on a big screen for the first time.
"I have a theory that there are two kinds of boys. There are those that want to be astronomers, and those that want to be astronauts[...]That's the difference between imagining and seeing"
Thank you for everything, doctor Grant.
saalweachter 18 hours ago [-]
I really appreciate the attempt by Chris & Jack to make Julysixth Park a thing.
I enjoyed Star Wars, but I kind of feel like a lot of my feelings towards it are just reflected nostalgia from the writers and comedians who grew up a generation before me.
Jurassic Park may not have been the first movie I saw in theaters, but it was still one of the movies of my childhood. The magic of it, and the experience of where we saw it -- the Mesker Park amphitheatre, in an outdoor showing, and then walking back to the car in the dark, past the Mesker Park Zoo, looking into the dark foliage and imagining dinosaurs.
jawilson2 17 hours ago [-]
Same, I was born in '81, and JP is a cornerstone of my childhood, more-so than any other movie I can think of. I saw that movie at the theatre more than any other, at least 6 times that summer.
My favorite was at a drive-in in Kentucky. We used to rent boats at Lake Cumberland over the summer, and one night we watched JP at a drive-in. I remember the drive back to the dock late at night, driving through the woods, and imagining it was a Jurassic jungle. Then, back on the houseboat, going reading through my "Making of Jurassic Park" book with a battery operated book light.
geocrasher 24 hours ago [-]
"I would have liked to have seen Montana..."
You are forever in our hearts, Vasili.
testing22321 20 hours ago [-]
I’m in Montana now, and I spent the weekend with a very energetic palaeontologist who has unearthed many dinosaurs.
esseph 19 hours ago [-]
My son isn't college age yet but is interested in this route. Any tips for potential future paleontologists?
21 hours ago [-]
symfoniq 17 hours ago [-]
Besides his role in Jurassic Park, I will always appreciate Sam Neill’s understated but important role as Borodin, the reliable and loyal First Officer in The Hunt for Red October. His character’s death (a change from the book) added emotional weight to the story.
conartist6 15 hours ago [-]
I've seen both films many times and I honestly never realized these two characters are played by the same person.
kayo_20211030 19 hours ago [-]
Sam Neill did a super podcast with Marc Maron a few years ago. He came across as a really stand-up bloke - genuine, funny, smart and kind; and every obit I've seen today seems to echo all that. It's well worth a listen. https://www.wtfpod.com/podcast/episode-1202-sam-neill
ballooney 2 hours ago [-]
I have rarely had such displeasure from hearing such an interesting interviewee having to cope with such a cretinous interviewer. I’m very surprised you recommended this.
kroaton 9 hours ago [-]
A shame it has Marc Maron in it.
Xenoamorphous 1 days ago [-]
So sad. Jurassic Park had a tremendous impact on me as a dino obsessed teenager ( was 13 when it came out). RIP.
hdgvhicv 1 days ago [-]
It’s a unix system, I know this!
The file navigator she used was running on a silicon graphics machine, called fsn
That I have a DevOps company working entirely on Linux can be directly attributed to realizing as a kid that Unix was a real thing and I needed to install it on my own computer. Interesting it was soon after this movie came out that FreeBSD and Linux were becoming popular.
pico303 1 days ago [-]
One of my favorite actors of all time. If you haven’t seen it, watch The Dish.
the-mitr 1 days ago [-]
also the Event Horizon, his change of character is something you don't forget..
RALaBarge 21 hours ago [-]
Something that is burnt into me is saying "DO YOU SEE?", invoking the final lines of Neill in Event Horizon
pezezin 20 hours ago [-]
"Where we're going, we won't need eyes to see."
s_dev 1 days ago [-]
Even Horizon is a Warhammer 40k film that has nothing to do with Warhammer 40k.
nilamo 20 hours ago [-]
Can you elaborate for those of us who don't know Warhammer?
pezezin 20 hours ago [-]
In W40k the primary form of FTL travel is the Immaterium or Warp, a realm of pure psychic energy inhabited by the Chaos gods and countless demons. Spaceships traveling through the Warp need powerful protective shields lest they be possessed and consumed by said demons... which is exactly what happens in the movie.
Kinda reminds of the inter-dimensional angry aliens from The Expanse that made ships disappear when transiting through the ring gates.
InsideOutSanta 1 days ago [-]
That's always the role I remember first when I hear his name, because it seems so unusual for him and because he was so great in it.
rbanffy 1 days ago [-]
Not my favourite movie though. The horror in space trope is a very tired one.
Alongside the poorly lit spaceship. Spaceships are workplaces and workplaces should provide adequate illumination so you can see what you are doing.
But I LOVE what he did for the New Zealand flag.
aarond0623 24 hours ago [-]
The part I liked in Event Horizon was Laurence Fishburn's character seeing the logs of the crew going crazy and immediately turning it off and saying, "We're leaving."
Probably the smartest decision made in a horror film. Time to get out of Dodge.
RALaBarge 21 hours ago [-]
Yeah! Its a great movie if you dont try to nitpick stuff, which is hard for me to do on a lot of things too.
Neill: We can't just abandon this ship, we just found her
Fishburn: I have no intentions of abandoning her. We will get far enough away from it and blow it up. Fuck this ship.
EdwardDiego 19 hours ago [-]
Australian flag.
* Their Southern Cross is more astronomically accurate (it includes Epsilon Crucis) our one omits it
* They have an additional seven pointed star to represent the six territories/states of Australia, the seventh point being added when they took control of Papua to represent anything else they added to the federation as time went on
* Their stars are white, ours are red
But fully agree, I loved that it the Union Jack was replaced with the Aborigine flag at Sam Neill's behest, because after all, it _is_ the future right?
woodson 18 hours ago [-]
> Alongside the poorly lit spaceship. Spaceships are workplaces and workplaces should provide adequate illumination so you can see what you are doing.
I always thought the same about CSI. Have the set designers ever been to a lab?
IAmBroom 14 hours ago [-]
I know it was "a long, long time ago", but why hasn't adequate lighting been invented in the Star Wars Universe?
You have a humanoid rich enough to own a couple robots, but their house is apparently entirely lit by about one candlelight.
Taniwha 24 hours ago [-]
Pretty sure it's "But I LOVE what he did for the Australian flag." - he is a kiwi but that's arguably the Aussie flag with the colonial bit replaced with the local one
EdwardDiego 19 hours ago [-]
It's got white stars, it has the seven pointed "Commonwealth star", and astronomically, it's more correct as it includes Epsilon Crucis.
Our flag has red stars, no bonus commonwealth star, and for some reason, whoever designed our flag decided that ε Cru could go fuck itself.
And I love him to bits for insisting that in the future, Australia would surely have a) become a republic and b) embraced the Aborigine first peoples. It's a remarkably hopeful vision of the future for a movie where he ends up running around without eyes saying creepy shit.
mkl 20 hours ago [-]
Not arguably, definitely.
ChrisMarshallNY 1 days ago [-]
Pandorum was pretty crazy (he wasn’t in it, but it was an odd space horror movie, and I feel that Event Horizon kind of paved the way).
steerpike 24 hours ago [-]
Australian flag.
The black, red and yellow flag he replaced the Union Jack with is the Australian first nations flag
rbanffy 20 hours ago [-]
My bad. I need to retake my geography classes from high school
EdwardDiego 19 hours ago [-]
You're sweet as mate, we're used to it eh.
Hell, it's why one of our former PMs had a referendum to try to replace our flag.
He got seated under an Aussie flag once at an international big important meeting, thus he decided to spend $21 million getting people to vote on whether or not to adopt a flag that looked like the logo a meat company would stick on a frozen leg of lamb being exported to the EU [0]. We ultimately voted against the meat wrapper.
My personal preference was for either the Black Jack [1] (because I loved how it co-opted the Union Jack with Māori design elements - the curved white koru) and tbh, we do love the colour black, or...
...Seeing as we're having a bit of a silly referendum anyway, good ol Laser Kiwi [2] (the white feather thing is the silver fern/ponga, adopted as our national plant when pteridomania was running rampant in the British Empire, and is often used as a logo for national sports teams, and for naming several female sports teams - Silver Ferns, White Ferns, Black Ferns), because who doesn't love the idea of shooting lasers out of your eyes?
John Oliver had a lot of fun with the whole debate. [3]
Oh, and fun fact, I believe during the anti-ICE protests, some Minnesotans were inspired by Laser Kiwi and brought about Laser Loon. [4]
...with very constrained sources of power. Lighting places where humans are not is wasting that power.
rbanffy 11 hours ago [-]
You have a power plant capable of generating the energy needed to take you to relativistic speeds (at minimum) or punch holes through spacetime (a couple hundred orders of magnitude more) that’ll radiate a Hiroshima per second in waste heat (at 99.99999% efficiency converting energy into movement). You can certainly power a couple light bulbs.
account42 2 hours ago [-]
Yeah but you save a couple bucks per ship if you cut the lighting to the absolute minimum required to keep crew shrinkage at an acceptable rate, and across the entire fleet that adds up to a nice bonus.
rbanffy 1 days ago [-]
It’s a wonderful little movie. Absolutely adorable.
olivierestsage 22 hours ago [-]
Rest in peace. Like many here, his performances were hugely influential on my childhood (and adulthood). One I haven’t seen mentioned here yet is Merlin.
nilamo 20 hours ago [-]
His Merlin was always my favorite, though I've never heard anyone else mention it out in the wild.
fnordsensei 19 hours ago [-]
Same here. The miniseries itself has its quirks and oddities, but I find it charming. Particularly his role as Merlin.
Lord-Jobo 16 hours ago [-]
The whole miniseries is (or was very recently) free on YouTube. I recommend it, it’s very unique and interesting
wewewedxfgdf 24 hours ago [-]
I saw him interviewed once and they asked about his cancer and he said that he did not find it very interesting. He said something to the effect of he finds living interesting and there's far more interesting things to talk about than his cancer. Paraphrased I don't recall exactly.
Findecanor 23 hours ago [-]
It is a touchy subject. When you have it, you don't want to think about it all the time.
wewewedxfgdf 23 hours ago [-]
You misunderstand - the message is he was far more interested in living and what he could do with his life and genuinely found the cancer not interesting compared to other things.
He wasn't just being touchy and trying to change the subject.
18 hours ago [-]
mulhoon 1 days ago [-]
I watched Possession (1981) a few weeks back. One of the weirdest films I’ve ever seen. His acting was so different from his later stuff.
lopsotronic 18 hours ago [-]
One of my favorite horror films of the 1980s, Andrzej Żuławski's 1981 Possession.
One quote I heard about it, is that some movies are about madness, and other movies seem to be themselves mad, and Possession is one of those movies. It has this immediacy to it, and an unease that only grows in quantity and tenor. And you genuinely do not know where it is going. Believe me when I say this.
It might be Sam's most memorable performance, for me. The movie seemed to drive its entire cast and crew to exhaustion or worse.
Do not under any circumstances watch the old American cut, the initial release. It was re-edited with scenes out of order and has this bizarro solarization effect at random intervals. It's really really bad. The modern blu-ray and others have the actual movie.
fetus8 1 days ago [-]
Possession is such a fantastically special movie, heavily due to Neill and Adjani’s performances.
RIP to a real one.
JodieBenitez 1 days ago [-]
I'm getting old, all my childhood heroes die.
phtrivier 1 days ago [-]
Here's to "trying to be someone's childhood heroes"
OJFord 1 days ago [-]
Without dancing on TikTok or pulling stupid faces for YouTube thumbnails
phtrivier 1 days ago [-]
Yup, we can dream bigger and give bigger dreams :)
A silver lining in the tech progress is this : I remember watching movies from the 60s or the 70s, in the 90s, and feeling "damn, that looks old". I could only care about movies made after 1984, or something (and, men, did amblin and the "produced by Steven Spielberg-verse" give us good things to watch.)
I suspect that, now that movies are kinda "converging" in terms of visual, it will be easier to share the movies of our childhoods with the next generation.
Besides, they don't care that much about looks : I litteraly witnessed 10 year old kids getting hooked on my 1991 game boy !!!!
simondotau 22 hours ago [-]
It gets worse. You start realising that the new heroes you're discovering are all younger than you.
kakacik 20 hours ago [-]
... and they are not that interesting / relatable
awnird 20 hours ago [-]
You’ll fit right in on this site then. It’s mostly elderly Americans sundowning and posting about their youth.
JodieBenitez 20 hours ago [-]
I'm not american, but ok, why not :)
benburton 1 days ago [-]
Today New Zealand has lost a national treasure.
Haere atu rā ki te okiokinga.
nephihaha 1 days ago [-]
And Northern Ireland.
decimalenough 24 hours ago [-]
And Australia. He lived in Sydney and the Aussie PM just posted a tribute.
josephcooney 21 hours ago [-]
He's as Australian as Russell Crowe and Lamingtons!
peterashford 6 hours ago [-]
They can have Russell Crowe. But you'll take Lamingtons from my cold dead hands!
An absolute legend. I thought he'd be around for longer. Thanks for making Jurassic Park what it is, Sam.
ChrisMarshallNY 1 days ago [-]
Ah, that sucks. I’ve always enjoyed him.
One of the inevitable features of getting older. All my cultural icons keep checking out.
weikju 22 hours ago [-]
Aside from Jurassic Park and the other roles mentioned, I also liked his role in the Merlin TV two part movies. Now I need to rewatch both…
noefingway 20 hours ago [-]
First time I saw him was in Riley Ace of Spies. A great series that was on PBS. Last series I watched was Untamed. He was one of my favorite actors and a credit to his profession. Sad to learn of his passing.
krupan 20 hours ago [-]
If you have not seen Hunt for the Wilderpeople (staring Sam Neil) find it and watch it today!
tanseydavid 10 hours ago [-]
Emphatic "SECOND" to this recommendation. This is a very enjoyable and touching film.
twelvedogs 22 hours ago [-]
i saw him around a lot on tv and so on as an australian, just genuinely a pretty good bloke. like i dunno what to say i don't know if i've ever cried about an actor dying before
i'd love to say he was awesome in every role but he always seemed super honest in his performance and i think that hurt him a lot when he had to play bullshit characters lol.
i dunno i'm just some guy
JKCalhoun 21 hours ago [-]
His debut in the 1001 Movies to See Before You Die is in the 1979 film, My Brilliant Career [1].
I’ve watched “In The Mouth of Madness” so many times. It is in my top 3 most re-watched horror movies list. Perfect Lovecraftian horror, and Sam Neill was perfect in it.
Do you read Sutter Cane?
jhickok 18 hours ago [-]
It's a great movie! One of the best attempts at capturing a Lovecraftian vibe, maybe only bested by The Thing or his excellent Event Horizon.
Vaslo 15 hours ago [-]
You made me think about the possibility of him being in The Thing - if he was chosen for that film, I wonder who he would have played.
asimpletune 19 hours ago [-]
He was an amazing actor. One of his best roles was “Reilly: Ace of Spies”.
chvid 1 days ago [-]
Event horizon.
pantulis 23 hours ago [-]
"Where we're going, we don't need eyes to see".
sgt 21 hours ago [-]
Remind me to never go to orbit around Neptune.
RALaBarge 21 hours ago [-]
"What makes you think I'll miss?"
Vaslo 15 hours ago [-]
He was great in it - horribly underrated movie though I concede the gore at a 8 or 9 out of 10 is not for everyone. The deaths were supposed to be far gorier and the film of the prior crew was to be longer and harder to watch until the studio stepped in.
samsudden 23 hours ago [-]
RIP. Recently watched Series 3 of The Twelve, and thought "No way is he in his 70s", and had just finished reading his autobiography "Did I Ever Tell You This?" - delightful read.
tjpnz 23 hours ago [-]
Bicentennial Man is one of my favourite films of his (also Robin Williams). There's an interesting subplot in there on right to repair which is very much relevant today. It also depicts a future 30 years away which might've seemed bleak when it was first conceived, but is in many ways more hopeful than what we actually got.
nephihaha 1 days ago [-]
Hunt for the Wilder People was fun, as was Reilly, Ace of Spies.
bushwart 23 hours ago [-]
Loved Hunt for the Wilder People.
donatj 21 hours ago [-]
I honestly didn't know he was a Kiwi until I saw Hunt for the Wilder People. Absolutely fantastic movie.
lapcat 23 hours ago [-]
I'll never forget Neill as Damien in Omen III.
I'd very much like to forget Neill as Damien in Omen III. Chilling.
jzb 19 hours ago [-]
Good performance, not really a good movie. It was a bit of a letdown after parts I and II, but he was well cast. The writing wasn’t there: didn’t quite stick the landing.
te_chris 1 days ago [-]
As a kiwi he was the best of us. Creative, talented, willing to roll up his sleeves, maker of exceptional wine. Haere ra
gautamcgoel 23 hours ago [-]
So sad to hear this. Hard to imagine anyone else playing Dr. Alan Grant in Jurassic Park.
Neil44 1 days ago [-]
He had a lovely gentle demeanor about him. He was good recently in the Untamed series.
Danox 13 hours ago [-]
Riley Ace of Spies: RIP Sam
vinkelhake 1 days ago [-]
Give me a ping Vasily. One ping only please.
Sad.
rbanffy 1 days ago [-]
A minute of silence for him. No echoes.
throwaway29303 21 hours ago [-]
Godspeed. ;~;7
major505 23 hours ago [-]
If someone here likes horror movies I highly recommend watching his work in Possession (1981) and Mouth of Madness (1995).
If you prefer a more family focused comedy, go with Hunt for the Wilderpeople (2016), from the same director of the excelent What we Do in the Shadows.
OrvalWintermute 20 hours ago [-]
Sam Neill had a great & prolific career; particularly appreciated his role as Cardinal Thomas Wolsey on The Tudors
RIP. Where he's going, he won't need eyes. Wait, perhaps that was an inappropriate quote to use.
GenericDev 1 days ago [-]
To this day, Event Horizon is one of the scariest premises to a horror movie I have ever watched. And it's thanks to Sam Neill's performance that it lives rent free in my head.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivanhoe_(1982_film)
He posted this video message to the Swedish people for New Years 2023: https://www.svt.se/kultur/ivanhoe-skadespelarens-nyarshalsni...
Great movie.
* One public broadcasting channel 40-50 years ago
* Someone decided to play a movie in the holiday period when most people sat around a TV
Norway has Tre nøtter til Askepott, Germany has Drei Haselnüsse für Aschenbrödel (they are the same Czech movie).
Repeatedly being TV broadcast on jan 1st for many years turned it into a tradition for something to watch while being hung over.
It's also actually surprisingly good, as a whole.
E.g.
https://x.com/TwoPaddocks/status/1212188526348890112 (2020)
I am relaxed, fit , and ready to fight the dreary Ivanhoe once more.
https://x.com/TwoPaddocks/status/1080048522492145664 (2019)
SWEDEN ! I have strapped on my body armor, renewed my courage, got my evils back, and am braced once again to Sweden's MOST HATED. And this year I WILL WIN . #HappyNewYear2019 #Ivanhoe
https://x.com/TwoPaddocks/status/947971082018889728 (2018)
Yes, my annual disemboweling seems to please Swedes every year. #Ivanhoe
Etc, going back to 2015.
"I have a theory that there are two kinds of boys. There are those that want to be astronomers, and those that want to be astronauts[...]That's the difference between imagining and seeing"
Thank you for everything, doctor Grant.
I enjoyed Star Wars, but I kind of feel like a lot of my feelings towards it are just reflected nostalgia from the writers and comedians who grew up a generation before me.
Jurassic Park may not have been the first movie I saw in theaters, but it was still one of the movies of my childhood. The magic of it, and the experience of where we saw it -- the Mesker Park amphitheatre, in an outdoor showing, and then walking back to the car in the dark, past the Mesker Park Zoo, looking into the dark foliage and imagining dinosaurs.
My favorite was at a drive-in in Kentucky. We used to rent boats at Lake Cumberland over the summer, and one night we watched JP at a drive-in. I remember the drive back to the dock late at night, driving through the woods, and imagining it was a Jurassic jungle. Then, back on the houseboat, going reading through my "Making of Jurassic Park" book with a battery operated book light.
You are forever in our hearts, Vasili.
The file navigator she used was running on a silicon graphics machine, called fsn
https://preterhuman.net/software/file-system-navigator-fsn-s...
https://warhammer40k.fandom.com/wiki/Immaterium
Alongside the poorly lit spaceship. Spaceships are workplaces and workplaces should provide adequate illumination so you can see what you are doing.
But I LOVE what he did for the New Zealand flag.
Probably the smartest decision made in a horror film. Time to get out of Dodge.
Neill: We can't just abandon this ship, we just found her Fishburn: I have no intentions of abandoning her. We will get far enough away from it and blow it up. Fuck this ship.
* Their Southern Cross is more astronomically accurate (it includes Epsilon Crucis) our one omits it
* They have an additional seven pointed star to represent the six territories/states of Australia, the seventh point being added when they took control of Papua to represent anything else they added to the federation as time went on
* Their stars are white, ours are red
But fully agree, I loved that it the Union Jack was replaced with the Aborigine flag at Sam Neill's behest, because after all, it _is_ the future right?
I always thought the same about CSI. Have the set designers ever been to a lab?
You have a humanoid rich enough to own a couple robots, but their house is apparently entirely lit by about one candlelight.
Our flag has red stars, no bonus commonwealth star, and for some reason, whoever designed our flag decided that ε Cru could go fuck itself.
And I love him to bits for insisting that in the future, Australia would surely have a) become a republic and b) embraced the Aborigine first peoples. It's a remarkably hopeful vision of the future for a movie where he ends up running around without eyes saying creepy shit.
Hell, it's why one of our former PMs had a referendum to try to replace our flag.
He got seated under an Aussie flag once at an international big important meeting, thus he decided to spend $21 million getting people to vote on whether or not to adopt a flag that looked like the logo a meat company would stick on a frozen leg of lamb being exported to the EU [0]. We ultimately voted against the meat wrapper.
My personal preference was for either the Black Jack [1] (because I loved how it co-opted the Union Jack with Māori design elements - the curved white koru) and tbh, we do love the colour black, or...
...Seeing as we're having a bit of a silly referendum anyway, good ol Laser Kiwi [2] (the white feather thing is the silver fern/ponga, adopted as our national plant when pteridomania was running rampant in the British Empire, and is often used as a logo for national sports teams, and for naming several female sports teams - Silver Ferns, White Ferns, Black Ferns), because who doesn't love the idea of shooting lasers out of your eyes?
John Oliver had a lot of fun with the whole debate. [3]
Oh, and fun fact, I believe during the anti-ICE protests, some Minnesotans were inspired by Laser Kiwi and brought about Laser Loon. [4]
----
[0]: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/38/NZ...
[1]: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5d/NZ_flag_...
[2]: https://nzhistory.govt.nz/sites/default/files/styles/wide/pu...
[3]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m_2tL--HMIo
[4]: https://images.thespinoff.co.nz/1/2026/02/Tinas-FeatureImage...
...with very constrained sources of power. Lighting places where humans are not is wasting that power.
He wasn't just being touchy and trying to change the subject.
One quote I heard about it, is that some movies are about madness, and other movies seem to be themselves mad, and Possession is one of those movies. It has this immediacy to it, and an unease that only grows in quantity and tenor. And you genuinely do not know where it is going. Believe me when I say this.
It might be Sam's most memorable performance, for me. The movie seemed to drive its entire cast and crew to exhaustion or worse.
Do not under any circumstances watch the old American cut, the initial release. It was re-edited with scenes out of order and has this bizarro solarization effect at random intervals. It's really really bad. The modern blu-ray and others have the actual movie.
RIP to a real one.
A silver lining in the tech progress is this : I remember watching movies from the 60s or the 70s, in the 90s, and feeling "damn, that looks old". I could only care about movies made after 1984, or something (and, men, did amblin and the "produced by Steven Spielberg-verse" give us good things to watch.)
I suspect that, now that movies are kinda "converging" in terms of visual, it will be easier to share the movies of our childhoods with the next generation.
Besides, they don't care that much about looks : I litteraly witnessed 10 year old kids getting hooked on my 1991 game boy !!!!
Haere atu rā ki te okiokinga.
https://youtu.be/TeONP37qsSo?si=cPLF_UpcuW7dfruT
One of the inevitable features of getting older. All my cultural icons keep checking out.
i'd love to say he was awesome in every role but he always seemed super honest in his performance and i think that hurt him a lot when he had to play bullshit characters lol.
i dunno i'm just some guy
("Hey, that's a young Sam Neill!")
[1] https://youtu.be/aU3kXBb6Yc4
Do you read Sutter Cane?
I'd very much like to forget Neill as Damien in Omen III. Chilling.
Sad.
If you prefer a more family focused comedy, go with Hunt for the Wilderpeople (2016), from the same director of the excelent What we Do in the Shadows.
https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000554/
Love this guy. Gonna miss him :(