On 2013-05-21, really real <
reall...@shaw.ca> wrote:
> lot of obscure movies I find on Netflix. It is well worth the monthly fee.
Unfortunately, obscure doesn't equate with good.
My problem is, I'm so old and have read/watched so may stories/movies,
it's hard to find one that I don't figure out in the first 5 mins and
become bored to tears with. Then, yer only salvation is to find a movie
where you like the actors, though that's doesn't always work. I LOVE
Jennifer Lawrence ever since Winter's Bone, which I still believe she
deserved an oscar for. So finally I watched Silver Sappyness, the
one that DID win her an oscar, and hadda shut it off after about 10
mins, it was so stupid.
Something drastic has occurred at Netflix and not for the better. I
don't know if the inmates are now running the asylum or if the entire
business thinks jes because business is booming, it can now kick back
and screw off. Whatever the change, huge chunks of cinema have simply
disappeared and what's left is all over the map or hidden away in
gawd-knows-where. I tried to find Bogart's Sahara for the upcoming
Memorial Day weekend. It wasn't where it's supposed to be. I found
it with a search, but it wasn't in classics, military, where it's
tagged. Likewise Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo.
What I do see is a jillion crappy new 1-1/2 to 2 star movies I never
heard of flooding the new arrival bins of both streaming and DVD, like
they jes acquired every worthless straight-to-DVD movie and dust
covered crappy TV series ever created. It's really grim. Yet the
campy fun junk like MST3K is rapidly disappearing. And if you don't
know a film by it's precise name, yer SOL. Despite all its $$$$, the
Netflix database can't equate "30" with "thirty". Whatta buncha
dullards!
nb