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Fifteen-geek-movies-to-see-before-you-die! by Ogaga4Luv(m): 3:14pm On Aug 01, 2011
[size=13pt]I am as much a film geek as a tech geek . . . cheesy cheesy so , everyone knows me on this Nairaland with my threads and post (s) In a previous life, I reviewed music and movies, and had lots more fun with the latter. If someone offered me a film-review job that paid my mortgage, I’d take it in a second, but I have a feeling that will remain a part of my past rather than become my future grin.

Brazil – There are some geeks who’d argue you should just list “any film directed by Terry Gilliam,” but I’m only putting three on my list. Brazil tops it, though, for the ultimate in skewed sci-fi dystopia. Geeks relate to its themes of freedom, longing and getting the girl, despite being quite dorky. Oh, and Robert DeNiro as a subversive air-conditioning repairman rocks, too wink.

The Matrix – Yeah, the second two in this series almost ruined the legacy of the first, but The Matrix remains an icon of geek culture. A fun mix of sci-fi, cyberpunk lit and sociopolitical commentary, it extends the notion of machines run amok further than any previous film. And after seeing it, I dare you not to wonder whether we all are, indeed, jacked in to some cheesy simulation of reality cheesy.

The Fifth Element – The best Terry Gilliam film he didn’t make, The Fifth Element has some cheap special effects but makes the list for its vision of media, society and art. If the vocal performance of the tube-headed alien doesn’t give you goose bumps, you’re not alive. Oh yeah, and Bruce Willis is pounds of fun, too cheesy cheesy cheesy.

Star Trek: The Wrath of KhanWilliam Shatner’s cry of “Khaaaaaaaaaaan!!!” has entered the Geek Movie Scene Hall of Fame, as has Chekov’s getting an earful of a space worm. Lines such as “The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, or the one,” uttered by Spock as he sacrifices himself to save the Enterprise, have entered the lexicon smiley.

Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home – The next-best film in the series makes the list for two wonderful scenes. The crew of the Enterprise comes back to mid-1980s Earth to save the future planet from destruction by a whale-loving alien. At one point, engineer Scotty confronts a Macintosh and tries to talk to it. Someone points out he should use the mouse, which he then picks up and says into it: “Computer!” Next is the scene in which Spock gives the Vulcan death grip to a rude, boombox-toting punk on a bus. Audiences still cheer that scene wink wink wink.~ Obinna5000 of Nairaland and iice dear you know what i mean ! cheesy

Serenity – Even if you’ve never watched the Firefly TV series, you owe it to yourself to see Serenity. It’s easily the best Star Trek movie that’s not a Star Trek movie, and you don’t need to be versed in the characters to get what’s going on. In fact, even if you didn’t follow the series, you’ll still weep when one of the major characters dies cry . This movie is smart, funny and hits the right balance between serious action and fun camp cheesy.

Dark City — There are those who hint, eyebrows arched, that The Matrix got its best ideas from Dark City, even though the latter was released just one year before the former. A city is reworked each night, people’s memories are rewritten and those who begin to guess the truth are reprogrammed. This film owes a lot visually to earlier works, such as the films of Fritz Lang, F.W. Murnau and Robert Wiene grin.

12 Monkeys — A Terry Gilliam/Bruce Willis pairing, 12 Monkeys is a little less serious in its dystopian vision. Willis travels back in time in an attempt to prevent a virus from ravaging the future. The film is worth it for Brad Pitt’s best performance ever, as a crazed environmental terrorist like me ~Ogaga4luv wink. A review at the Internet Movie Database offers a grammatically garbled warning to take to heart, though: “. . .this movie needs your attention the forthcoming two hours and you better not miss some minutes for getting a coke as there is a danger you can’t follow.” I think I agree . . . cheesy cheesy

Shaun of the Dead — This is both the best parody of a zombie movie ever made, and the best zombie movie ever made. All zombie movies are political commentary — the masses are mindless and dangerous, yada yada — but few of them have as much fun with it as this one. In Shaun of the Dead, the heroes are misfits and geeks who bust through the conventions of zombie filmdom. It will be hard to make a zombie movie with a straight face from here on out.

DarkmanSam Raimi does a comic book movie, pre-Spider-Man. It’s an updated version of Batman with a darker heart and more attitude, in which a scientist is horribly disfigured by thugs and uses his brains to outwit their brawn to wreak vengeance. In other words, geeks harassed in high school by jocks for being science nerds will relate.

Army of Darkness — More Sam Raimi, this time capping off his Evil Dead series with a more mainstream and approachable film. Bruce Campbell, arguably the king of geek actors, reprises his Ash role as he’s sucked back in time to the Middle Ages. Ash is both brilliant and brilliantly dumb, playing a geek who succeeds in spite of himself. Best scenes — Ash assembles a replacement for the arm he hacked off in Evil Dead II, and he does battle with a demon in the aisles of an “S-Mart”.

War Games – Possibly the first film to give mainstream audiences a taste of hacker culture — sanitized though it was — War Games is both a period piece and a source of geek lexicon. The term wardialing, the practice of dialing random phone numbers until you find a modem to connect to, came from this film. That later morphed in to wardriving – cruising the streets in search of unsecured Wi-Fi networks. Geeks will also have a great time watching for the techno-mistakes, which are legion cheesy.

Monty Python and the Holy Grail – I occasionally run into geeks who say, “I’ve never seen Monty Python and the Holy Grail, but I feel like I have.” I think it’s fair to argue that the Pythons invented geek humor, and this movie is its pinnacle. Note to serious geeks: You shouldn’t just have seen this movie, you should pwn it grin.

Office Space — No film has captured what it’s like to work at an “enlightened” high-tech workplace as has Office Space, which bombed when first released but has become a cult hit on DVD. Who among us hasn’t wanted to smash the office fax machine with a baseball bat while profane hip hop plays in the background?

• Repo Man – Directed by Alex Cox, this movie is best known for having been produced by former Monkee Mike Nesmith (the smart, talented one). Emilio Estevez plays a punk who takes a job as a repo man. “Repo man is intense,” Harry Dean Stanton tells him, and that’s an understatement. Geek alienation and the blanding down of mainstream society are the themes here. Those who missed the 1980s may not get the references to black-and-white generics — Estevez dines from a can marked simply “Food” — but a little history lesson never hurt wink wink wink
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Re: Fifteen-geek-movies-to-see-before-you-die! by Nobody: 7:47pm On Mar 26, 2012
I've seen only 2: Matrix and The Fifth Element. But I've seen the Chris Pine Star Trek though. Loved it.
Re: Fifteen-geek-movies-to-see-before-you-die! by kombats: 9:24am On Mar 27, 2012
SimonAndal: I've seen only 2: Matrix and The Fifth Element. But I've seen the Chris Pine Star Trek though. Loved it.
seconded
Re: Fifteen-geek-movies-to-see-before-you-die! by Ogaga4Luv(m): 2:58pm On Mar 27, 2012
Ogaga4Luv: [size=13pt]I am as much a film geek as a tech geek . . . cheesy cheesy so , everyone knows me on this Nairaland with my threads and post (s) In a previous life, I reviewed music and movies, and had lots more fun with the latter. If someone offered me a film-review job that paid my mortgage, I’d take it in a second, but I have a feeling that will remain a part of my past rather than become my future grin.

Brazil – There are some geeks who’d argue you should just list “any film directed by Terry Gilliam,” but I’m only putting three on my list. Brazil tops it, though, for the ultimate in skewed sci-fi dystopia. Geeks relate to its themes of freedom, longing and getting the girl, despite being quite dorky. Oh, and Robert DeNiro as a subversive air-conditioning repairman rocks, too wink.

The Matrix – Yeah, the second two in this series almost ruined the legacy of the first, but The Matrix remains an icon of geek culture. A fun mix of sci-fi, cyberpunk lit and sociopolitical commentary, it extends the notion of machines run amok further than any previous film. And after seeing it, I dare you not to wonder whether we all are, indeed, jacked in to some cheesy simulation of reality cheesy.

The Fifth Element – The best Terry Gilliam film he didn’t make, The Fifth Element has some cheap special effects but makes the list for its vision of media, society and art. If the vocal performance of the tube-headed alien doesn’t give you goose bumps, you’re not alive. Oh yeah, and Bruce Willis is pounds of fun, too cheesy cheesy cheesy.

Star Trek: The Wrath of KhanWilliam Shatner’s cry of “Khaaaaaaaaaaan!!!” has entered the Geek Movie Scene Hall of Fame, as has Chekov’s getting an earful of a space worm. Lines such as “The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, or the one,” uttered by Spock as he sacrifices himself to save the Enterprise, have entered the lexicon smiley.

Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home – The next-best film in the series makes the list for two wonderful scenes. The crew of the Enterprise comes back to mid-1980s Earth to save the future planet from destruction by a whale-loving alien. At one point, engineer Scotty confronts a Macintosh and tries to talk to it. Someone points out he should use the mouse, which he then picks up and says into it: “Computer!” Next is the scene in which Spock gives the Vulcan death grip to a rude, boombox-toting punk on a bus. Audiences still cheer that scene wink wink wink.~ Obinna5000 of Nairaland and iice dear you know what i mean ! cheesy

Serenity – Even if you’ve never watched the Firefly TV series, you owe it to yourself to see Serenity. It’s easily the best Star Trek movie that’s not a Star Trek movie, and you don’t need to be versed in the characters to get what’s going on. In fact, even if you didn’t follow the series, you’ll still weep when one of the major characters dies cry . This movie is smart, funny and hits the right balance between serious action and fun camp cheesy.

Dark City — There are those who hint, eyebrows arched, that The Matrix got its best ideas from Dark City, even though the latter was released just one year before the former. A city is reworked each night, people’s memories are rewritten and those who begin to guess the truth are reprogrammed. This film owes a lot visually to earlier works, such as the films of Fritz Lang, F.W. Murnau and Robert Wiene grin.

12 Monkeys — A Terry Gilliam/Bruce Willis pairing, 12 Monkeys is a little less serious in its dystopian vision. Willis travels back in time in an attempt to prevent a virus from ravaging the future. The film is worth it for Brad Pitt’s best performance ever, as a crazed environmental terrorist like me ~Ogaga4luv wink. A review at the Internet Movie Database offers a grammatically garbled warning to take to heart, though: “. . .this movie needs your attention the forthcoming two hours and you better not miss some minutes for getting a coke as there is a danger you can’t follow.” I think I agree . . . cheesy cheesy

Shaun of the Dead — This is both the best parody of a zombie movie ever made, and the best zombie movie ever made. All zombie movies are political commentary — the masses are mindless and dangerous, yada yada — but few of them have as much fun with it as this one. In Shaun of the Dead, the heroes are misfits and geeks who bust through the conventions of zombie filmdom. It will be hard to make a zombie movie with a straight face from here on out.

DarkmanSam Raimi does a comic book movie, pre-Spider-Man. It’s an updated version of Batman with a darker heart and more attitude, in which a scientist is horribly disfigured by thugs and uses his brains to outwit their brawn to wreak vengeance. In other words, geeks harassed in high school by jocks for being science nerds will relate.

Army of Darkness — More Sam Raimi, this time capping off his Evil Dead series with a more mainstream and approachable film. Bruce Campbell, arguably the king of geek actors, reprises his Ash role as he’s sucked back in time to the Middle Ages. Ash is both brilliant and brilliantly dumb, playing a geek who succeeds in spite of himself. Best scenes — Ash assembles a replacement for the arm he hacked off in Evil Dead II, and he does battle with a demon in the aisles of an “S-Mart”.

War Games – Possibly the first film to give mainstream audiences a taste of hacker culture — sanitized though it was — War Games is both a period piece and a source of geek lexicon. The term wardialing, the practice of dialing random phone numbers until you find a modem to connect to, came from this film. That later morphed in to wardriving – cruising the streets in search of unsecured Wi-Fi networks. Geeks will also have a great time watching for the techno-mistakes, which are legion cheesy.

Monty Python and the Holy Grail – I occasionally run into geeks who say, “I’ve never seen Monty Python and the Holy Grail, but I feel like I have.” I think it’s fair to argue that the Pythons invented geek humor, and this movie is its pinnacle. Note to serious geeks: You shouldn’t just have seen this movie, you should pwn it grin.

Office Space — No film has captured what it’s like to work at an “enlightened” high-tech workplace as has Office Space, which bombed when first released but has become a cult hit on DVD. Who among us hasn’t wanted to smash the office fax machine with a baseball bat while profane hip hop plays in the background?

• Repo Man – Directed by Alex Cox, this movie is best known for having been produced by former Monkee Mike Nesmith (the smart, talented one). Emilio Estevez plays a punk who takes a job as a repo man. “Repo man is intense,” Harry Dean Stanton tells him, and that’s an understatement. Geek alienation and the blanding down of mainstream society are the themes here. Those who missed the 1980s may not get the references to black-and-white generics — Estevez dines from a can marked simply “Food” — but a little history lesson never hurt wink wink wink
[/size]
Re: Fifteen-geek-movies-to-see-before-you-die! by Vieira(m): 10:37pm On Mar 27, 2012
I have not seen Brazil but agree with most of your list except Python and Darkman.
Python is zany comedy and brilliant but I do not see the geek connection.
Darkman was meh at best for me, I would swap this with Superman 2

But how could you leave out these ones?

Alien & Aliens
Superman 2
Old School Godzilla
Old School Star Wars
Tron
Terminator 1 & 2
The greatness that is Blade Runner
Total Recall
Predator
Re: Fifteen-geek-movies-to-see-before-you-die! by Jayboy124: 11:38pm On Mar 27, 2012
Tech geeks.

Artie geeks are really quite different.
Re: Fifteen-geek-movies-to-see-before-you-die! by Nobody: 6:59am On Mar 28, 2012
Jayboy124: Tech geeks.

Artie geeks are really quite different.
_
Oh my god Tron! Aka the evolution of sci-fi!
Re: Fifteen-geek-movies-to-see-before-you-die! by Ogaga4Luv(m): 2:54pm On Mar 28, 2012
[size=13pt]Between The Avengers and Batman 3, there’s already enough on the summer 2012 movie slate to inspire geekgasms, but the addition of some highly-anticipated reboots and sequels set it up nicely against an already filled-out summer of 2011, which features a slew of big-time superhero movies geeks have been dying to see . grin[/size]
Re: Fifteen-geek-movies-to-see-before-you-die! by firestar(f): 3:20pm On Mar 28, 2012
Tron. Now that's a movie!
Keep em' coming!
Re: Fifteen-geek-movies-to-see-before-you-die! by Ogaga4Luv(m): 3:41pm On Mar 28, 2012
[size=13pt]firestar u are really on fire and a great star indeed! Tron --is one great geek movie for sure . grin . With the release of the new Tron, I've been trying to show this movie around to friends who haven't seen it so they can see the new one and be caught up. The main complaint I hear is that the film is hard to follow. cheesy cheesy[/size]

Is straight forward, point A to point B story telling where everything is handed to the viewer on a silver platter too much for people nowadays? This is the furthest thing from a film where thought is required, and yet it seems to confuse people.

firestar: Tron. Now that's a movie!
Keep em' coming!

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