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A mediocre action film, but a very underrated satire that becomes more and more prophetic with each passing year.
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This might be my favorite Sylvester Stallone movie after Rocky's II, III and IV. this movie ust works really well.
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Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
Get drunk and watch this movie. It's the best, there's no way they would have survived that blast at the beginning.
Two shots down. Let watch this. BTW, it's on AMC is it really a classic? |
Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
Its probably about 20 years old. I'm sure it isn't the youngest movie they have played.
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Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
21 years old, and terrible! 1993.
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Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
I vote "guilty pleasure."
I think it is the only Stallone movie I like. |
Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
21 years old! Holy shit I'm old...
Love this movie. |
Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
According to Wikipedia it only cost 56 million to make made 150 million, I wonder why there was never a sequel.
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Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
Originally Posted by PenguinJoe
(Post 12021906)
Get drunk and watch this movie. It's the best, there's no way they would have survived that blast at the beginning.
Two shots down. Let watch this. BTW, it's on AMC is it really a classic? TLC does not stand for The Learning Channel. A&E doesn't stand for Arts and Entertainment. KFC does not stand for Kentucky Fried Chicken. |
Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
Originally Posted by PenguinJoe
(Post 12022023)
According to Wikipedia it only cost 56 million to make made 150 million, I wonder why there was never a sequel.
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Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
So 100 million worldwide? That's better than Tomb Raider.
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Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
Originally Posted by PenguinJoe
(Post 12022033)
So 100 million worldwide? That's better than Tomb Raider.
I have the French Blu-ray import. Saw this in theaters, too. Always enjoyed it. Director Marco Brambilla is the one who had the peculiar directing career. I only remember him doing this and that one with Alicia Silverstone and Benicio del Toro called Excess Baggage, which bombed. |
Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
Originally Posted by PenguinJoe
(Post 12022033)
So 100 million worldwide? That's better than Tomb Raider.
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Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
Originally Posted by Count Dooku
(Post 12022067)
No, it is not. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=tombraider.htm
About 90 million is more than 15 million isn't it? EDIT: NM, I'm only looking at domestic gross. |
Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
I love this movie but the one thing that always bugged me was that the whole thing takes place in the utopia of "San Angeles" but that's still presumably in the United States. It would have to be completely isolated from the rest of the world (and for a much longer period of time) for everyone to forget so much about everything, to be shocked by murder, to have no old cars anymore, etc. It's never said the whole country is following Cocteau's plan.
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Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
Try not to think too hard on the details. Like Cocteau agrees to let more criminals out to "help" Simon when Cocteau hadn't programmed any of them with an inhibition to harming him like he did with Simon. For such a so called mastermind that was pretty stupid.
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Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
Originally Posted by PenguinJoe
(Post 12022023)
According to Wikipedia it only cost 56 million to make made 150 million, I wonder why there was never a sequel.
First, Hollywood's perception of the value of foreign box office changed markedly from the 90s to the 2000s. This idea may seem odd because money is money no matter where the dollars come from, but it is true. Second, a Demolition Man franchise would have been dependent on Stallone's appeal to moviegoers. If you look at the numbers for his films from 93-96 you see a continuous and steady decline in his popularity as an action star. Also a DM sequel would have needed Sandra Bullock to return, and after Speed in 94, she was playing the lead in her own movies. Tomb Raider was Angelina Jolie's first movie as the singular headliner, and she was still considered a global star on the rise. Third, despite DM's ability to make money in foreign markets, it's primary appeal is to American audiences and it did not appeal to them so well. Despite the action movie beats, DM is also a commentary on action movie cliches and a satire of politically correct culture. Tomb Raider is the story of a sexy and buxom woman who travels the world getting into fights, shoot-outs, and car chases. That's a universal movie language that any audience can understand. |
Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
Originally Posted by McHawkson
(Post 9168469)
There's one nude scene where Sly entered his newly "dorm" and some lady appeared on screen in topless.
Actually no. There is a second nude scene. Play her “sex” scene with her and Stallone in their sex helmets. You will catch a couple nude body shots in with the flashes of bullocks face. She supposedly had a body double. |
Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
Nice to hear I'm not the only one that got a soft spot for Demolition Man.
I just bought the blu-ray for $6 from Best Buy. |
Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
I was a fan of Stallone and Schwarzenegger films as a kid, but I stopped liking their action films when they became too funny or tongue-in-cheek.
How do you go from Terminator 2: Judgment Day to Last Action Hero? I initially viewed Demolition Man the same way. But it turned out to be one of the better action films from the 90s and definitely a highlight in Stallone's career. Wesley Snipes was great as Simon Phoenix. Bullock was adorable. And the visual design of the future was pretty good. Even the title was great, and seemed destined to be a franchise. Oh well.
Originally Posted by Cout Dooku
Despite the action movie beats, DM is also a commentary on action movie cliches and a satire of politically correct culture.
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Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
I remember getting a special Demolition Man cup from Taco Bell back in 1993 and thought it was a big deal.
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Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
I just did a re watch (on Hulu) after quite a few years had passed since I last saw the film on home video/cable (and I of course saw it in theaters) and it is a much better film than I remembered it to be with a crazy adorable Sandra Bullock and some action set-pieces that are shockingly well put together (the scene in the museum when Simon goes looking for weapons is a great set-piece).
It is great looking in HD, has lots of action, some humor, and a stellar cast...if this got the UHD treatment it would go on my shortlist of catalog titles worth picking up. |
Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
Damn, another multi-year thread bump by a newbie with only one post (so far)! What's going on here?! It's an epidemic.
(The thread began in 2004 and got bumped at five-year intervals. The newbie should have waited a year.) |
Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
Originally Posted by Sonic
(Post 13359842)
Nice to hear I'm not the only one that got a soft spot for Demolition Man.
I just bought the blu-ray for $6 from Best Buy. |
Re: Demolition Man questions and comments
I love DM and would scoff at inevitable rebootoot...
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