(Movie Reviews--My Favorite Movies)
As I mentioned in the video, this is a rewatch. But this is the first time I'm reviewing it on this blog, so according to my new rules, I'm doing this as a video only review.
Related Playlists:
* Movie Reviews Playlist: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLOY-0V_l_9x6N06WoIoV2fLb6xRYrepTk&si=iWMhXdwlxxKxm6r6
* My Favorite Movies List: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLOY-0V_l_9x5FrM-RfWQKzIagh6rQjXfG&si=kHLlZniqby0QBgjc
* Movies that I Watched in 2026: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLOY-0V_l_9x4MSFWzU5IicG0H3orcJ1tV&si=7Xu-ASHaL36-7DER
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ReplyDeleteI for one never mind white savior stuff (watched Jones and Lawrence of Arabia, they are comfortable to watch). I mind characters/IRL people acting arrogant, bestowing.
ReplyDeleteMale relative of mine called the Indiana Jones series lame "despite telling pretty exciting plots of it" (my sister's words). I liked it - although minus the 4th movie with the Soviets. This is the iconic Harrison Ford movies series for me (for which reason it just seems unsuitable to see him as Han Solo personally).
How restrictions work in cultures are funny. This side of the earth tends to be tolerant of these stuff, to the point of allowing children to watch literal gores. Adult stuff is a no-no for children of course, but it's only an "oops" moment if the DVDs accidentally had that stuff (nobody goes out of their way to check if the movies are apt for the kids).
...but when it comes to important life choices (what to learn, where you are supposed to go to study, what careers you are allowed to pick, etc.), then suddenly checks and balances just spring up.
I agree it's funny how the restrictions are different in different cultures. When I lived in Japan, Japanese society struck me as much more permissive than my American upbringing--at least in terms of media consumption. But what was funny was that most Japanese had an image of America media as being much more permissive.
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