Good thrillers to recommend for thriller fans

Family movies are for all audiences. But "thrillers" may be harder to determine. After all, many movies want to excite you. This does not mean that they all have life and death situations, serial killers and kidnappings.

 

Mulholland Drive
David Lynch turned a failed TV pilot into one of the most famous films of the century with "Mulholland Drive", a fanatical legend of isolation and pain on the Hollywood Hills. Naomi Watts plays Betty elms, a naive and aspiring actress who falls in love with Rita (Laura Harling), an amnesia patient who recovers from a mysterious car accident. When they seek the truth of Rita's past, they strip the ostentatious layer of the entertainment industry and reveal the terrible truth at the bottom.Again, what is the truth in David Lynch's film? The director's iconic dream logic makes muhrando always open to interpretation. Many fans of the film are still debating which parts are dreams or whether there are any parts. Whether it is the paranoid fantasy of a sad and despised lover, or the real dream in which all Hollywood lives inexplicably, or something more sinister, what we know is that Lynch must put us in his evil grasp, and you should never, ever, ever walk into the alley behind Winkie's.An interesting thriller movie.

Ripley's Game
Many of Patricia Highsmith's stories about Tom Ripley - chameleons, anti social murderers - have been adapted to the screen many times before. However, the talented Mr. Ripley portrays the anti hero as a tragic and lonely character, while Liliana Cavani's "Ripley's game" visits an older and more comfortable Ripley, played by the cunning John markovich. He has found love, he has found wealth. But when his neighbor Jonathan (doggerscott) secretly insults Ripley at the party, he cannot extricate himself... Jonathan must be destroyed.Ripley's game is demonic and cruel, but the evil pleasure of seeing Jonathan forced to murder evolved into an unlikely friendship between Ripley and his toys, if you can say so. Even the master manipulator Ripley was surprised by the progress of his latest plan... However, this feeling was inevitable. Cavani's sleek, mature games are half twisted character research, half crime thrillers, and always mean.A dark thriller movie.

Oldboy
Wu Daxiu (Cui Minzhi) was kidnapped and thrown into a locked hotel room for 15 years when he started his drunken business. He had nothing but TV company. Then, without warning, he was suddenly released back to the world and told that he had five days to find out the reason why he was originally imprisoned: if he succeeded, his captives would commit suicide; if he failed, his captives would kill the only woman who treated Wu Daxiu well.The manga adaptation directed by park Zan wook has a strange setting and a suffocating performance of desperate protagonists. Wu Dazhu's journey has taken a terrible and unusual direction. In a battle scene in the corridor, our hero only used a hammer to beat back a group of killers. This is the most famous scene in old boy, but the ending is the part that really attracts you. The old boy is the most memorable thriller movie of that year. (American remakes? Not so many.)

Runaway Jury
John Grisham's adaptation of "the fugitive jury" was released to a shrugged audience at the time of its initial release, but perhaps no other Grisham adaptation has aged so gracefully. John Cusack plays Nick Easter, a randomly selected juror in a landmark case in which the family of a mass shooting victim is suing the gun industry because they are responsible for his death. This is such an important lawsuit that the gun manufacturer asks Franklin Ritchie (Gene Hackman) to monitor and manipulate the jury to ensure that the verdict goes smoothly.But rich has his work to do: Nick and his partner Mary (Rachel Weitz) plan to manipulate the jury from within and sell the verdict to the highest bidder. Then there is a series of cunning and unpredictable reversals. The director Gary fried exposes the corruption of the legal system and the large-scale and arduous battle that any victim faces on the road to justice. Grisham's story is full of suspense and heroism - comparable to the course - but this time it is refreshing, but what is impressive is respect for the serious (and increasingly serious) problems at the heart of the trial. An impressive thriller movie.

Caché
Directed by Michael Haneke with a subtle sense of fear, the clever thriller kache raises a deeply disturbing question: if you are being monitored and judged, and you don't know who you are, what do you think they know about you? Daniel Auteuil and Juliette Binoche play a middle-aged bourgeois couple who are shocked and gradually afraid to find someone shooting in front of their home. Every day, they receive a new VHS video tape, which contains a still photo from across the street and a disturbing hand-painted image. The question of what they have done to match this strange stalker begins to break them apart.

Disturbing events are disturbing, disturbing, but hanek is not interested in the excitement that distorts our reality or tradition. Cach é allows some simple videos to completely destroy life, just let people watch them and form their own conclusions. This is a thriller about guilt and other common human emotions, but it is also a meta narrative about our collective use of the film as a Rorschach test. It reveals the characters in cach é, as well as the audience it reveals, which is disconcertingly cursed.

Death Proof
Originally released as the second half of the experimental double act called Grindhouse, it was paired with Robert Rodriguez's bizarre horror comedy planet terror, and the serial killer car chase thriller death certificate skillfully recaptured the vulgar pleasure of watching low-cost thrills in smoke - the 1970s was full of theatres. Kurt Russell plays stunt actor Mike, a despicable ex stunt performer who hates women. He likes to kill women by letting them into his car and deliberately crashing them. The driver's seat has been manipulated, which can almost "prevent death". Passenger seats... Not so many.


wan lee

43 Blog posts

Comments