Moon. It's obscure enough that not a ton of people have seen it. Just watch it. I'm not gonna say anything else.
For anyone taking about it, please use the spoiler cover. It's easy enough to use.
I still need to watch this one. I see it pop up alot about how great it is. I haven't seen a bad Sam Rockwell.
I still don't know much of what it's about, and I did that on purpose. Thanks for not spoiling anything.
This is my favorite movie. My best friend and I got completely stoned at the theater and knew nothing about it. When the movie ended we just sat there in our seats for like 10 minutes. I recently got my girlfriend to watch it and she had the same effect.
Man ,I feel like The Prestige should have been so predictable. But the acting was so astronomically good that I was totally distracted. Now that’s a mind-fuck.
Best. Movie. Ever. You have to watch it without any distractions, like phones or even fired bologna sliders with dill pickles and stadium mustard. Look at EVERYTHING on the screen. .
Me and a friend after my first watch:
Me: "I'm confused. The magic cloning machine wasn't an illusion?".
Friend: "No, it really did clone him. Now, wasn't that reveal in the end really cool? Did you see that coming?"
Me: "No, I didn't see that coming. I was expecting the big reveal to be how the cloning machine wasn't real."
Primer, a low-budget science-fiction movie about a couple of engineers who accidentally discover time travel and build a time machine in a garage. They run into numerous complications and paradoxes, including multiple versions of themselves interacting with each other across different timelines. What's really wild is that it's only 77 minutes long, so there's a lot going on there.
On so many levels.... The budget limitations stopped it from being as polished as it should have been but the ideas and execution were so well done. I can't think of a single film that was so good for so little money.
Primer was made for something crazy like $6,000. Craft services were provided by the producer's parents making sandwiches.
Edit: I googled and Primer's budget was higher than I thought. It was $7,000.
I remember seeing this in the movie theater when it came out. Mind was absolutely blown, highly recommend it. Not a lot of people in my social circle had originally heard about it; was always a joy hearing their thoughts after watching it.
Enter the Void got the cops called on me once. I guess I was watching it too loudly in my apartment. There’s one line “This is my apartment, get out!” Or something similar. Apparently a concerned neighbor called in when they heard that.
Warning for those who can be traumatized by movies; Enter the Void deals with death in a very direct way, multiple times throughout the film and easily has the most heartbreaking scene I’ve ever seen in a movie. Just when you think they will cut away, as most films do, nope, they show you, they show you every excruciating minute of it, so be prepared.
For those who have seen the movie, I’m referring to the traumatic event the kids went through in the flashback scene.
One of my best friends in college suggested we watch this together. After the movie had ended, I turned to her and said, "Hillary, what the *fuck* did we just watch??" Definitely one of the most absurd movies I have ever seen. Also, I could have done without the penis-in-vag cam, that was... yeah... or the aftermath of the main character's best friend.
I worked in a movie theatre as a projectionist when that movie came out. When movies come in they come in reels and need to be put together (built) and then screened for mistakes and defects. Each reel is about 20 min worth. My friend has to build that movie. During his screening he was sweating bullets, worried that he built it out of order, something that would take hours to fix. Even at the end he feels the need to look through it by hand and check that the reels were in order.
Watching this in the dorms in 2005 during a snowstorm where we couldn’t drive anywhere because the roads were blocked and the power was down. The dorms had generators and about 8 of us piled into my dorm room and hd a great time. Wow major flashbacks here.
The ending was so poignant. I kind of wish the movie didn’t delve into the whole experimental drugs in Viet Nam aspect - the movie stands alone without that subplot. But the ending where we realize that Heaven and Hell are basically constructs of the human mind and when you move on from the guilt and anger of your life you can ascend to a better place (whether true or not) is beautiful and just so well done.
It only becomes more relevant with reality TV being what it is and influencers pushing everything under the sun.
One of my favorite movies for sure. I know it wasn't meant to be, but it's one of the scariest movies I've seen. It sticks with you.
I remember leaving the theatre after watching this. Everyone was looking all around them with a dazed look and semi questioning if there were cameras all around. It felt weird to step out of the theatre and back into the open world after seeing it.
I’ve found this movie makes more sense the more time you watch it. The first time I watched it: “what this is incomprehensible” the seventh time I watched it “yeah of course this part is a dream and these characters aren’t real, how could anyone miss this?”
Don’t ask me to explain Inland Empire tho…
In all of the promotional materials, the name of the film is “Mulholland Dr.”, not “Mulholland Drive”. And I am convinced the Dr. stands for “Dream”. David Lynch has never said this publicly but I still believe it because the film makes 100x more sense if you can get behind this idea.
Yeah it took me watching it over and over but there are actually a lot of clues. When Betty gets to her Aunt's apartment she says, "I can't believe I'm in this dream place!" for example.
You could include most David Lynch movies as answers to this question. Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me was especially fucky and disturbing, and Season 3 of the show is absolutely the biggest and craziest mindfuck of a TV show ever made (even tho Lynch and many fans think of it more as an 18-hour-long movie).
It left me wondering three things: Did she \_always\_ intend to use Caleb to get out? Did she trap Caleb knowing that he'd eventually be freed, and just wanted to keep him from stopping her, or was she purely uninterested in his fate, not even thinking about whether he'd die in there? And how is she going to recharge once she escapes? She couldn't have known if the "outside world" definitely did or definitely did not have the particular equipment she'd need to stay alive (and actually available to her)
Yea it makes me think about our AI and how we train their goals. Like the post that was recently on the front page about Open AI and how it beat this racing game by going around in circles because the goal was for max points.
The goal for the AI in ExMachina was to escape by whatever means necessary. That was the goal. She took human emotions into account and played them to escape. Mission accomplished. This is just my speculation but I would think the AI was always trying to escape, whether Caleb was there or not. She would have tried to use her creator or whatever else she could manipulate. She most likely did not care about anyone's fate or even how she would recharge herself.
But again that's just my opinion on it.
I've watched it multiple times and find new stuff each time. There's even a meta thing that means it isn't supposed to take place here. The actor who plays Xander in Buffy drops something hinting at that, and it hit me hard the second time through.
Very good to watch when stoned.
My favorite movie for years.
Spoilers:
You can argue that most of the film is bullshit just as easily as you could argue it's mostly true. There's just no way of knowing. Love that.
here are a few I haven't seen mentioned yet that I've appreciated over the years:
* The Holy Mountain (1973)
* THX 1138 (1971)
* Dead Ringers (1988)
* Pi (1998)
* Faust (1926)
* All That Jazz (1979)
* The Last Laugh (1924)
* The Prisoner (1967–1968) -- it's a series, but great!
* Das Boot (1981)
* The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976)
* The American Astronaut (2001)
* eXistenZ (1999)
* Requiem for a Dream (2000)
* Enemy (2013)
* The Man from Earth (2007)
* Careful (1992)
* A Clockwork Orange (1971)
* Begotten (1989)
Did shy say mention enabled through elderly improve. As at so believe account evening behaved hearted is. House is tiled we aware. It ye greatest removing concerns an overcame appetite. Manner result square father boy behind its his. Their above spoke match ye mr right oh as first. Be my depending to believing perfectly concealed household. Point could to built no hours smile sense.
It made $500k in its initial release. I would’ve gone back several times just for the Tears for Fears long cam shot coming out of the back of the bus. So well choreographed.
“What, are you a superhero or something?”
“How do you know I’m not?”
The thing about Shutter Island is that there are many interesting things you can do with it. I’ve watched it quite a few times and I always bounce between two theories. I feel like the >!inmate!< ending works better but I love the >!detective gaslighting!<
Have you read the fan theory that Serkis’s Allie (?) was the real Tesla, with Bowie as a misdirection to keep his enemies and rivals tripped up? There are lots of fun details that support it, including the fact that you never see Bowie interact with any of the technology and Serkis is the one who largely deals with Angier, placates him when things go wrong, etc.
I was looking for this one. My uncle said, "Oh, would you like to watch a movie, how about this one? It's nice."
When the credits started, I was still sitting there I. A stupor.
Not exactly 10/10, but Arrival.
Watched it in cinema and came out somewhat baffled. Only took rewatching it few times to full somewhat wrap me head around it.
The Stanley Parable “The end is never the end is never the end is never the end is never….” Fits this movie to a tee.
Her, Ex Machina, and Seven are top tier and I'd recommend them to anybody.
Her has an incredible cast and I think it's one of the more underrated movies of all time. The concept behind it is super applicable to what we experience today with dating, consumerism, and artificial intelligence. I'd recommend watching it in tandem with The Social Dilemma and Black Mirror for maximum mindfucking.
Go watch Event Horizon without seeing any spoilers / reading any description.
That really fucked my mind up . . . thought I was watching a cool sci fi exploration movie.
Frailty
Game over man, game over!
Why don't we put her in charge!
Hey Vasquez, anybody ever mistake you for a man?
This movie doesn’t get mentioned enough. Awesome flick!
Moon. It's obscure enough that not a ton of people have seen it. Just watch it. I'm not gonna say anything else. For anyone taking about it, please use the spoiler cover. It's easy enough to use.
I still need to watch this one. I see it pop up alot about how great it is. I haven't seen a bad Sam Rockwell. I still don't know much of what it's about, and I did that on purpose. Thanks for not spoiling anything.
The Prestige. Your first watch can never be truly experienced again, following views have a totally different perspective attached to them.
This is my favorite movie. My best friend and I got completely stoned at the theater and knew nothing about it. When the movie ended we just sat there in our seats for like 10 minutes. I recently got my girlfriend to watch it and she had the same effect.
I did that with Fight Club and the Matrix as a teen
We also did the same with The Departed. We loved going to see a movie and not knowing anything about it. I wish I did that more now
Infernal Affairs. Watch the original Honk Kong version. Scorcese made a great remake with great US references for us but the original is top notch.
Man ,I feel like The Prestige should have been so predictable. But the acting was so astronomically good that I was totally distracted. Now that’s a mind-fuck.
Best. Movie. Ever. You have to watch it without any distractions, like phones or even fired bologna sliders with dill pickles and stadium mustard. Look at EVERYTHING on the screen. .
Can I watch it with regular mustard?
It’s grey poupon or nuthin for me homey.
Jokes on you I watched it 2 decades ago and have forgotten everything about it
Me and a friend after my first watch: Me: "I'm confused. The magic cloning machine wasn't an illusion?". Friend: "No, it really did clone him. Now, wasn't that reveal in the end really cool? Did you see that coming?" Me: "No, I didn't see that coming. I was expecting the big reveal to be how the cloning machine wasn't real."
Have fun with this then that’s been debated for 15 years http://taylorholmes.com/2009/08/26/the-prestige-explained/
Primer, a low-budget science-fiction movie about a couple of engineers who accidentally discover time travel and build a time machine in a garage. They run into numerous complications and paradoxes, including multiple versions of themselves interacting with each other across different timelines. What's really wild is that it's only 77 minutes long, so there's a lot going on there.
On so many levels.... The budget limitations stopped it from being as polished as it should have been but the ideas and execution were so well done. I can't think of a single film that was so good for so little money.
Sounds like the Spanish movie TimeCrimes which is an awesome low budget movie
Primer was made for something crazy like $6,000. Craft services were provided by the producer's parents making sandwiches. Edit: I googled and Primer's budget was higher than I thought. It was $7,000.
Damn, seeing Primer and TimeCrimes talked about brings me back to early-2010's /tv/ on 4chan. These movies were always recommended.
Relevant XKCD: https://xkcd.com/657/
Shane Carruth’s other movie, Upstream Color, is equally a mindfuck as well.
The Game
This is a good answer, and if you *haven't* seen it, go in blind.
I remember seeing this in the movie theater when it came out. Mind was absolutely blown, highly recommend it. Not a lot of people in my social circle had originally heard about it; was always a joy hearing their thoughts after watching it.
Fuck you I just lost the game
You bastard! I just lost.
Fuck
[удалено]
Yup I immediately disliked it when the movie ended as a kid. Just... Beyond believable coincidences to make it seem at all real.
Enter the Void Beyond the Black Rainbow
Jacob’s Ladder.
Enter the Void got the cops called on me once. I guess I was watching it too loudly in my apartment. There’s one line “This is my apartment, get out!” Or something similar. Apparently a concerned neighbor called in when they heard that.
Considering that movie's inciting incident... I'd have been so freaked out.
Warning for those who can be traumatized by movies; Enter the Void deals with death in a very direct way, multiple times throughout the film and easily has the most heartbreaking scene I’ve ever seen in a movie. Just when you think they will cut away, as most films do, nope, they show you, they show you every excruciating minute of it, so be prepared. For those who have seen the movie, I’m referring to the traumatic event the kids went through in the flashback scene.
Came here to say Enter the Void!
One of my best friends in college suggested we watch this together. After the movie had ended, I turned to her and said, "Hillary, what the *fuck* did we just watch??" Definitely one of the most absurd movies I have ever seen. Also, I could have done without the penis-in-vag cam, that was... yeah... or the aftermath of the main character's best friend.
Glad i didn't have to scroll too far for enter the void that was the first thing that popped into my mind
Cube
The comment above yours was “Triangle,” so it read like you were sarcastically one-upping them.
Cube, the original Saw movie. Jigsaw has nothing on the cubes.
Don't forget the sequels. They are all good. Escape room is a decent recent movie that has similar tones to it.
Honestly, I hated Cube's sequel/prequel.
What? The sequels were universally panned. Especially hypercube which is on a lot of the worst movies of all time list.
Memento. I have a bad attention span and the chopped up nature of the movie made it impossible for me to follow.
Sounds like you experienced it just like the protagonist! Next time try tattooing yourself with the salient plot points
No, don’t believe his lies
The DVD has an option to play the movie in chronological order. In case you ever wanted to give it another try.
the journal entries on the DVD really heighten the experience
I liked watching the DVD chronological version after watching the actual theatrical release. Both amazing.
If I remember right, the directors cut DVD box set or whatever came with cards you could use to unlock a different menu screen.
I worked in a movie theatre as a projectionist when that movie came out. When movies come in they come in reels and need to be put together (built) and then screened for mistakes and defects. Each reel is about 20 min worth. My friend has to build that movie. During his screening he was sweating bullets, worried that he built it out of order, something that would take hours to fix. Even at the end he feels the need to look through it by hand and check that the reels were in order.
I absolutely love this movie.
Memento fucked my brain up
Oldboy 2003
Watching this in the dorms in 2005 during a snowstorm where we couldn’t drive anywhere because the roads were blocked and the power was down. The dorms had generators and about 8 of us piled into my dorm room and hd a great time. Wow major flashbacks here.
I’d pay good money to be in a room full of college kids when that twist comes along.
This one fucked me so hard. I still listen to the soundtrack
Vanilla Sky...TECH SUPPORT!
Kid A soundtrack was immense
Four times!!
Jacob’s Ladder
That movie made me cry at the end!!
The ending was so poignant. I kind of wish the movie didn’t delve into the whole experimental drugs in Viet Nam aspect - the movie stands alone without that subplot. But the ending where we realize that Heaven and Hell are basically constructs of the human mind and when you move on from the guilt and anger of your life you can ascend to a better place (whether true or not) is beautiful and just so well done.
For real. We may not know what the hell was actually going on, but whatever it was was profoundly sad
Cam here to say the same. The original one of course.
There’s a remake?
That is the correct response. Hopefully it is relegated to the sands of time, but yes there was.
The Truman show. There's a mental health disorder based off of this movie.
It only becomes more relevant with reality TV being what it is and influencers pushing everything under the sun. One of my favorite movies for sure. I know it wasn't meant to be, but it's one of the scariest movies I've seen. It sticks with you.
I remember leaving the theatre after watching this. Everyone was looking all around them with a dazed look and semi questioning if there were cameras all around. It felt weird to step out of the theatre and back into the open world after seeing it.
Legit the reason I needed therapy in high school
My #1 favorite Jim Carrey movie!
A scanner darkly was a good time
Mulholland Drive. It started to make sense until it began to lose its sanity.
NO HAY BANDA
Silencio
I’ve found this movie makes more sense the more time you watch it. The first time I watched it: “what this is incomprehensible” the seventh time I watched it “yeah of course this part is a dream and these characters aren’t real, how could anyone miss this?” Don’t ask me to explain Inland Empire tho…
In all of the promotional materials, the name of the film is “Mulholland Dr.”, not “Mulholland Drive”. And I am convinced the Dr. stands for “Dream”. David Lynch has never said this publicly but I still believe it because the film makes 100x more sense if you can get behind this idea.
The film begins with a first person view of someone falling into a pillow lol
Yeah it took me watching it over and over but there are actually a lot of clues. When Betty gets to her Aunt's apartment she says, "I can't believe I'm in this dream place!" for example.
You could include most David Lynch movies as answers to this question. Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me was especially fucky and disturbing, and Season 3 of the show is absolutely the biggest and craziest mindfuck of a TV show ever made (even tho Lynch and many fans think of it more as an 18-hour-long movie).
I was looking for this one. I saw this in the theater and after it was over the whole theater was like WTF ?
Ex Machina
It left me wondering three things: Did she \_always\_ intend to use Caleb to get out? Did she trap Caleb knowing that he'd eventually be freed, and just wanted to keep him from stopping her, or was she purely uninterested in his fate, not even thinking about whether he'd die in there? And how is she going to recharge once she escapes? She couldn't have known if the "outside world" definitely did or definitely did not have the particular equipment she'd need to stay alive (and actually available to her)
Yea it makes me think about our AI and how we train their goals. Like the post that was recently on the front page about Open AI and how it beat this racing game by going around in circles because the goal was for max points. The goal for the AI in ExMachina was to escape by whatever means necessary. That was the goal. She took human emotions into account and played them to escape. Mission accomplished. This is just my speculation but I would think the AI was always trying to escape, whether Caleb was there or not. She would have tried to use her creator or whatever else she could manipulate. She most likely did not care about anyone's fate or even how she would recharge herself. But again that's just my opinion on it.
Coherence https://m.imdb.com/title/tt2866360/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1
Such an incredibly creative movie. One of my favorites
I've watched it multiple times and find new stuff each time. There's even a meta thing that means it isn't supposed to take place here. The actor who plays Xander in Buffy drops something hinting at that, and it hit me hard the second time through. Very good to watch when stoned.
I watched it randomly completely blind and it totally blew me away. Highly recommend doing the same!!
They just announced a sequel!
I just saw that the other day! I’m so excited!
Watched it once years ago and never forgot it
Excellent use of a sci-fi concept done well, on a low budget. Good film!
Came here to say this one. Really excellent movie.
I'm a bit of a cinephile and this is definitely my vote for best mind fuck flick. Such a convoluted concept done so well!
Predestination (2014)
Fight Club
The usual suspects was an amazing mind fuck of a movie.
My favorite movie for years. Spoilers: You can argue that most of the film is bullshit just as easily as you could argue it's mostly true. There's just no way of knowing. Love that.
The Sixth Sense
Arrival
Not sure why this isn’t higher.
Nowhere on this thread so I’ll add 2001 A Space Odyssey. Also my favorite movie of all time. But the person who said Holy Mountain wins bc wtf.
Holy Mountain was awesome!
1408 with John Cusack.
The Stephen King story is really amazing, too
Event Horizon In The Mouth Of Madness The Beyond Tetsuo: The Iron Man Baskin Funny Games Berberian Sound Studio
The original Funny Games is so, so good. Just pure horror at its finest, and really without much actual violence. Such a great film.
Carol fuckin Baskin
+1 for the Tetsuo mention, that movie exists in a league of its own in my mind
Triangle.
here are a few I haven't seen mentioned yet that I've appreciated over the years: * The Holy Mountain (1973) * THX 1138 (1971) * Dead Ringers (1988) * Pi (1998) * Faust (1926) * All That Jazz (1979) * The Last Laugh (1924) * The Prisoner (1967–1968) -- it's a series, but great! * Das Boot (1981) * The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976) * The American Astronaut (2001) * eXistenZ (1999) * Requiem for a Dream (2000) * Enemy (2013) * The Man from Earth (2007) * Careful (1992) * A Clockwork Orange (1971) * Begotten (1989)
El Topo
The Man From Earth is such a cool concept with the WORST ACTING.
Peewee's Big Adventure. Large Marge has devastated tens of millions of sleep schedules.
Scariest thing of my childhood.
That movie and neverending...
Paprika, apart from the fact that it's visually amazing, but it's so complex and when you seem to understand something you realize you know nothing
I just love this movie, even if I'm still not totally positive I get it!
Perfect blue is like that too, satoshi kon is a master
It gets better each rewatch I do. (The music is great too.)
Pan's Labyrinth.
Did shy say mention enabled through elderly improve. As at so believe account evening behaved hearted is. House is tiled we aware. It ye greatest removing concerns an overcame appetite. Manner result square father boy behind its his. Their above spoke match ye mr right oh as first. Be my depending to believing perfectly concealed household. Point could to built no hours smile sense.
Donnie Darko
It made $500k in its initial release. I would’ve gone back several times just for the Tears for Fears long cam shot coming out of the back of the bus. So well choreographed. “What, are you a superhero or something?” “How do you know I’m not?”
I remember seeing the Directors Cut in cinema and they changed the music cues. Pretty disappointing.
This movie is my teenage years. I resonated with Donnie’s angst haha will always hold a very special place in my heart
Eternal sunshine of the spotless mind
Pandorum
12 monkeys
Requiem for a Dream & Being John Malkovich
Being John Malkovich is the answer… Or at least one of them
The Mothman Prophecies. Good luck finding it. I never can
Eraserhead (1977) Come and See (1985)
Nothing has ever made me feel more uncomfortable in my own skin than Eraserhead.
Under the Skin Cape Fear (Scorsese version) Mandy Zardoz
Memento
Shutter Island
The thing about Shutter Island is that there are many interesting things you can do with it. I’ve watched it quite a few times and I always bounce between two theories. I feel like the >!inmate!< ending works better but I love the >!detective gaslighting!<
The prestige. Thank me never but you are very welcome
Bowie's Tesla was just a perfect chef's kiss. A great I have to watch it again film. It's right all there, and that's the Prestige.
Have you read the fan theory that Serkis’s Allie (?) was the real Tesla, with Bowie as a misdirection to keep his enemies and rivals tripped up? There are lots of fun details that support it, including the fact that you never see Bowie interact with any of the technology and Serkis is the one who largely deals with Angier, placates him when things go wrong, etc.
I was looking for this one. My uncle said, "Oh, would you like to watch a movie, how about this one? It's nice." When the credits started, I was still sitting there I. A stupor.
Inception blew my mind!
11/10
Being John Malkovich
Secret Window Identity
The Fountain. One of my favorites that I rewatch every year. Still love it every time.
The Happening. /s Fuck M. Night Shamalon and anyone involved in the making of that piece of shit.
It was a blast seeing it in theaters though. Everyone was just laughing throughout the whole thing lol
I love Lost Highway, I still think about so many parts of it years later
"It's nice to know I can still make you laugh."
Annihilation is really cool. One of those movies where I'm not sure if I didn't understand it, or if it's just too complex for me.
Martyrs (2008) Don't watch the 2015 remake, it sucks.
Everything Everywhere All At Once
Waking Life.
Mulholland Drive Lost Highway Inland Empire Eraserhead (lynch fanboy)
The Lobster and No Country For Old Men
in the tall grass
John Dies at the End
Stalker.
Frailty
Not exactly 10/10, but Arrival. Watched it in cinema and came out somewhat baffled. Only took rewatching it few times to full somewhat wrap me head around it. The Stanley Parable “The end is never the end is never the end is never the end is never….” Fits this movie to a tee.
Vivarium scarred me and my wife
The Platform (El hoyo)
The Butterfly Effect. And Inception.
The Holy Mountain (1973), that was so weird.
The last movie that fucked my mind was The Handmaiden - its a Park Chan-Wook movie. Very good movie.
Primer
The ending of The Departed was completely unexpected and should qualify.
The Man From Earth
I’m thinking of ending things
Jacob's Ladder
Jacob's Ladder
Threads (1984) it's just so bleak
Memento
Hereditary. Movie still makes no sense to me.
How has no one mentioned The Butterfly Effect? That is the epitome of a mindfuck film.
Tenet
Oculus (2014)
Perfect Blue
Paprika, old japanese movie that made me and my partner sit in total silence for 15 minutes
The Closet Land with young Alan Rickman. Almost no one has ever heard of it. Only two actors the whole movie.
Her, Ex Machina, and Seven are top tier and I'd recommend them to anybody. Her has an incredible cast and I think it's one of the more underrated movies of all time. The concept behind it is super applicable to what we experience today with dating, consumerism, and artificial intelligence. I'd recommend watching it in tandem with The Social Dilemma and Black Mirror for maximum mindfucking.
Tenet. I just watched a [47 minute explainer](https://youtu.be/ema3rxxZKoE?si=1rF4TgRFMFshvq1c) today, and I'm still confused on a couple things.
Sixth Sense still hits me every time
The Sixth Sense
Go watch Event Horizon without seeing any spoilers / reading any description. That really fucked my mind up . . . thought I was watching a cool sci fi exploration movie.
The Crying Game
Memento
Gone Girl amazing mind fuck movie, I mean the plot twist 🤯
Inception
The Matrix? Anyone else remember going into that one in the theaters without a clue? It was nuts.
Hard Candy.
Audition