Matt Epp

Matt Epp Pro

Kept a personal list of movies I'd seen on my phone since 2015. Now I can broadcast my list with strangers on the internet.

Favorite films

  • The Silence of the Lambs
  • The Wizard of Oz
  • The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover
  • Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon

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  • Ghidorah, the Three-Headed Monster

    ★★½

  • Spring Breakers

    ★★★

  • Mickey 17

    ★★★½

  • The Electric State

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  • Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters

    Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters

    ★★★★★

    “Can art and action still be united?”

    A testament to what the medium of film can create. One of the most original biopics I’ve ever encountered, fusing the history of a man’s entire extraordinary life with surreal recreations of his own art. I’m legitimately stunned after watching this.

  • The Marsh King's Daughter

    The Marsh King's Daughter

    ★★½

    Someone has to go to the cineplex and make sure the posters hanging in the lobby are for actual movies that were made.

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  • Ghidorah, the Three-Headed Monster

    Ghidorah, the Three-Headed Monster

    ★★½

    More monsters means the subplots had to get more outlandish as well. Princess assassination attempts and psychics from Venus. Go off.

  • Spring Breakers

    Spring Breakers

    ★★★

    Truly terrible and incredible. Spring Breakers forever. 

    The Britney Spears sequence is lowkey iconic.

    Screening note: another IMAX re-release that did not utilize the IMAX ratio for one frame.

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  • The Electric State

    The Electric State

    Who is more dedicated to the death of cinema: Ted Sarandos or the Russos? Welp, together they could be dangerous.

    $320M spent and not one head of hair looked reasonable.

  • The Brutalist

    The Brutalist

    ★★★★½

    “Nothing is of its own explanation. Is there a better description of a cube than that of its construction?”

    Add this to the compendium of grandiose films about a distinct industry that are ultimately a metaphor for America. Plenty more to say here about arts’/artists’ servitude to Capitalism and the cost of authenticity.

    Hell of a looking picture. VistaVision is supreme. And you could have fooled me with the number on that runtime.