ideas for a cheer m...
 

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[Closed] ideas for a cheer me up film please.

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 ton
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at home ill. need to watch something to cheer me up.

ideas please


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 12:43 pm
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hunt for the wilderpeople


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 12:52 pm
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National Lampoons European vacation


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 12:54 pm
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+1 for hunt for the wilderpeople


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 12:58 pm
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Princess Bride

Top Secret

Team America


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:00 pm
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TED

EDIT : Good call on The Princess Bride


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:00 pm
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I think Animal house was the best national lampoons film but either would do.
My wife got me one of those bucket list posters for films and one i quite enjoyed was The grand Budapest hotel a total farce but i enjoyed it way more yhan i thought i would.
If youll watch kids stuff theres the likes of wreck it ralf
Amelie is also a good film and is our youngests name.


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:01 pm
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Airplane


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:02 pm
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Amelie
Oh, and Young Frankenstien .


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:02 pm
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This is life-affirmingly wonderful, and really puts things in perspective when you're feeling a bit meh.

Its also just a bloody brilliant film


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:04 pm
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Wim Wenders' Until the End of the World


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:07 pm
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Team America is a good shout. Fun if crude.

I love Scott Pilgrim vs the World. Mostly for nerds, but if you give it some slack to begin with you might like it too.

I rewatched Holy Grail the other day - it’s great, and familiar too. Lots of quotable stuff, if it’s your thing.


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:08 pm
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Planes, Trains & Automobiles. One of my all-time faves 🙂


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:09 pm
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Dodgeball !!


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:21 pm
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+1 for Dodgeball. Hot Fuzz is my current go-to cheerying film, honourable mention for A Million Ways To Die In The West, top-class comedy gross. 🙂


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:24 pm
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If I was in the 'ill at home' situation I wouldn't be aiming to be cheered up I'd just be aiming for some of my favourite classics that I enjoy and would make me then feel better because of it. So for that reason

Forest Gump
Nottinghill
Harry Potter 3 - onwards


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:25 pm
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The Way Way back.


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:26 pm
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Airplane


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:28 pm
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Withnail and I


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:28 pm
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Princess Bride if you have not seen it 🙂


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:30 pm
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Scott Pilgrim vs the World

Good call!


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:31 pm
 marp
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+1 for hunt for the wilder people and The Way Way back

Of the same ilk - little miss sunshine


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:33 pm
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+1 for hunt for the wilderpeople

I opened the thread to recommend this too.


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:39 pm
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Back to the Future 1.

Anything by Wes Anderson, But Moonrise Kingdom for a happy ending.

National Treasure 1&2 (normally on constant replay on Sky)


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:43 pm
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Free Fire. I thought it was a hoot, and you'll never hear Annie's Song again without thinking of THAT scene.


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:45 pm
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The Secret Life of Walter Mitty
Princess Bride
Stardust
Ferris Bueller's Day Off
Desperado


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:48 pm
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Hot Fuzz
Shaun of the dead
Back to the future
Goonies


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:54 pm
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Posted : 09/04/2019 1:55 pm
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Tucker & Dale vs Evil
Bill & Ted!


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 1:55 pm
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It happened one night.
Top Hat.
The apartment.


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 2:19 pm
 DezB
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The Incredibles! The Incredibles 2 !


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 2:32 pm
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Ignore Wilderpeople and go for What We Do In The Shadows.

+1 for Top Hat and Tucker&Dale. Of late I really enjoyed Monuments Men after finally seeing it. Oh, and Ocean's 8 was good enough chewing gum for the brain.


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 2:41 pm
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Nearly forgot: Young Frankenstein.


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 2:42 pm
 IHN
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Sunshine on Leith.

Don't let the fact that it's a musical set to the songs of The Proclaimers put you off, it's chuffingly cheeringly brilliant.

Or, on a cycling theme, Breaking Away.


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 2:48 pm
 ton
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just watched Princess bride.
very good and funny.
always wondered who Inigo montoya was............ ;o)


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 2:51 pm
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Blazing Saddles.
Or The Big Lebowski.
...and seconded on What we do in the shadows. Genius movie 😆


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 3:01 pm
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I remember belly laughing out loud, with my headphones on, sitting on business class watching the film Knocked Up.

It was pretty funny, just made me chuckle. Same for the Ugly Truth

Simple humour, simple plot, an easy and enjoyable watch

Is it wrong that I also enjoyed the Baywatch movie recently?


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 3:07 pm
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The Secret Life of Walter Mitty

Great shout, I’m going to watch that again tomorrow.


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 3:12 pm
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The Blues Brothers - original only; not the shonky re-make.
Mars Attacks!
Oil City Confidential - following on from Binners^^^
Spinal Tap.
O Brother where art thou?
Burn before reading.

Get well soon.


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 3:17 pm
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A Knight's Tale. 🙂


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 3:22 pm
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Little Miss Sunshine.


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 3:26 pm
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Old School
Snatch
Lock Stock
Maybe some American Pie


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 3:40 pm
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Twin town (if you don't mind a bit/lot of swearing)


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 3:47 pm
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Several +1s for The Way Way Back, Little Miss Sunshine and Twin Town.


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 4:04 pm
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Kingpin.


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 4:43 pm
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Young Frankenstein
Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid
My Neighbor Totoro
Kiki’s Delivery Service
Belleville Rendez-vous
Porko Rosso


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 10:18 pm
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Some like it hot.


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 10:24 pm
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Big lebowski, greatest film ever.


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 10:34 pm
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Operation Petticoat with carry grant if you fancy something easy to watch.

Perfect for falling asleep on th sofa to.


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 10:35 pm
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Ton, it's not a film - but Tokyo: Midnight Diner cheered me up after work a lot. It's uplifting in a slow, sentimental way.

https://www.theverge.com/2017/4/6/15202004/midnight-diner-tokyo-stories-netflix-japan-terrace-house

Terrace House has become Netflix Japan's breakout international hit — and with good reason — but for my money it runs second place to another of the streaming service's Japanese shows. Midnight Diner: Tokyo Stories follows the owner and clientele of a tiny Tokyo restaurant, telling short, touching stories of family, friendship, and humanity in the heart of urban sprawl.

Like Terrace House, Midnight Diner had a life before Netflix, existing as a manga, a TV drama, and a movie before the streaming company bought the rights as part of its Japanese expansion. But that doesn't mean you'll need to bone up on years of back story to dial into the new series.

The salient facts are simple: the owner of the diner, known to his customers as "Master," only opens his restaurant from midnight to 7AM, and serves a revolving cast of diner customers, both regulars and visitors. Master serves only pork miso soup as standard, but will make anything his customers ask for — assuming he has the ingredients at hand. Each episode is loosely based around these dishes, but despite the lingering cooking shots and neatly presented dishes, it's not a foodie show.

Instead, each meal is a springboard for stories that deal with the customers' various problems. They're heavy issues, too. The acceptance of international marriages, familial piety, the stresses of parenthood, the regret of wasted lives, the panic of a porn collection being found after death — all are focuses of the show’s short episodes.

The people they happen to are drawn in broad strokes. Some are lifted straight from anime or Japanese TV dramas, the kind of stereotypes defined by their jobs, their age, or their gender. There are occasional visits from porn-obsessed college students, hyper-aggressive gigolos, overly doting mother figures, waster fathers, and supremely shy young women. Others are more nuanced, like adult movie star “Erect” Oki, who radiates calm confidence, and a young real estate agent who flips traditional gender norms to learn how to knit.

A handful of characters make more regular appearances, including cherubic old man Chu-chan — whose flat-brimmed baseball cap seems glued to his head — and a trio of gossipy women who offer their opinion in every situation. These characters seem to exist as manifestations of the room itself. Chu-chan, in particular, might as well be a Yokai: one of the countless supernatural figures from Japanese folklore. Having spent three years of my own life living on the edges of a small Japanese city, I swear I’ve seen him in real life, waving cheerily as he passes on his bike or propping up the corner of a local izakaya.

THE MASTER IS A DETACHED PRESENCE
Above all of these characters is Master. He's a detached presence most of the time, content to sit in the back of the diner and smoke as his customers chat, bicker, and laugh among themselves. When he does step in, it's usually with a piece of sage advice, his calming voice soothing arguments and helping people see sense.

Master intersects with his customers' lives briefly, catching specific moments while they eat and let their guard down. The show takes us a little further, giving us glimpses into their daily routines, but it's not much more. The rest is instead left for the viewer to fill in, to imagine what characters were doing before they arrived at the diner, where they go after, and how they live. This is how Midnight Diner deploys its most powerful storytelling tool: the sense of place.

Shinjuku is one of Tokyo’s busiest districts. It’s the kind of place you might think about when you think about modern Japan: a dense, bright, and noisy warren of bars, electronics stores, and infamous robot restaurants, where vast LCD screens scream advertisements and offers from the side of every building. It's also the district the Midnight Diner calls home, supposedly tucked away in a back street mystically separated from the din of the pachinko parlors and traffic.

Such oases of silence do exist in Shinjuku, but everything about the area around the diner suggests this is something different, something otherworldly. Locals sit out on the street together and share peppery black cider, an idyllic summer scene playing out in the midst of the city, while street sellers hawk squawking wind-up toys. It's like nostalgia brought to life — an effect amplified by the half-light of early morning, which coats diner scenes in a weird haze. Major story beats, on the other hand, like fights, chance meetings, or climactic mahjong games, almost invariably happen outside in the cold light of day.

When the floating green ghost of a patron’s mother appears outside of the diner, demanding to be let in, it almost feels normal. The message is clear: the square, and the diner, are spaces outside of reality.

A WAILING GREEN GHOST TRIES TO GET INTO THE DINER
It's a place where everyone bows to the Master, and everyone is hungry — where porn star and physicist, famous actor and failed talent sit and eat beside each other. Customers who step into the diner are stepping out of the physical plane, and into their own heads, like a slightly seedy reimagining of Pixar's Inside Out. The bar's regulars play the parts of visitors' personalities, chiding and congratulating them for their decisions and actions, while the Master acts as the arbiter of common sense, stepping out to provide wisdom only when entirely necessary.

The Master himself is less a man, more an anthropomorphic conscience, his wicked scar and soothing voice suggesting he's already learned all there is to know about life. While other patrons come and go, grow up and die, it feels like the Master will endure forever, operating his tiny diner on geological time. He doesn't pry for gossip, doesn't press decisions on people, doesn't hurry through life. He languorously smokes cigarettes on his tiny balcony instead, waiting for midnight to come, and his shift to start.

Unlike Terrace House, his customers aren't aspiring models and actors. They're love-hotel maids, escorts, gamblers, and bums, people who get overlooked in the noisiest corner of a city of tens of millions. Midnight Diner's powerful sense of place makes the restaurant feel like Shinjuku's own reflex response to these forgotten people, giving them a place to escape from their tough lives, and a patient ear to hear their stories.

https://www.theverge.com/2017/4/6/15202004/midnight-diner-tokyo-stories-netflix-japan-terrace-house


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 10:41 pm
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Hunt for the Wilderpeople
Brassed off
Purely Belter
Blues Brothers (original)


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 10:42 pm
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Brassed off

Good choice!

The Full Monty.
Despicable Me - and not forgetting the delightful Minions.


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 10:59 pm
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The Commitments


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 11:04 pm
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+1 for Totoro, Spirited Away, Ponyo and anything by studio Ghibli should keep you going for the rest of the week


 
Posted : 09/04/2019 11:25 pm
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Sightseers

Let's face it, you can't beat a good caravan holiday!


 
Posted : 10/04/2019 12:08 am
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Love, honour & obey.


 
Posted : 10/04/2019 12:20 am
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Peewee Herman's Big Adventure

The greatest movie ever about a bike, one of the best movies ever made, and possibly the only film by Tim Burton worth watching.


 
Posted : 10/04/2019 12:39 am
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Any Studio Ghibli movie.


 
Posted : 10/04/2019 9:08 am
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Nearly forgot: Young Frankenstein.

It's Fronkensteen!


 
Posted : 10/04/2019 9:15 am
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Just remembered, The World's fastest Indian. Brilliant feel good film.


 
Posted : 10/04/2019 9:18 am
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I'd suggest Blazing Saddles rather than Young Frankenstein though.


 
Posted : 10/04/2019 9:21 am
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Eddie The Eagle


 
Posted : 10/04/2019 9:56 am
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Best in show
The 40 year old virgin


 
Posted : 10/04/2019 10:04 am
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Crocodile Dundee, 1 or 2.


 
Posted : 10/04/2019 10:07 am
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Monty Python films are on netflix


 
Posted : 10/04/2019 10:26 am
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Swimming with Men


 
Posted : 10/04/2019 10:40 am
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'The Worlds Fastest Indian'. one of the most uplifting films i have ever seen!


 
Posted : 10/04/2019 1:34 pm
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#Thread killer

Paddington


 
Posted : 10/04/2019 1:42 pm
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Cool Runnings
Uncle Buck


 
Posted : 10/04/2019 1:54 pm
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Posted : 10/04/2019 2:24 pm
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Good shout there, and Dirty Rotten Scoundrels - one of my all-time fave comedies.

#Thread killer

Paddington

I'd beg to differ. It was alright but a bit smug. Love Sally Hawkins though.


 
Posted : 10/04/2019 3:19 pm
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Lego Movie!


 
Posted : 10/04/2019 4:04 pm
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and anything by studio Ghibli should keep you going for the rest of the week

No, not anything.
Grave Of The Fireflies is not a film you want to watch if you need something cheerful.
I’ve watched a lot of Studio Ghibli films; I won’t watch that one.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grave_of_the_Fireflies


 
Posted : 10/04/2019 10:13 pm
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Yea Grave of the Fireflies is punishing, see also Waltz With Bashir, tho actually, still not as grim as fireflies!

for a genuine smile bringer


 
Posted : 10/04/2019 10:32 pm
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A Knights Tale.


 
Posted : 10/04/2019 10:34 pm
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Watched Eddie the Eagle last night. Well worth a watch.

Lion (also on Netflix). Incredible story.

Padddleton is a happy film but will have you on tears.


 
Posted : 10/04/2019 10:49 pm
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When you get bored of normal films, look up Hooks on you tube. Well worth a view.


 
Posted : 11/04/2019 9:47 am
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Sightseers is a great call! Top film

In a very similar dark comedy vein, one of those Great films that went under the radar - God Bless America. Its bloody brilliant! You can't beat a good, old-fashioned killing spree to cheer you up, surely? 😀 One of my all-time favourite films


 
Posted : 11/04/2019 9:56 am
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That video from a thread on here about the Scottish guy cycling around the world with a cat that adopted him 🤗


 
Posted : 11/04/2019 10:22 am
 MSP
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agree on "God Bless America", also a film with lots of comedy killing and a great 80's soundtrack "grosse point blank" and then to keep the hitman vibe going "In Bruges".


 
Posted : 11/04/2019 10:38 am
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