㆗roku㆙ Free Online The Goonies (1985) Movie To Watch Now


8,6 of 10 star. Star=Sean Astin. director=Richard Donner. writed by=Steven Spielberg. release date=1985. USA

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This is a film i always used to watch when i was little and from time to time i still watch it and it never looses steam.
this film has an adventure type feel to it that i really love, and this film i very very funny and the jokes never get old to me and always makes me laugh. the characters in this film are brilliant and work extremely well together and it leads to some really funny moments.
i don't want to give away what they are doing because it will make the film more exciting and let you discover things more.
overall this movie is a funny adventurous journey and once you see it you will never stop watching it.

Gunisi kizlari 6 fragman. Gunisi ceo film. Gunisi kizlari 8 fragman 1. As a kid, I saw this one at the theater. As a kid it is a really fun and funny action ride. A bunch of kids getting together find a map in the attic of one of the kids and they decide to see what they can find. Meanwhile, some criminals are loose and they find out about the map as well later on as their hideout is the starting point. A very good movie for kids, but it is just ok for adults, though it is a lot more watchable for adults than most of the kid oriented movies these days. Though there are a few instances that may be to dark for the smaller tykes out there as there are a couple of dead bodies here and there. Looking back at this movie, one thing is interesting. When seeing this movie as a kid, it seemed like their adventure was really long and they were underground a bunch. When I saw it later again, they really weren't in the underground chamber all that long. One thing though I would like to see is the octopus scene that was cut out of the movie, but the one kid refers to at the end (when the kid refers to it should have been cut out as well.

Gunisi trailer. Gunisi kizlari 38 fragman. And it's a fitting coincidence that it stars Ke Huy Quan, the kid who loved Indy one year before, and Corey Feldman who didn't want to be called crazy, the year after.
But it's not just a matter of chronology, The Goonies" marks a climactic point in the 80's with all the craze for youth-oriented escapism and more-or-less comedic adventure movies, released the year of "Back to the Future" and when Steven Spielberg and Chris Columbus combined their talents again to make "Young Sherlock Holmes. I just watched this film a few days ago and looking at "The Goonies" again, I was thinking of that moment where Watson and Holmes are about to ride a sort of flying bicycle for the first time, a scared Watson asks "where have I gotten myself into? to which Holmes answers "the adventure of a lifetime.
The more I think of this sublime exchange, the more I appreciate its resonance in the very context of the 80's, and more specifically when Richard Donner directed "The Goonies. Movies were all about 'adventures of a lifetime' in that glorious decade, inaugurated with the iconic images of Indiana Jones escaping a giant boulder, children flying away from the Police to get "E.T" back home and so forth. The Goonies are like Elliott's friends playing Indiana Jones, living an adventure whose quest might not be as noble as in "E.T. it's a treasure, something tangible like in Indiana Jones) but it does carry some symbolic value like living the last adventure before one of them leaves the town, enjoying youth, or less pompously: to have fun. And even if some of them, like the big brother Brand (Josh Brolin) or the two girls (Kerri Green and Martha Plimpton) wonder where they've gotten themselves into, they stick together nonetheless and enjoy (once again) the 'adventure of a lifetime.
And I think the reason why the film isn't as humanistic as "E.T." and borrows more from the 'Indiana Jones" franchise is because Spielberg didn't want to make some sort of hymn to childhood, which explains why for the sake of realism, there's a lot of profanity and many moments where kids talk and shout at the same time and it's barely audible. Despite some similarities, we're far from the universe of Tom Sawyer and Hucklberry Finn where the two boys quietly wandered on the Mississippi River and where Injun Joe was really scary. In "The Goonies" there's no room for 'drama-realism' or 'dreamy-humanism' and Spielberg and Donner inject as many archetypes as possible. Sean Astin is Mikey, the voice of reason, the leader, the one who needs the treasure the most so his Dad can keep their house so it's not just about greed. He also respects the Pirate One-Eyed Willy, Mouth is the comic relief, Data is the nerd and Chunk (Jeff Cohen) is the fat insecure kid.
And there are also a bunch of Italian-American gangsters, the Fratellis, played by Robert Davi and Joe Pantaliano, and Anne Ramsey's as their scary-looking Mama, the Fratellis contribute to one of the best moments of the film, the opening chase sequence and its catchy theme, and the hidden (and hideous) third brother Sloth (John Matuszak) would have felt like a gratuitous addition if his relationship with Chunk wasn't so touching and poignant. Only two outcasts can understand each other, the Fratellis and the Goonies were already outcasts, but when you're the fat, clumsy, talkative and misunderstood kid of the bunch (no way to go through life) maybe it takes a criminal Family's offspring who looks like a cross between Quasimodo and a Garbage Pail Kid to become your friend. In some weird twisted way, there are some Elliott-E.T. vibes in that relationship between Chunk and Sloth but I wonder if Steven Spielberg didn't mean that in a self-parodying way.
Indeed, The Goonies" is action-packed, filled with chases, screams, long slides, booby traps, romantic kisses in the dark, scary cadavers and skeletons, it's perhaps the most blatantly and shamelessly adventurous film of the 80's involving kids before a change of settings in 1986 with "Stand By Me. In Rob Reiner's film, the kids' quest will carry more macabre undertones, they go to find a body and get some publicity, but in the end, they choose the wisest solution and call the Police, it's the ultimate coming-of-age film. Kids grow up, their maturity also conveys the feeling of a lost innocence, emphasized by the epilogue that gives away the fates of the protagonists, and not all of them are pleasing. The 80's slowly slide toward the 90's realism so "The Goonies" is the last hurrah of kids-oriented movie, the same year where Marty McFly visits the past, where we get to the past of Holmes and Watson, the Goonies visit the past of their town Astoria, and fix one thing or two in their lives.
In a way, it's like Spielberg revisiting his own childhood and translating his memories into the film. Of course, his perfectionism was more palpable in "E.T" which had a personal meaning and he directed it himself. There's some naivety in the way kids behave in "The Goonies" trying to sound too cool and too smart at the expenses of realism, but the film is so fast-paced and so oblivious to these subtleties that we ready to accept it's not "E.T." and enjoy it for what it is. And maybe that's the secret of its everlasting appeal, more than 30 years after, improved by the nostalgia effect, the same than can make us enjoy a film like "Police Academy. So, The Goonies" might have too many 80's actors, too many recognizable Spielberg's tricks, hell, even a Cindy Lauper song, but maybe these dating factors are the film's saving graces, making it forever a part of the most fun cinematic decade.
"Never say die" like they say.

 

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