List Of Movies I've Seen And Liked From 2019

Out of all the movies I’ve seen that were released in 2019, I’ve seen 145 of them. That’s 17 less than in 2018, so I think I’m slacking a little bit. I may blame that to the switch overs from Moviepass (RIP), AMC Stubs A-List, Sinemia (RIP), and then finally to Regal Unlimited. In truth there are two reasons I’ve seen less movies, life reasons and laziness. Maybe it’s because there actually weren’t enough films for me to get excited to go to the movies for. Now with that said, to be fair, there were actually a lot of good films released in 2019, but not as many that I would consider great when compared to previous years. Either way, quality or not, I love going to the movies, so I’m sure I’ll get back that spark to see even more films in 2020.

Although 2019 is over, there are still “Oscar-bait” prestigious films that I haven’t seen yet at this time, like “Just Mercy,” “Clemency,” “Pain and Glory,” “Portrait Of A Lady On Fire,” “Harriet,” “I Lost My Body,” “The Laundromat,” “The Last Black Man In San Francisco,” and several more. Some of those were either because they were only playing in limited locations that were inconvenient for me to get to, or I just couldn’t find the time to watch them on Netflix or Amazon Prime Video. That brings me to another point, I’m loving the fact that there are more and more prestigious films being released online; and ON PURPOSE and not some bootleg! How great is that?

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As for this list below, I’m only sharing 80 titles out of those 145 I’ve seen. The top 75 are movies that I gave a grade of either B, B+, A-, or an A (no A pluses this year). So I either “Enjoyed It” or “Loved It,” as I normally would grade them on my no-spoilers “isawthatmovie” blog. The other 5 listed after that 75, are the movies that I do not recommend seeing. Don’t see it as me completely saying they are horrible films that should never be made or are just a waste of time, but me saying…

Alright, here’s the big list of movies released in 2019 that I recommend checking out. Not necessarily based on film making qualities, but more on the “would I watch X movie over X movie as opposed to X movie.” It’s a subjective list, so don’t take some of the positions personally. Click on the hyperlink and read what I said, to get an idea on what I thought of the movie.

  1. Knives Out 

  2. Parasite (Gisaengchung) 

  3. Marriage Story 

  4. Jojo Rabbit 

  5. Toy Story 4 

  6. Avengers Endgame 

  7. Spider-Man Far From Home 

  8. Doctor Sleep 

  9. The Farewell 

  10. Good Boys 

  11. Klaus 

  12. John Wick Chapter 3 Parabellum 

  13. Uncut Gems 

  14. Apollo 11 

  15. The Kid Who Would Be King 

  16. Ford v Ferrari 

  17. Alita : Battle Angel 

  18. Shazam 

  19. Captain Marvel 

  20. Star Wars: The Rise Of Skywalker 

  21. Booksmart 

  22. Frozen II 

  23. Abominable 

  24. Cold Pursuit 

  25. Furie 

  26. Little Women 

  27. Us 

  28. 1917 

  29. Dora and the Lost City Of Gold 

  30. The Lighthouse 

  31. Hobbs & Shaw 

  32. Always Be My Maybe 

  33. Jumanji The Next Level 

  34. The Two Popes 

  35. Midsommar 

  36. The Lego Movie 2 : The Second Part 

  37. Zombieland 2 

  38. Jay and Silent Bob Reboot 

  39. Ready Or Not 

  40. Dolemite Is My Name 

  41. Missing Link 

  42. Rocketman 

  43. Once Upon A Time In Hollywood 

  44. The Dead Don’t Die 

  45. Aladdin 

  46. Fighting With My Family 

  47. Joker 

  48. Scary Stories To Tell In The Dark 

  49. Pokemon Detective Pikachu 

  50. Hustlers 

  51. The Amazing Johnathan Documentary 

  52. Where’d You Go Bernadette? 

  53. Brittany Runs A Marathon 

  54. Terminator Dark Fate 

  55. A Beautiful Day In The Neighborhood 

  56. Dark Waters 

  57. First Love (Hatsukoi) 

  58. A Dog’s Journey 

  59. It Chapter Two 

  60. Happy Death Day 2U 

  61. Honey Boy 

  62. Judy 

  63. Blinded By The Light 

  64. Long Shot 

  65. Annabelle Comes Home 

  66. Official Secrets 

  67. Villains 

  68. Yesterday 

  69. Waves 

  70. The Report 

  71. The Irishman 

  72. Ad Astra 

  73. Crawl 

  74. Freaks 

  75. A Hidden Life 

Okay, don’t take it personally, but here are the bottom 5 movies on my list…

141. Black Christmas 

142. Cats 

143. Men In Black International 

144. Rambo: Last Blood 

145. Captive State

Until 2020. Remember to watch all different kinds of movies, and not just the blockbusters. Support cinema. There are original films out there worth checking out.

Quick Update

Hello. If you've somehow wondered why I haven't been providing content every day to this website like I used to, there are three reasons...

1) I've gotten lazier.
2) I've lost my appetite (again) in writing my no-spoilers movie reviews. I actually have well over a dozen movies I have yet to write reviews on as it is.
3) I'm giving myself more days off from #whowhatwhereswhy

In fact, episode 254 of the Stuff & Junk show, and the most recent comic strip, might be the only content released this week (the week of this post). I'm also only 37 percent sure that I'll be able to watch and do a review of Rambo Last Blood or Ad Astra before the end of their opening weekend, like I normally expect myself to be able to do. I'm at least pretty sure Decafzzz will do the next comic strip for Sunday's release.

With that said, I apologise. It might be that there's just a lack of incentives and motivation for me to work on this site every day like I used to. I suppose that's what happens when you do work for free. I might accept this as the new normal, but maybe not. Either way, whowhatwhereswhy is not going away. It's just not going to be as active as it used to be.

Or will it?

Is Star Wars Land actually empty?

If you’ve gone through the geek fandom side of the internet, you’ve probably run into a statement suggesting that it’s supposedly a “ghost-town” at Star Wars Galaxy’s Edge in Disneyland, Anaheim. You know what? Saying that Star Wars Land is "Empty" is starting to sound like fake news. 

People who actually went to that place that tell people it's empty, have apparently changed that word to mean that "it's not the shoulder to shoulder crowd traffic that I expected to see.” I've been to that place multiple times now, and I wish it was actually as "empty" as the internet claims it to be. Despite what has been suggested, it actually still manages to get crowded, but it's at least tolerable.

Some things of note… Millenium Falcon : Smuggler's Run is averaging 60 mins in it’s wait times, which is normal for a popular attraction at Disneyland on a regular busy day. It’s a longer wait than what you would find in “It’s a Small World,” “Pirates Of The Caribbean,” or “Big Thunder Mountain Railroad.” The Cantina and the Lightsaber building workshop requires reservations just to experience because of high demand, which automatically takes out two of the four "attractions" available there right now for those who couldn’t get reservations (the other 2 being the Falcon and the $100 Droid building). Merchandise are selling out much faster than expected, and that’s even though they limit the ability of buying things in bulk for collectors. Those are just some examples to it being "not empty." It’s the most active land in all of Disneyland Park right now. 

Demand to get in Star Wars Land may not be as apocalyptically crowded as originally advertised, but this was actually the ideal outcome from Disney's strategy. Right from announcing the land, they promptly warned people in advance to consider avoiding the crowds and to plan ahead; like to come back some other year instead. They outpriced most customers, by making it cost $149 for just one adult ticket, and that isn’t even the park-hopper pass which cost $199. Disneyland also blocked out most of the annual passholders, which is a huge chunk of the resort's attendees. They used a reservation system prior to official opening date to show high demand, and to pull in as many of the Star Wars enthusiasts into a controlled 4 hours visit. They talked about a boarding pass system that limits the amount of people that can be there at a time (about 4000 people), which I believe has only been used once during opening day. Then there are those YouTube videos of mass crowds entering that land during the first public day, to scare people off. Thanks YouTube! It only has one ride attraction available; which admittedly is likely an unintentional strategy. It doesn't really have any kid friendly attractions, short of the interactive experience with Rey and Chewbacca, plus the expensive light-saber / droid building options.

Several bloggers have stated that Galaxy’s Edge is slow, because it’s not “their Star Wars” as it’s part of the new trilogy, and that’s the reason why people aren’t showing up (it’s really not because of the price?). I’d like to flatly say NO. The fact that Galaxy's Edge is supposed to be "emptier than expected" isn't an indictment against the new trilogy. It's all about Disney theme park logistical strategies at work. People who don’t like the new trilogy may be boycotting going, but you’ll be kidding yourself if you think that’s the main reason for it being supposedly “slow.” 

As it's been pointed out. Disney's strategy for "Star Wars Galaxy's Edge" is that it's going to be an immersive experience first and foremost. They went more for the idea that you are actually visiting a planet in the Star Wars universe, and not being in a themed park anymore. It has its own lingo that includes greetings and terminologies, which draws upon how it can feel like when you are traveling to a foreign land. Merchandise are intended to look like things you might actually find on an Outpost on a distant planet, and not products made on earth. Employees are in character and don't acknowledge "Earth stuff" or "Disneyland stuff," and you are encouraged to play along with the make believe. There aren't many theme park centric markers like obvious queue lines, or obvious theme park layout designs (except for the safety stuff). It's suppose to be an outpost on a planet you've never been on, and it looks and acts like an outpost on a planet you've never been on. It's essentially the renaissance faire, but for Star Wars. Hard core fans get to pretend to be in Star Wars (acting skills may vary), as the story that takes place in Galaxy's Edge is actually canon to the mythology (specifically takes place between VIII and IX). To be immersive was the goal. 

You can't have an immersive Star Wars Land and have it primarily based on the original trilogy. With that said, you will still find artifacts and references to the original trilogy, prequels, or TV shows, that are all scattered all around the land. Hard core fans of Star Wars should get a kick finding all those easter eggs. Now if you were expecting to interact with Dark Vader, Clone Troopers, or Darth Maul, you can’t. Why? Because how could they be around, on a planet that already has Kylo Ren and Rey in it? 

Having Darth Vader alone immediately breaks the immersion just from a story continuity level. You can't have Han Solo there, because then you can't have any characters or items post The Force Awakens show up at the Black Spire Outpost. You can't have the planets Coruscant, Mustafar, Hoth, or even Crait, at Star Wars Land, because Batuu is a desert & forest planet (the Falcon could potentially travel to those planets though). You can't recreate locations from the movies, because it's never going to be truly accurate to the source material, and that'll break the immersion.

Immersion is the key to why Star Wars Galaxy's Edge exists, and those are factors that can't be ignored. You want those prequel or original trilogy interactions? That's what Star Tours, Tomorrowland, Star Wars Launch Bay, and the VOID at Downtown Disney, are for.

But you feel like you are REALLY a fan of the original Star Wars trilogy, and would miss that not being a part of Batuu. Well guess what, they are a part of Batuu as well. Besides the most obvious facts that original trilogy alums like Chewbacca, the Millenium Falcon, and R2-D2, are at the Black Spire Outpost, or that you could purchase your own replica of Darth Vader’s lightsaber, there are also tons of Episodes IV - VI references and representations scattered throughout the land. How about visiting Han and Leia’s hallway kiss spot, that you saw in a scene in Empire Strikes Back, or finding an Imperial Probe Droid that you last saw on the planet Hoth? How about seeing an 8D-J8, which is a Droid you would find in Jabba The Hutt’s palace in Return Of The Jedi, or finding Ewok artifacts from the forest moon of Endor? How about seeing GNK power droids, which appeared in Star Wars : A New Hope, or encountering a Dianoga that you saw in the Death Star trash compactor? You hard core original Star Wars trilogy fans should have fun finding all those references and more at Star Wars : Galaxy’s Edge. So once again NO, it’s not only for new trilogy fans.

I’ve given you reasons on why you should go visit the Black Spire Outpost, but just to be fair, here are some complaints you could legitimate make about the place. You can complain that you don’t like how Blue Milk or Green Milk tastes like. You can complain that you feel that riding Smuggler’s Run with strangers ruins the experience. You can complain that it’s hard to get into Oga’s Cantina or Savi’s Workshop. You can complain that they ran out of legacy lightsabers a little too fast. You can complain that kyber crystals and droid personality chips are all sold out. You can complain that the merchandise are expensive, and that you’ve also heard that there has been cases of them breaking faster than expected. You can complain that one ride is just not enough for you. You can complain that Star Wars Launch Bay is all the way at Tomorrowland, and that’s the only place you could meet Darth Vader. You can complain that Disneyland tickets are too expensive. Those are all logical reasons that may keep you from going to Galaxy’s Edge, but come on now with the “it’s a ghost town because The Force Awakens and The Last Jedi sucks” excuses.  

Since comparisons to the Wizarding World is commonly made when Galaxy's Edge is brought up. You have to admit that you can't say that Harry Potter Land is truly immersive, when the rides look like rides, and the locations are obviously not the same as they actually are in the movies or books. Yes, you do get to interact and experience the many different aspects that encompasses the Wizarding World of Harry Potter, but that's Universal's strategy for recreating that franchise. Disney's strategy is to go for the immersive factor with the Black Spire Outpost, and soon to be Star Wars Hotel. To each their own, but I really appreciate Disneyland's approach.

P.S. Let’s also give Galaxy’s Edge some credit to the fact that once you’re tired of visiting the Black Spire Outpost, there’s still the rest of Disneyland Anaheim or Disney’s Hollywood Studios (when that opens) to occupy your day. You’re not paying that expensive park ticket for just one themed land.