movies – Live Laugh Love Do http://livelaughlovedo.com A Super Fun Site Wed, 01 Oct 2025 12:15:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Charlie Sheen’s Greatest (and Worst) Hits You Can Stream Now http://livelaughlovedo.com/charlie-sheens-greatest-and-worst-hits-you-can-stream-now/ http://livelaughlovedo.com/charlie-sheens-greatest-and-worst-hits-you-can-stream-now/#respond Wed, 01 Oct 2025 12:15:45 +0000 http://livelaughlovedo.com/2025/10/01/charlie-sheens-greatest-and-worst-hits-you-can-stream-now/ [ad_1]

Whether you knew him from the movies as a soldier or television as an eccentric bachelor, Charlie Sheen has had a lasting presence. He’s been acting so long that you’ll find a few roles from movies you’ve dug. With such a wide range, spotting some of his lesser works is easy.

With the recent Netflix documentary about the actor’s life, aka Charlie Sheen, recently released, it’s worth checking out Sheen’s filmography for all his hits and flops—why not have a bit of a Sheen-a-thon? Getting a complete picture of the actor in his best and worst films can give you a full picture of his rocky and fascinating legacy in acting. From action to comedy, let’s shed some light on Charlie Sheen’s most notable and lesser roles.

Best: Platoon

While some young men tried to find a way to escape being drafted into the Vietnam War, Chris Taylor (Charlie Sheen) dove straight into the conflict. Although approaching war with great aspirations, his vigor erodes when he experiences the inhumanity of war. Soldiers on the same side will fight each other as they debate who to trust in this warzone of uncertainty and cruelty, where every moment is one of dehumanizing terror.

Writer and director Oliver Stone conceived of Platoon based on his experience in the military, intending to present a more accurate depiction of war that doesn’t celebrate it. Following in the footsteps of his father, Martin, who was filming Apocalypse Now when Charlie was just a kid, Charlie nabbed the lead role in Platoon thanks to a recommendation by co-star Willem Dafoe, and he fit perfectly into a role that required great contemplation amid the horrors of the Vietnam War. He gives a brilliantly nuanced performance alongside a strong cast that includes the talents of Tom Berenger, Keith David, and Forest Whitaker, making this one of the greatest war films for being so critical of its morality and mortality.

Best: Wall Street

According to Wall Street corporate expert Gordon Gecko (Michael Douglas), greed is good. The younger stockbroker Bud Fox (Charlie Sheen) hopes to learn from this master of deals how to be greedy enough to rise into the upper echelon of wealthy businessmen. While Bud’s tutelage yields results, his corrupt tactics could threaten his life as the schemes for cash spiral out of control.

Oliver Stone directed Wall Street, a film perfectly timed for the excessive nature of capitalism in the 1980s. While several young actors were considered for the role of Bud, Stone was impressed by Sheen’s stern presentation, which made the character’s naive nature easier to buy. Adding some more authenticity to the film is Bud’s father, played by Charlie’s dad, Martin. It was genius casting and even made for a great joke in Hot Shots Part Deux, where Charlie and Martin pass each other in the film, shouting to each other, “I loved you in Wall Street!”

Best: Major League

Rachel Phelps (Margaret Whitton) has taken ownership of the Cleveland Indians baseball team, and the only way to ensure that she can move the team to Miami is for ticket sales to fall. Desiring failure, she employs an incompetent ensemble of players, ranging from the visually impaired Rick Vaughn (Charlie Sheen) to the fragile catcher Jake Taylor (Tom Berenger). She doesn’t count on the fact that the team might become winners and draw in a bigger crowd for being underdogs.

Major League was equally absurd and charming for posing an underdog comedy around baseball, based on writer/director David S. Ward’s desire for the Cleveland Indians to win something for once. Given his history of being a pitcher in high school, Sheen was a natural choice for the role. He’s fun in the film, but the picture is also worth noting for launching the acting careers of Rene Russo and Wesley Snipes and brilliantly using sportscaster Bob Uecker.

Best: Young Guns

When the rancher John Tunstall (Terence Stamp) is gunned down by Lawrence G. Murphy (Jack Palance), it’s up to his young employees to avenge his death. The young men, dubbed Regulators, are led by Billy the Kid (Charlie’s real-life brother, Emilio Estevez) and are not afraid to embrace the life of outlaws for the sake of their mentor. Gun battles and standoffs coat this stylized depiction of Western revenge and violence.

Young Guns is most notable for its iconic ensemble, which boasts Sheen, Estevez, Kiefer Sutherland, Lou Diamond Phillips, and Dermot Mulroney. Sheen was notable for his role as Richard “Dick” Brewer, the original leader of the Regulators, who still holds a key role in the quest for vengeance and meshes well with the stunning cast. While the film does have issues in how it takes plenty of liberties with history, it’s still a unique film for posing what felt like the Brat Pack of Westerns.


young-guns-movie-poster.jpg


Young Guns


Release Date

August 12, 1988

Runtime

107 Minutes

Director

Christopher Cain




Best: Hot Shots! (and Part Deux)

It’s not easy to follow Leslie Nielsen’s tongue-in-cheek performance in the spoof series The Naked Gun, but Sheen met the call with Hot Shots. Called in for a Top Gun parody, Sheen plays Topper Harley, a cocky aircraft pilot trying to prove himself. While trying to assert himself in the air, he must also deal with his attraction to the seductive Ramada Thompson (Valeria Golino) and taking orders from the absent-minded Rear Admiral Benson (Lloyd Bridges).

Sheen was so perfect for the role that he would return for the sequel, Hot Shots Part Deux. Although the sequel switched to being a parody of Rambo, Sheen was so good at delivering silly lines straight that he could easily mesh into any role. The actor was at his comedic best with such parody roles, making him an easy choice for his roles in Scary Movie 3 and Scary Movie 5.

Worst: The Rookie

Nick Pulovski (Clint Eastwood) is a police detective who isn’t happy that his newest partner is the young and inexperienced David Ackerman (Charlie Sheen). Pulovski has a history of his partners turning up dead in the line of duty, with his latest case on busting some car thieves carrying a personal vendetta for the men who killed his previous partner. To apprehend this gang of criminals, the old gun and the young upstart must put their differences aside if they hope to uphold justice.

Teaming Sheen with Eastwood sounds like a solid buddy cop action movie. But The Rookie just doesn’t work for feeling so tiresome with the buddy-cop tropes and highly questionable choices in casting, hiring a Puerto Rican and a Brazilian to play Germans. It wastes Sheen’s potential as an actor and Eastwood’s directorial skill, highlighting one of his rare missteps.

Worst: Terminal Velocity

Sheen plays Ditch, a skydiving instructor who goes from teaching skills in the skies to working as a spy. A death under his watch leads to his school shutting down, and something about this doesn’t seem right to Ditch. He investigates with special agent Krista Moldova (Nastassja Kinski) and uncovers a conspiracy involving Russians.

Terminal Velocity doesn’t work because it tries too hard to make Sheen seem like a gritty action hero, which was hard to buy after recently seeing him play a parody of that archetype in Hot Shots. It doesn’t help that the action premise is also absurd in how it tries to wrap a skydiving school in with a coup d’état against the Russian government. The only good thing about the film is the unintentionally comedic line where Ditch insists he is more of a flying phallus than a walking one.

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Terminal Velocity finds Charlie Sheen playing a skydiving instructor who becomes entangled in a conspiracy involving Russians.


Worst: Navy SEALS

The Navy SEALS Lt. James Curran (Michael Biehn) and Lt. Dale Hawkins (Charlie Sheen) must face off against the terrorist Ben Shaheed (Nicholas Kadi). Having killed hostages and acquired missiles, the terrorist is in a position to turn the Middle East upside down with attacks that could threaten treaties. It’s up to SEALS and an informed reporter to figure out Shaheed’s tactics and save the world from destruction.

Sheen was a long way away from Platoon, considering that Navy SEALS is less critical of the military. Sheen and Biehn are wasted in thankless roles of generic action heroes who add little to a film that just screams generic. It was such a tiresomely bad movie that it became a punchline of Kevin Smith’s Clerks, where Randall’s comment about video store customers renting the dumbest films cuts to a customer spouting, “Ooo, Navy SEALS!”

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Navy SEALS features Charlie Sheen as part of a SEAL team assigned to stop a terrorist threat.


Worst: All Dogs Go To Heaven 2

As the sequel to the Don Bluth animated comedy, All Dogs Go to Heaven 2 lacks a presence, from the diminished animation budget to Don Bluth’s not returning. Burt Reynolds, who played the lead dog Charlie, also did not return to the film. Charlie finds heaven boring, so he returns to Earth with his pal, Itchy (Dom DeLuise), for another adventure to defeat the evil Carface (Ernest Borgnine).

Released years after the original movie, this tiresome sequel went to theaters instead of ending up on home video like most animated sequels of the 1990s. The animation was dull, the story uninspired, and Sheen isn’t much of an upgrade from Reynolds’s smooth performance. This sequel made a case for why the dogs should’ve stayed in heaven, especially for the lackluster franchise projects that followed with All Dogs Go to Heaven: The Series and An All Dogs Christmas Carol.

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All Dogs Go to Heaven 2 features the dog Charlie returning to Earth to once again stop an evil dog’s intentions when it escapes from the afterlife.



Charlie Sheen has a certain energy about him as an actor. He never feels as though he can try too hard for drama or laughs. He’s far more than just the weird guy who got fired from Two and a Half Men, and hopefully, he’ll be remembered beyond his TV sitcom role.

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3 New Netflix Movies to Watch in September 2025, Ranked by IMDb Rating http://livelaughlovedo.com/3-new-netflix-movies-to-watch-in-september-2025-ranked-by-imdb-rating/ http://livelaughlovedo.com/3-new-netflix-movies-to-watch-in-september-2025-ranked-by-imdb-rating/#respond Sun, 14 Sep 2025 15:53:15 +0000 http://livelaughlovedo.com/2025/09/14/3-new-netflix-movies-to-watch-in-september-2025-ranked-by-imdb-rating/ [ad_1]

Netflix has another strong lineup of newly arrived movies in September, but that’s always been how the streamer has maintained its dominance.

The streamer has plenty of Netflix original movies, but the most exciting films are the ones that have already found a large audience outside of Netflix.

To help you make your viewing plans for the month, the Watch With Us team has selected three new Netflix movies to watch in September, as ranked by IMDB score.

Our picks include a story about a completely adorable talking bear, a fantastic sci-fi action flick and a moving coming-of-age drama.

Alex Baldwin and Mark Wahlberg in The Departed


Related: 5 Best Netflix Movies to Watch in August 2025, Ranked by IMDb Score

Netflix‘s lineup of new movies in August has been very strong, thanks to some carefully selected films from other studios. Whoever makes the movie choices at Netflix apparently has some fantastic taste in cinema, because these are impeccable films among them. Watch With Us has included some of August’s fresh arrivals as well as established […]

3. ‘Paddington’ (2014)

IMDb rank: 7.3

It takes a real monster to hate Paddington Brown (Ben Whishaw), because he’s just so lovable that even his mistakes feel like fun misadventures. Paddington does have a monster in the form of Millicent Clyde (Nicole Kidman). She wants to stuff Paddington and add him to her taxidermy collection.

The Brown family, Henry (Hugh Bonneville), Mary (Sally Hawkins) and their children, are far more welcoming to Paddington when he arrives in London. They take Paddington in and make him one of the family, even though he does have a knack for getting in trouble despite his sweet disposition. He’ll also need their help when Millicent attempts to capture and stuff him once and for all.

Paddington is streaming on Netflix.

2. ‘Edge of Tomorrow’ (2014)

IMDb rank: 7.9

Tom Cruise lives lifetimes in a single day in Edge of Tomorrow. Unlike Bill Murray‘s character in Groundhog Day, Cruise’s Major William Cage never gets to enjoy his time loops. Cage was killed in battle against the aliens, but his exposure to their blood has effectively made him immortal, as the day constantly repeats for him.

Sergeant Rita Vrataski (Emily Blunt) recognizes Cage’s abilities because she once had them herself. Under her tutelage, Cage becomes a true warrior on the battlefield. But against an enemy that can simply turn back time any time it starts losing, Cage’s efforts may be for nothing in the long term.

Edge of Tomorrow is streaming on Netflix.

1. ‘Stand by Me’ (1986)

IMDb rank: 8.1

Stand by Me was one of the first Stephen King adaptations to succeed at the box office without venturing into horror. Instead, this coming-of-age story winds the clock back to 1959, as Gordie Lachance (Wil Wheaton), Chris Chambers (River Phoenix), Teddy Duchamp (Corey Feldman) and Vern Tessio (Jerry O’Connell) embark on an adventure.

The boys are looking for a dead body that may give them recognition as heroes. But as their journey progresses, the kids are haunted by their personal demons and pursued by a gang leader, Ace Merrill (Kiefer Sutherland). There’s no one coming to back up these children in a fight, and all they have is each other.

Stand by Me is streaming on Netflix.

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9 Movies We Can Never Watch Again Now That We Have Kids http://livelaughlovedo.com/9-movies-we-can-never-watch-again-now-that-we-have-kids/ http://livelaughlovedo.com/9-movies-we-can-never-watch-again-now-that-we-have-kids/#respond Thu, 04 Sep 2025 00:13:05 +0000 http://livelaughlovedo.com/2025/09/04/9-movies-we-can-never-watch-again-now-that-we-have-kids/ [ad_1]

There are some movies that just stick with you forever. Some in really good ways, some in really terrifying ways, and some in ways you weren’t expecting. For me, becoming a mom meant that I suddenly had a list of movies I could truly never watch again. And I don’t just mean movies that make you think, “Oh, this hits a little harder now that I have kids,” I mean movies that I would literally run from if someone said I had to sit through and watch from beginning to end. Becoming a mom changes you, but I was not expecting motherhood to give me a list of movies to avoid for the rest of my life.

The same thing happened with Law & Order: SVU. Before I had my first daughter, I could watch it for hours, bingeing one episode after another. Now, the thought of listening to a whole hour-long procedural about a kid being hurt or a young girl being assaulted or any other horrifying thing that happens on that show is too much. My aversion to things like this became worse with each of my daughters’ births, and by the time my husband and I had our third girl, we could barely stomach a lot of shows and movies we once enjoyed.

So join me in shielding your eyes and making an enormously loud “yeeeechughhhhh” noise anytime someone mentions one of these movies. Kids completely change your DNA — and apparently also what you can handle in a movie plot.

Pet Sematary

I saw Pet Sematary as a kid (way too young to be watching such a terrifying movie) and then tried to watch it again as an adult, and it’s a big fat nope from me. I can handle spooky stuff, but witnessing a father’s grief in real time, seeing a small child literally die in an accident, and then having that small child become a reanimated, murderous, evil zombie? Absolutely not, no thank you.

Case 39

Few movies leave me reeling when they’re over like Case 39 did. The scene where Renee Zellweger, playing a social worker, breaks down the door of a family she suspects is abusing their daughter to find that they’re trying to shove their daughter into an oven is terrifying enough. And then the movie shows you why they were trying to do just that, and ugh. It’s all just too much. It makes me want to wrap my own girls up in my arms and also, maybe, if I’m being honest, keep them at arm’s length.

The Lovely Bones

When The Lovely Bones was released, I had no idea what it was going to be about. I don’t think 21-year-old me really loved it, but thought it was a good move in the way 21-year-olds do. But now, as a late 30s mom of three? Specifically, three daughters? Oh, hell no. When even Stanley Tucci says he would not play his role as a serial killer of young girls again, you know it’s going to absolutely demolish you to watch. It’s heartbreaking and terrifying and just makes me feel sick to even think about.

Poltergeist

A creepy kid is always scary in a movie, but imagining your own 5-year-old whispering, “They’re here,” and disappearing into a ghost portal? Nope, nope, nope. Poltergeist totally scarred me as a kid, and now I know I can’t handle it as a parent.

The Good Son

For whatever reason, The Good Son was one of my favorite movies when I was a kid. I obviously loved Macauley Culkin and Elijah Wood, but beyond that, the movie is so upsetting. Elijah Wood’s character has lost his mom, and his dad hopes that living with his cousin, played by Macaulay Culkin, and his family will help. But it’s obvious that Culkin’s character is not quite right, and the scenes with his own mother realizing her son might be a psychopath are both chilling and heartbreaking. I genuinely don’t think I can sit through this one now that I have my own kids.

Thirteen

When you watch Thirteen as a young girl, you can convince yourself that it’s kind of the perfect warning movie about not mixing in with the wrong crowds, about truly loving yourself, and about always reaching out when you need help. But when you watch Thirteen as a parent of girls, all you can see is your nightmares playing out on screen. No, thank you. (But maybe I’ll let my daughters watch when they’re older so we can discuss.)

We Need to Talk About Kevin

I remember when We Need to Talk About Kevin was released, and everyone was talking about what a great movie it was. It’s the kind of drama that you just know actors felt really good about sinking their teeth into, but oh man, it’s a lot to watch. And as a parent, the thought of your children suffering so much and of also being completely alienated and trapped by their own mind to the point of causing violence is heart-wrenching.

The Mist

To be fair, I saw The Mist when I was already a parent because my husband told me it was a great horror movie. He’s not wrong, but the ending will absolutely gut you. I think I sat in the living room in the dark for a long time after the credits were over, just reeling from it. (There are also some pretty terrifying scenes throughout the movie that remind you our own worst enemy might always just be other people.)

Casper

OK, so technically Casper isn’t one we have to completely swear off, but it absolutely hits different watching it as an adult. Poor Casper was just a sweet little kid who got sick and died — and his dad spent the rest of his life trying to get his son back, even for just one day. So heartbreaking.

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