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Re: Movies You Just Watched Discussion
#94417
08/03/06 06:02 PM
08/03/06 06:02 PM
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Joined: Nov 2002
Posts: 12,543 Gateshead, UK
Capo de La Cosa Nostra
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Joined: Nov 2002
Posts: 12,543
Gateshead, UK
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Zamilované maso (Meat Love)  Jan Svankmajer 1989 US/UK/West Germany (1st time; YouTube) Two lumps of raw meat fall in love. Brilliant stop-motion animation, colourful, with old-fashioned music; there's nothing like a bit of raw love…love is a butchery?Et Cetera  Jan Svankmajer 1966 Czechoslovakia (1st time; YouTube) Three shorts within a short: a primate learns how to fly with four pairs of wings; a human whips an animal into submission three times; a man attempts to draw a house over and over again. Brilliant, simple animation with a somewhat nightmarish feel; it feels like one of those fever dreams in which humans become tiny 2-D drawings. Thematic similarities with Beckett: the futility of life, as well as some sign of frustration with form: a figure drawing his way to curiosity, and thence to insanity.Spiel mit Steinen (A Game with Stones)  Jan Svankmajer 1965 Austria 1st time; YouTube A clock spits out stones every hour, and various patterns are formed. Visual gags and poetry with the most mundane of all objects, rocks; the patterns get more ambitious and impressive as it goes on, but it could probably be shorter.Flora  Jan Svankmajer 1989 US (1st time; YouTube) A bed-ridden "vegetable", or a human comprising vegetables, rots and explodes. A thirty-second short of such explosive visual power that it will linger for a while, before you want to watch it again. It sounds like a Lynch film, and is horrific to look at, in an attractive sort of way.Kyvadlo, jáma a nadeje (The Pit, the Pendulum and Hope)  Jan Svankmajer 1989 Czechoslovakia (1st time; YouTube) Black-and-white images of death and devilry to the sounds of an industrial furnace. Industrial furnace indeed - if a literal meaning of that phase fails to register, the imagination might define it better. An atmospheric, rather frightening affair which clocks in under two minutes; most feature films fail to reach Svankmajer's level of intensity.
...dot com bold typeface rhetoric. You go clickety click and get your head split. 'The hell you look like on a message board Discussing whether or not the Brother is hardcore?
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Re: Movies You Just Watched Discussion
#94418
08/04/06 08:51 AM
08/04/06 08:51 AM
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Joined: Nov 2002
Posts: 12,543 Gateshead, UK
Capo de La Cosa Nostra
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Joined: Nov 2002
Posts: 12,543
Gateshead, UK
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Rabbit-Proof Fence  Phillip Noyce 2002 Australia (1st time; TV) In 1930s Australia, three young half-caste girls escape the camp intending to domesticate them into the white community, and trek across the Outback to their home. The kind of film the general public are inspired by and critics fall in love with; it is impressively shot by Christopher Doyle, but you never really get a sense of the heartbreak the girls must be feeling when separated from their mother, the alienation they feel once in the camp, or the adversity they face when trying to get home. Short enough to be of passing interest.Strangers on a Train  Alfred Hitchcock 1951 US (1st time; TV) A tennis player has a chance encounter with a maniac, who suggests the two combine forces: the maniac is to kill the tennis player's wife, and the tennis player is to kill the maniac's father. Cinematic story-telling at its finest; besides the initial conversation between the two, this could be told entirely in images, from the contrasting opening shots of feet walking to the same place but in different directions, to the suspense set-pieces around which the narrative revolves: the murder at the playground, the would-be attempt from Haines to warn Bruno's father, and the climactic merry-go-round scene - the macabre hilarity of which is telling of Hitchcock's sense of humour, even at the most seemingly inappropriate of times.
...dot com bold typeface rhetoric. You go clickety click and get your head split. 'The hell you look like on a message board Discussing whether or not the Brother is hardcore?
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Re: Movies You Just Watched Discussion
#94419
08/04/06 09:12 AM
08/04/06 09:12 AM
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Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 4,246
MistaMista Tom Hagen
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 4,246
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Last Days 2005/Van Sant My first Van Sant. Contrary to how I thought I'd feel, I found his choice of incredibly long, un-moving shots to be almost refreshing against the backdrop of most other recent cinema. The best aspect of the film, to me, was Van Sant's work with subliminal audio manipulation, something I had only ever seen Paul Thomas Anderson do. At random points throughout the film, we hear a seemingly random collage of audio clips that, in some strange way, helps us to understand our main character's feelings. I loved this in Anderson's films and I loved it here too. Van Sant's film clearly benefits from the lure and tragic mystery surrounding Cobain's death, even to someone like me who knows little about it. Rarely do I find myself so enamored in every nuance of a character's movements and speech patterns as I did here. This attests to Michael Pitt's performance, which I've been told is spot-on with Kurt. There was just a beautiful sense of complacency and tragedy surrounding this whole thing that I found fascinating. It lived up to the hype.
I dream in widescreen.
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Re: Movies You Just Watched Discussion
#94421
08/05/06 11:18 PM
08/05/06 11:18 PM
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Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 13,145 East Tennessee
ronnierocketAGO
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Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 13,145
East Tennessee
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JACKASS: THE MOVIE (2002) - ***1/2
The entire MTV gang of the wildly-popular television series make for 90 miuntes of frathouse stunts, public spectacles of insanity, stupidity, and probably gastricide as well (I'm sure more than one person has vomited on watching some of the more disgusting sequences).
However, while I use the "Intellectual Logic" defense to piss on Michael Bay, Peter Jackson, Rob Cohen, Renny Harlin, and other hackjob mother fuckers, I can't stick my nose in the hair and call this retarded.
Okay, it IS retarded. However, like SUPER TROOPERS, except no cookie-cut plot(hell, no damn plot at all), this is hilarious for immature hijinks and well, for a good six-pack party.
In fact, I can't wait for JACKASS: NUMBER TWO either.
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Re: Movies You Just Watched Discussion
#94432
08/08/06 12:54 PM
08/08/06 12:54 PM
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Joined: Nov 2002
Posts: 12,543 Gateshead, UK
Capo de La Cosa Nostra
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Joined: Nov 2002
Posts: 12,543
Gateshead, UK
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Pierrot le fou  Jean-Luc Godard 1965 France/Italy (1st time; DVD) A married man bored with his life runs away to the south of France with his babysitter. Drenched in colour, politics and philosophy, this is often credited as the film which combined all of Godard's preoccupations. Most interesting is the constant self-reflexivity, attractive not only in itself but because of the sparkling performances from Karina and Belmondo; it looks absolutely gorgeous, too, with some incredible long-take sequences, the most impressive of which has the present and a flashback happen in the same take, with actors disappearing out of frame and re-entering in a different time, but the same space. Almost impossible to sum up.Made in U.S.A.  Jean-Luc Godard 1966 France (1st time; DVD) When she discovers her journalist fiancé has been killed, a woman investigates the circumstances of death and becomes involved in political corruption. Incoherent and fragmented even by Godard's standards, and curiously titled, for the references to American culture aren't all that obvious (or scathing) besides the self-reflexive commentary on how the narrative is borrowed from Hollywood gangster films, or "a Disney film with Bogart". Karina has all the gorgeous charm in the world, but this is minor Godard all the same - though there remains a fantastic scene in a bar, with characters coming in and out of frame at will, with a short essay on language.
...dot com bold typeface rhetoric. You go clickety click and get your head split. 'The hell you look like on a message board Discussing whether or not the Brother is hardcore?
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Re: Movies You Just Watched Discussion
#94435
08/09/06 01:59 AM
08/09/06 01:59 AM
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Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 4,246
MistaMista Tom Hagen
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 4,246
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The Last Temptation of Christ 1988/Scorsese An interesting picture, directed with trademark Scorsese flair, but it's still noticeably different in style than his work in the early 90's. A bit overlong, yes, and a bit difficult to follow for someone not too familiar with the story of Jesus, but still thought-provoking, still amazing to watch. It's strongest points lie in Scorsese's journey into Christ's thoughts, nightmares, visions, and fantasies. And wow, what a performance by Willem Dafoe, which went sadly un-nominated at the 88 Oscars. Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby 2006/McKay Not exactly laugh-a-minute like Anchorman, but still a solid comedy with Ferrel and the gang assuming new identities and some Southern accents. McKay experiments with some more daring camera techniques, including some CGI, which worked well. Great supporting cast here as well, Amy Adams, Gary Cole, Michael Clark Duncan, John C. Reilly, David Koechner, Sacha Baron Cohen, Molly Shannon, even Andy Richter. Very enjoyable.
I dream in widescreen.
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Re: Movies You Just Watched Discussion
#94436
08/09/06 02:18 AM
08/09/06 02:18 AM
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Joined: Aug 2003
Posts: 4,512 Right here, but I'd rather be ...
long_lost_corleone
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: Aug 2003
Posts: 4,512
Right here, but I'd rather be ...
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Originally posted by MistaMista Tom Hagen:
[b]Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby 2006/McKay Not exactly laugh-a-minute like Anchorman, but still a solid comedy with Ferrel and the gang assuming new identities and some Southern accents. McKay experiments with some more daring camera techniques, including some CGI, which worked well. Great supporting cast here as well, Amy Adams, Gary Cole, Michael Clark Duncan, John C. Reilly, David Koechner, Sacha Baron Cohen, Molly Shannon, even Andy Richter. Very enjoyable. [/b] "Let's try and pry it out with a second knife!"
"Somebody told me when the bomb hits, everybody in a two mile radius will be instantly sublimated, but if you lay face down on the ground for some time, avoiding the residual ripples of heat, you might survive, permanently fucked up and twisted like you're always underwater refracted. But if you do go gas, there's nothing you can do if the air that was once you is mingled and mashed with the kicked up molecules of the enemy's former body. Big-kid-tested, motherf--ker approved."
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Re: Movies You Just Watched Discussion
#94439
08/09/06 11:05 AM
08/09/06 11:05 AM
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Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 73,793 The Villa Quatro
Irishman12
OP
UNDERBOSS
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OP
UNDERBOSS

Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 73,793
The Villa Quatro
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Originally posted by MistaMista Tom Hagen: [b]The Last Temptation of Christ 1988/Scorsese An interesting picture, directed with trademark Scorsese flair, but it's still noticeably different in style than his work in the early 90's. A bit overlong, yes, and a bit difficult to follow for someone not too familiar with the story of Jesus, but still thought-provoking, still amazing to watch. It's strongest points lie in Scorsese's journey into Christ's thoughts, nightmares, visions, and fantasies. And wow, what a performance by Willem Dafoe, which went sadly un-nominated at the 88 Oscars.[/b] I couldn't agree more. One of my favorite Scorsese "underrated" films and definitely one of my favorite Willem Dafoe films. Harvy Keitel kinda stuck out like a sore thumb but the movie (especially as you said, Scorsese's journey into Christ's thought, etc) was unorthodox but bold and enjoyable by him.
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Re: Movies You Just Watched Discussion
#94440
08/09/06 11:18 AM
08/09/06 11:18 AM
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Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 13,145 East Tennessee
ronnierocketAGO
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Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 13,145
East Tennessee
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I agree with Hagen and Irishman. Its funny really. I still remember LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST being embargoed, directly or not, by so many theater chains and other companies. For example, as some people tell me, CHIK-FALA closed its doors during the entire run of the movie at this one local-plex. Then the video stores in my area just refused to carry the movie. Blockbuster blacklisted the movie for years. Yet now, some Theologists have sort of "rediscovered" this movie and realize, like many of us did beneath that religious right controversy bullshit, that the movie is only a dramatic and alternative meditation on the Jesus Christ of Nazareth myth. The finale sequence, the namesake of the picture, does ask the question: How willing are you to finish something that you don't want to do but believe must be done? Besides, its easily the best J.C. movie, or at least the most interesting. Forget PASSION OF THE CHRIST or GREATEST STORY EVER TOLD, or the very dull KING OF KINGS. You all notice how the different groups within the movie are represented with differing accents? You have Keitel with a Brooklyn-accent. Harry Dean Stanton with his southern accent. Then the Romans, like David Bowie, being British. Just food for thought... THE LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST (1988) - ****1/2
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Re: Movies You Just Watched Discussion
#94441
08/09/06 12:07 PM
08/09/06 12:07 PM
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Joined: Nov 2002
Posts: 12,543 Gateshead, UK
Capo de La Cosa Nostra
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Joined: Nov 2002
Posts: 12,543
Gateshead, UK
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Prénom Carmen (First Name: Carmen)  Jean-Luc Godard 1983 France (1st time; DVD) A female terrorist tricks her insane filmmaker uncle, Jean-Luc Godard, into lending her video equipment so she can pull off a heist; meanwhile, a clumsy security guard falls in love with her. Instead of jamming as many different threads as possible into one extended essay, Godard builds an entire film around a few ideas; the result is one of his most accessible films. The camera hardly moves at all, as it films waves crashing to the shore, trains passing in opposite directions, and a violin quartet, whose music is edited into the narrative, so that the score, usually added in post-production, is, for the most part, actually diegetic. A clever, mature, and often profound film, perhaps overshadowed by his flashier work from the sixties.
...dot com bold typeface rhetoric. You go clickety click and get your head split. 'The hell you look like on a message board Discussing whether or not the Brother is hardcore?
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