Terence Davies, C/D. S/D

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A general thread (esp since I'm utterly meh on his House of Mirth), a general roundup:

http://mubi.com/notebook/posts/terence-davies-in-america

Sawe him do a Q&A after The Deep Blue Sea (which is good but not revelatory) with Rachel Weisz last night. He sure does like to remind people that he hates rock n' roll. He also mentioned Joan Fontaine and Doris Day in the first 2 minutes.

Why does he keep returning to the early '50s? "Because that's the last time I was happy."

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Friday, 16 March 2012 15:56 (thirteen years ago)

The Long Day Closes is playing here this week -- looks intriguing.

Cuba Pudding, Jr. (jaymc), Friday, 16 March 2012 16:04 (thirteen years ago)

(Haven't seen any of his films.)

Cuba Pudding, Jr. (jaymc), Friday, 16 March 2012 16:04 (thirteen years ago)

Of Time and the City worth watching to hear Davis' pompous sonorosities in voice-over.

Love THOM.

Exile in lolville (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 16 March 2012 16:06 (thirteen years ago)

in Brooklyn retro will finally get to see Distant Voices, Still Lives

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Friday, 16 March 2012 16:13 (thirteen years ago)

it's all time, for me. an absolute masterpiece.

jed_, Friday, 16 March 2012 16:19 (thirteen years ago)

Yup, I would also say anyone should catch A long Day Closes. There are some beautiful songs in it -- a type of ethnograhic cinema.

Why does he keep returning to the early '50s? "Because that's the last time I was happy."

He is a child of the war, austerity and BBC Radio's Third Programme. From what he says he wasn't that happy until he met his partner about 15 years ago (?) By all accounts he had a brutal upbringing, but its a case of what he knows.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 16 March 2012 20:39 (thirteen years ago)

his Sunday NYT interview said he's been celibate for 30 years?

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Friday, 16 March 2012 20:41 (thirteen years ago)

I took it as meaning these last 30 years.

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Friday, 16 March 2012 20:42 (thirteen years ago)

Yes, he has a partner, but he is still celibate and has been so for that long.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 16 March 2012 20:52 (thirteen years ago)

Jeez, and yet he claims to no longer be Catholic...

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Friday, 16 March 2012 20:54 (thirteen years ago)

Shit stays w/you!

Its not just about that -- from the interview I saw he did talk about some painful experineces in the gay scene of the time as well...

xyzzzz__, Friday, 16 March 2012 20:59 (thirteen years ago)

what jed said. Distant Voices Still Lives is probably one of the best British films ever, I think

killa amc (admrl), Friday, 16 March 2012 21:31 (thirteen years ago)

The best I can say about The Deep Blue Sea is that it isn't as bad as Of Time and the City. At least is looks gorgeous but really it isn't good. I'd be amazed, but thrilled, if he ever made another good film.

jed_, Sunday, 18 March 2012 03:26 (thirteen years ago)

yeah i don't have high hopes for this one.

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Sunday, 18 March 2012 07:00 (thirteen years ago)

littl thread-bomb?

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 18 March 2012 08:24 (thirteen years ago)

Don't think he's made a really great film since Long Day Closes?

Deep Blue Sea was gd for getting to see Rachel Weisz in a meatier role (like Keira in a Dangerous Method).

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 18 March 2012 09:30 (thirteen years ago)

But it ws good - the source material is a bit thin overall. Story w/potential but sorta ran out of gas..

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 18 March 2012 09:31 (thirteen years ago)

TDBS is a significant improvement over the two earlier adaps, I think.

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 18 March 2012 09:34 (thirteen years ago)

i really liked The House of Mirth and i like it even more each time i see it.

one of the main problems with the deep blue sea was the that the weird unnatural acting of the guy who played freddie rendered him ridiculous and made it unbelievable that weiss would be interested in him in any way. i don't blame the actor though, it's clearly davies' fault that he's so bad. also i just didn't get it. i couldn't understand what the film was supposed to be about. davies clearly gets so close to his material, and so passionate about it, that he doesn't realise that he's doing some things that only make sense to him and will just confuse the audience. he doesn't have enough distance on the material so sit back and put himself in the audience's place. i'm thinking of the fractured structure of TDBS particularly.

jed_, Sunday, 18 March 2012 12:46 (thirteen years ago)

House of Mirth didn't make much of an impression on me at the time...I'll revisit.

re: TDBS...well, Freddie was a 'dashing' pilot who seemed quite funny/charming -- at least that's what I infer from that scene at the pub where he and his friend are seeking to impress w/their tales of aerial combat. Then you have her husband who ws 'nice' and yet allows the mother-in-law to put her down.

Obv this was thinly skethed out, and I agree the fractured structure adds nothing to the story.

Guess what registered w/me ws the need for passion in one's life, taking risks that won't come off but carrying on regardless. That drive towards one's own destruction has always been a topic I'm attracted to.

Since then I've seen Dreyer's Gertrud. Its a similar topic but there is so much more to it -- what you have there are long takes, conversations where no matter how much is said and thrashed out doesn't alter first principles which are never deviated from, with no regrets. Its a bit of a joke that they were established when the character ws 15. Then again many are indoctrinated w/a faith and never doubt so perhaps its a comment on that, knowing what Dreyer gets up to in his other films.

What Dreyer and Davies resolve to also is the essential unknowability of relationships from people on the outside looking in. TDBS is much worse at this, again the structure gets in the way.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 18 March 2012 13:20 (thirteen years ago)

also the "nice" husband is clearly gay but not in a way that seems to leave any impression on the story. i thought freddie seemed more annoying/unreal than funny or charming. like that armstrong and miller sketch with the pilots. of course, there was lots of acting like this in old stiff-upper-lip films but it's out of kilter because weiss (who is very good in this and very, very beautiful at 40) is acting much more naturalistically.

i'll check out gertrud though, cheers.

jed_, Sunday, 18 March 2012 13:52 (thirteen years ago)

weisz, sorry.

jed_, Sunday, 18 March 2012 13:53 (thirteen years ago)

she makes me swoon.

http://shropshirescreen.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/The-Deep-Blue-Sea-31-650x432.jpg

jed_, Sunday, 18 March 2012 14:03 (thirteen years ago)

The other thing about Freddie is that he has his issues/damaged by the war etc. so the cliche goes about saving a person.

RW's existence didn't register w/me prior to this (not too surprising, she seems to turn up in films I won't see) but yes - something we can all agree on...that scene at the gallery 'broke' me.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 18 March 2012 14:10 (thirteen years ago)

also the "nice" husband is clearly gay

Don't get this and it seems clearly not intended by the filmmakers; the only eay I could understand it is if you think Simon Russell Beale, who is gay, is a lousy actor. But he just seemed British to me.

Davies explaine the other night with a bit of an eyeroll that ALL the first acts of Rattigan's plays are exposition. Since it starts with the suicide attempt, which anhors the rest of the plot, you really couldn't do it in strict chronological order. I'm finishing my piece on this today so maybe I'll say more later, but I do think the two scenes w/ William's mother (both invented by Davies) were one too many...

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 18 March 2012 14:47 (thirteen years ago)

...I mean, the husband COULD be gay, but there are other explanations. And one would presume Hester would know on some level, and therefore her dilemma would be no dilemma.

"How were you conceived? Willpower?" is a funny line though.

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 18 March 2012 15:03 (thirteen years ago)

i guess the reason i'm not being too optimistic about this is because the criticisms that have been made of TDBS resonate with me in terms of my feelings about davies' work after the long day closes. i actually thought house of mirth was not bad, just kind of cripplingly miscast (eric stoltz, dan ackroyd, laura linney, and to a lesser extent gillian anderson). the liverpool film i thought was flabby and formless, i did not care for it at all. neon bible is gorgeous but ultimately kind of flat -- i'm wondering if i'll have the same reaction to this.

but, if it is some kind of return to form i'll be very happy. like everybody else in the world, apparently, his first few films (the shorts + DVSL + LDC) are among my favorite things.

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Sunday, 18 March 2012 17:54 (thirteen years ago)

I can take or leave Ackroyd in THOM but I think the exact opposite: it's alarmingly well cast, especially Linney and Stolz. I'm biased too by knowing the novel fairly well.

Exile in lolville (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 18 March 2012 18:02 (thirteen years ago)

The novel really is incredible.

jed_, Sunday, 18 March 2012 18:17 (thirteen years ago)

I really didn't find Hiddleston and Beale's acting chord much diff from Weisz... I think if you tried to go any more 'naturalistic' w/ Rattigan's dialogue you'd be in trouble.

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 18 March 2012 18:34 (thirteen years ago)

yeah i read the novel in one feverish night and day. it is astounding. it's not that the actors were or weren't approximations of the characters in the book, it's just that they seem jarring and uncomfortable (to me anyway) in the film.

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Sunday, 18 March 2012 18:55 (thirteen years ago)

the gay noir that davies was trying to make in the early-mid 90s -- vile bodies -- i wonder if that's ever going to happen.

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Sunday, 18 March 2012 18:56 (thirteen years ago)

btw NOT an evelyn waugh adaptation

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Sunday, 18 March 2012 18:56 (thirteen years ago)

damn, I just saw the Trilogy for the second time and forgot what unalloyed misery it is....and often not in good ways; glad he got that out of his system. (and heh, the Beatles hater killed McCartney's grandfather)

nice interview:

The problem with film is that it's always in the eternal present. When you cut, you always read it as "this is the next thing that happened." What do you do if you actually dissolve? Or you cut and then dissolve? What does that mean? It begins to change the nature of how we perceive time. But it's closest, I think, to music. You don't have to be a musician to follow a symphonic argument. If you love the music, you'll follow it. My great love is Anton Bruckner. There's a wonderful moment in the 7th Symphony where there's a huge climax to this wonderful tune, and then there's a pause, and then the tune returns on first violins, like a long long echo of what we've just heard. Your inner ear has been waiting for some kind of resolution, but it wasn't waiting for that. It's devastating. It's so moving and so beautiful and I think you can do that with film. You can deny expectation, but you've always got to imply that expectations are going to be satisfied; but, not necessarily in the way that you were expecting it. That's what makes things interesting.

http://mubi.com/notebook/posts/memory-as-mise-en-scene-a-conversation-with-terence-davies

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Friday, 23 March 2012 03:38 (thirteen years ago)

DVSL is my fave British film ever by miles. still amazing to me that just 5 or so years back it had been out of print since the early 1990s on VHS and *never* available on DVD.
i can't recommend the BFI Classics book enough either.

man i've always really wanted a poster of it and there's an amazing one here. £40's not bad either i guess.. http://norwichfilmposters.com/foreign_and_non_quad.htm

piscesx, Friday, 23 March 2012 05:49 (thirteen years ago)

more review links in the Mubi post up top

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Friday, 23 March 2012 19:45 (thirteen years ago)

Good interview with a local critic.

Exile in lolville (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 26 March 2012 11:16 (thirteen years ago)

he appears to have been swallowed by The Hunger Games. (alas just like at the b.o.)

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Monday, 26 March 2012 11:43 (thirteen years ago)

i interviewed him a few years ago about of time and the city: http://www.montrealmirror.com/2009/032609/film1.html (that first photo caption appears to be a hilarious mistake.)

A Little Princess btw (s1ocki), Monday, 26 March 2012 13:22 (thirteen years ago)

The actress who plays the big-boned, jokey friend of the older sister in DV,SL is brilliant, yet she seems to have no other film credits.

In that film, the BAM audience laughed in semi-astonishment at the pub singalong of "Stone Cold Dead in the Market," a song w/ which I am very familiar from WFMU airplay over the years. A pointed inclusion in a film w/ wifebeating tho.

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Monday, 26 March 2012 14:03 (thirteen years ago)

yes, she is fantastic in the film. so much of this has entered my consciousness. e.g. the moment where the girls reunite and they sing "they tried to sell us egg foo-yung" to the tune of the old nat king cole song "too young". a beautiful moment that says so much about the shared language of friendship.

jed_, Monday, 26 March 2012 18:09 (thirteen years ago)

also

-"How much do you love me, Mam?"
-"A pound of sugar."

jed_, Monday, 26 March 2012 18:12 (thirteen years ago)

song is usually called "brownskin gal" btw

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Monday, 26 March 2012 19:12 (thirteen years ago)

love the banter between big-boned girl and her short husband. they constantly insult each other, yet clearly love each other as much as anyone in the movie.

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Monday, 26 March 2012 19:12 (thirteen years ago)

sounds to me like they were doing a medley of "Brownskin Gal" and this one?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stone_Cold_Dead_in_the_Market_(He_Had_It_Coming)

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Monday, 26 March 2012 19:17 (thirteen years ago)

The music almost belted me out of the theater, and boy, he loves the chiaroscuro but this was quite moving in places. I'd no problem with Hiddleston and Weisz, although I often wondered what she was supposed to project. I also didn't think Hester's husband was queer; he looked honestly besotted with her, if confused about where to put it in.

The creakiness of Rattigan's theater devices is amusing now: the inconveniently found letter, the husband stumbling into the phone call, the dowager mom getting laughs from scowling.

Exile in lolville (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 30 March 2012 01:38 (thirteen years ago)

oh, I breezed through the text recently, you'd love the landlady and neighbors providing the entire backstory in Act I.

But um, the phone call stumble and the mother's two scenes are entirely Davies' invention.

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Friday, 30 March 2012 01:55 (thirteen years ago)

Damn.

Exile in lolville (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 30 March 2012 01:59 (thirteen years ago)

Brand new creakiness!

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Friday, 30 March 2012 02:04 (thirteen years ago)

He said at BAM two weeks ago of the mother scenes "I was pressured to cut them" and I thought, at least one, damn right.

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Friday, 30 March 2012 02:06 (thirteen years ago)

xxxxp that big-boned, jokey girl mentioned above who was in DV,SL quit acting to become er.. one of this lot;
http://www.yournextmp.com/candidates/debi_jones

piscesx, Friday, 30 March 2012 06:49 (thirteen years ago)

!!!!

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Friday, 30 March 2012 06:53 (thirteen years ago)

i know!

piscesx, Friday, 30 March 2012 08:29 (thirteen years ago)

wow. well she's truly amazing in DV,SL. i can even forgive her conservatism.

jed_, Friday, 30 March 2012 09:33 (thirteen years ago)

saw The Long Day Closes for the first time in 20 years last week... funny how he blatantly remakes bits of the trilogy & DVSL, incl Debi Jones and the clowning hubby (w/ diff actors)!

World Congress of Itch (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 5 April 2012 19:27 (thirteen years ago)

one year passes...

Terence Davies has signed up Sex and the City‘s Cynthia Nixon to play Amherst poet Emily Dickinson in a biopic. Davies has written the script to A Quiet Passion, which, I’m told, bursts with wit and one-liners, like a Noël Coward play…. Davies is preparing for one of the busiest spells of his long, not always busy, career. He begins shooting Scottish drama Sunset Song (with Peter Mullan and Agyness Deyn) this summer and may then go straight into the Dickinson film.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2013/may/19/trailer-trash-cannes-marine-vacth-pele

ballin' from Maine to Mexico (Dr Morbius), Monday, 20 May 2013 19:25 (twelve years ago)

i have to say i don't think he'll ever make a film nearly as good a distant voices/long day closes again. he seems to be on shakier ground when he's not writing about his own life (or some version thereof). i think deep blue sea was his best since those days (though the sharks looked kind fake IMO), and i was not impressed with the formless documentary about liverpool.

the sunset song thing is something he's been trying to get funding for since (at least) the early 1990s, so I'm glad he's making it. i guess i'll just have to trust him on the dickinson biopic which looks horrible on paper.

anyway this dude still made one of the two or three best british movies ever so he's got a lifetime of good will from me.

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Monday, 20 May 2013 22:03 (twelve years ago)

house of mirth had a lot of amazing stuff but i would point to it as an example of the dangers of miscasting. anderson was fine, but the rest of the cast was kind of a mess.

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Monday, 20 May 2013 22:04 (twelve years ago)

i thought eric stotz was good although not exactly sheldon as i see him but anderson is not the lily bart i see either, or that anyone saw other than davis.

i lost my shoes on acid (jed_), Monday, 20 May 2013 23:18 (twelve years ago)

Dan Akroyd threw me out of the movie when he talked like his character in My Stepmother is an Alien.

A deeper shade of lol (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 20 May 2013 23:20 (twelve years ago)

eight months pass...

The Long Day Closes is coming out on Criterion

http://www.criterion.com/films/27984-the-long-day-closes

good to see that the 1992 episode of The South Bank Show is included in this. hopefully Distant Voices, Still Lives will be next.

piscesx, Tuesday, 28 January 2014 19:01 (eleven years ago)

FINALLY

Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 28 January 2014 19:02 (eleven years ago)

and he very likely has 2 new films coming out in the next 2 years....

eclectic husbandry (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 28 January 2014 19:06 (eleven years ago)

seven months pass...

excerpt from Michael Koresky's imminent book:

“Being gay has ruined my life. I hate it. I’ll go to my grave hating it.”

http://brooklynrail.org/2014/09/film/queerness-and-melancholia-an-excerpt-from-terence-davies

son of a lewd monk (Dr Morbius), Monday, 8 September 2014 20:21 (eleven years ago)

you can watch TLDC on YouTube for those who can't wait:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_w12UaW6sqI

guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 8 September 2014 20:53 (eleven years ago)

don't do it!

son of a lewd monk (Dr Morbius), Monday, 8 September 2014 21:00 (eleven years ago)

Its his best film.

The appearance of the book explains why this is being shown at the ICA, with a Q&A too:

https://www.ica.org.uk/whats-on/long-day-closes-qa

xyzzzz__, Monday, 8 September 2014 21:03 (eleven years ago)

signing w/ DV,SL in NY on Sept 28

http://www.movingimage.us/visit/calendar/2014/09/28/detail/distant-voices-still-lives

son of a lewd monk (Dr Morbius), Monday, 15 September 2014 17:55 (eleven years ago)

The actress who plays the big-boned, jokey friend of the older sister in DV,SL is brilliant, yet she seems to have no other film credits.

That's Debi Jones, she's a bit of a local celeb in Liverpool, had a radio show, column for the local paper, does a bit of panto. Oh and stood as a Conservative candidate in a local election. I had a moment of cognitive dissonance when I saw her in the film.

ewar woowar (or something), Monday, 15 September 2014 19:48 (eleven years ago)

wasn't she in brookie for a good while though?

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Monday, 15 September 2014 20:40 (eleven years ago)

Honestly don't remember her on It? Wasn't an avid fan tbf, only watched it round my nan's, my dad wouldn't have it on in ours.

ewar woowar (or something), Tuesday, 16 September 2014 00:06 (eleven years ago)

well a quick google says i'm wrong. could have sworn...

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Tuesday, 16 September 2014 00:11 (eleven years ago)

eleven months pass...

cautiously optimistic

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 15 September 2015 18:55 (ten years ago)

Same. He's the director whose star has fallen furthest I think. Actually it's fallen so far that it makes me wonder if the towering greatness of DV,SL (all time top 5, for me) was an accident.

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Tuesday, 15 September 2015 21:36 (ten years ago)

Nah. I watched The Long Day Closes Blu-ray a few months ago and fell in love again.

The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 15 September 2015 21:38 (ten years ago)

last one was his best in awhile

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 15 September 2015 21:41 (ten years ago)

So was the documentary, in which that querulous voice craps on pop culture since the Beatles.

The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 15 September 2015 21:43 (ten years ago)

Yeah I've seen them both. I've seen everything.

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Tuesday, 15 September 2015 21:49 (ten years ago)

makes me wonder if the towering greatness of DV,SL (all time top 5, for me) was an accident.

Bcz he followed it with The Long Day Closes its no accident, and Deep Blue Sea had its moments.

Following Deyn with Weisz is pretty exciting.

Friend of mine read that book by Lewis Grassic Gibbon earlier this year. She hasn't been doing great and I really hope to take her to this.

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 15 September 2015 22:28 (ten years ago)

two months pass...

Watched this w/her and she says only one of the three Gibbon bks were filmed.

Anyway this was a disappointment. Slow-cinema over-used (especially in the switchover to WWI France sequence, but also the one in the church), Deyn stretched at some points but that face has potential. I think its equally true the film stretched the material and everybody involved.

Looked great but one for ppl who recognise all the themes - working-class life and song, the woman's lot, brutal patriarchs, and I liked Davies' re-use of these themes in a new setting.

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 8 December 2015 23:34 (nine years ago)

one month passes...

I remain apprehensive of Sunset Song, mainly cus of its regional relevance to me, I went to The Other primary school but I have slept with eh Persons from Redmyre school, which is across the main road from me, and is where the Lewis Grassic Gibbon Centre is (no thread on him? For shame...) I think they filmed parts of the 70's TV version in this village, slightly before I was borned, the old dudes still talk of the dirt they laid up the High Street for it. I heard they got the accents all wrong, no Doric? Still, I will no doubt catch this eventually, on DVD or whatever. But really I'm just looking for reassuarance that this isn't a travesty, cus I love Terrence Davies, albeit from a 2 generation remove from Liverpool, which may make all the difference. But (in the absence of a LGG thread) y'all should read A Scot's Quair. That's as close as my people come to A Great Work Of Literature, and objectively I think it may be. It's like Ulysses to us, and while the ILB people (who intimidate me) might find that comparison offensive I'll throw down for that.

Jonathan Hellion Mumble, Friday, 29 January 2016 16:45 (nine years ago)

i feel pretty confident that this movie will be a travesty. davies just seems plum out of inspriation and has fallen back on the 'heritage cinema' model. none of films since 'long day closes' have had more than a fraction of the power of that or the ones before it. 'the neon bible,' which davies considers a complete failure, at least retained his unusual, striking, planimetric composition sense. 'the house of mirth' was, by contrast, just a middling --and greivously (sp?) miscast--prestige literary adaptation.

wizzz! (amateurist), Friday, 29 January 2016 22:39 (nine years ago)

We'll have to disagree really HOM.

The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 29 January 2016 23:32 (nine years ago)

That's as close as my people come to A Great Work Of Literature, and objectively I think it may be. It's like Ulysses to us, and while the ILB people (who intimidate me) might find that comparison offensive I'll throw down for that.

― Jonathan Hellion Mumble

I would contend that there are a number of Scottish works that rank highly in the history of letters but of course I would.

The best Scottish comparison to Ulysses is a A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle by Hugh McDiarmid imo.

-Thread derail ends-

Absence of Doric consistent with the book in a way surely? Seem to remember Grassic-Gibbon mainly renders the dialogue in Standard English orthography. Though I may be mistaken.

Cornelius Pardew (jim in glasgow), Friday, 29 January 2016 23:36 (nine years ago)

"HOM"?

wizzz! (amateurist), Friday, 29 January 2016 23:51 (nine years ago)

Autocorrect, "Re: The House of Mirth", I guess.

pastoral fantasy (jed_), Saturday, 30 January 2016 01:15 (nine years ago)

I like the House of Mirth. think it has a few amazing moments and is v interestingly cast, fwiw.

pastoral fantasy (jed_), Saturday, 30 January 2016 01:18 (nine years ago)

i didn't think Gillian Anderson was as miscast as a Wharton 'heroine' as Michelle Pfeiffer was in Age of Innocence... still, it didn't quite work. Deep Blue Sea is the best one since '92 imho.

we can be heroes just for about 3.6 seconds (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 30 January 2016 05:06 (nine years ago)

anderson wasn't the worst bit of casting in that film by any means. actually, i think she was fine. it was the secondary and tertiary parts that were dreadfully miscast: eric stoltz, dan aykroyd (!)... even anthony lapaglia and laura linney seemed off (i'm not a huge linney fan anyhow). i think jodhi may in her brief role probably came across most convincingly.

wizzz! (amateurist), Tuesday, 2 February 2016 02:53 (nine years ago)

Selden is a callow lawyer, and Stolz is a callow actor, so

The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 2 February 2016 02:56 (nine years ago)

didn't mind Linney; she's good at assholery (and she wasn't in it long enough to bother me). Akyroyd though stumbles out of a Carol Burnett skit.

The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 2 February 2016 02:57 (nine years ago)

hm

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZI5HhhpidD8

pastoral fantasy (jed_), Friday, 12 February 2016 16:32 (nine years ago)

Arguably Terence Davies’ most profoundly personal film since Of Time and the City

:-|

pastoral fantasy (jed_), Tuesday, 16 February 2016 23:56 (nine years ago)

since the film he made two films ago.

pastoral fantasy (jed_), Tuesday, 16 February 2016 23:57 (nine years ago)

which is terrible.

pastoral fantasy (jed_), Tuesday, 16 February 2016 23:57 (nine years ago)

I would honestly love this to be good but that clip...

And that review!

"...tableaux-like compositions (at times reminiscent of American painting)"

pastoral fantasy (jed_), Wednesday, 17 February 2016 00:12 (nine years ago)

three months pass...

Sunset Song feels too long and foreshortened at the same time. I preferred the squalor and rural violence of the first act, although New Film Boy Crush Kevin Guthrie is adorable and believable as Chris' husband in the second.

The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 29 May 2016 13:38 (nine years ago)

xyzzzz otm more or less

The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 29 May 2016 13:41 (nine years ago)

New Film Boy Crush Kevin Guthrie

hands off!

pastoral fantasy (jed_), Sunday, 29 May 2016 20:05 (nine years ago)

old bastard has made his best film in 25 years, i think!

a pleasant antidote to US Memorial Day

we can be heroes just for about 3.6 seconds (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 2 June 2016 02:28 (nine years ago)

pleasant in quotes, of course

we can be heroes just for about 3.6 seconds (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 2 June 2016 02:28 (nine years ago)

did not recognize Peter Mullan as the nightmare dad (which was TD's way in to the story i suppose)

we can be heroes just for about 3.6 seconds (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 2 June 2016 02:29 (nine years ago)

yes, especially when he sings

The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 2 June 2016 02:40 (nine years ago)

This is the sort of film whose annoyances may recede when recollecting the thing in tranquility in December. I have no problem with his wanting to adapt works of lit when they're this lived in; on this one he chewed on the project too long.

The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 2 June 2016 02:42 (nine years ago)

Disagree strongly, fastest 135 minutes in eons. Loved the use of the trad Scot songs since he couldn't use any movie clips...

omg Cynthia Nixon as Emily Dickinson is imminent

we can be heroes just for about 3.6 seconds (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 2 June 2016 02:43 (nine years ago)

this left his Wharton & Toole adaps in the dust.

we can be heroes just for about 3.6 seconds (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 2 June 2016 02:46 (nine years ago)

I wasn't bored and it didn't drag but the film had an erratic rhythm. Chris went from independent mistress to married woman awfully quickly, and Ewan is hustled off the screen just as quickly so he can SPOILER disappear into mud and hymns.

The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 2 June 2016 02:46 (nine years ago)

Nothing wrong with keeping it moving... Working in 2.35:1, I thought you could see the influence of '50s Wyler, Ford, Stevens etc on Davies but he made it his own (even Bergmanesque with the first 45 mins' horrors).

we can be heroes just for about 3.6 seconds (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 2 June 2016 02:55 (nine years ago)

For what it's worth.

The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 2 June 2016 02:55 (nine years ago)

btw bowlegged hottie Guthrie is up soon in a remake of Whisky Galore!, which sounds like a terrible idea.

we can be heroes just for about 3.6 seconds (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 2 June 2016 02:56 (nine years ago)

he's a nice bit o' arable land, isn't he

The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 2 June 2016 02:59 (nine years ago)

Bowlegged? Could I like this guy any more?

I haven't seen this btw

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Thursday, 2 June 2016 03:38 (nine years ago)

whisky galore is a fucking hilarious movie.

wizzz! (amateurist), Thursday, 2 June 2016 06:17 (nine years ago)

once i saw it i remembering thinking, "aha! now i know where bill forsyth comes from."

wizzz! (amateurist), Thursday, 2 June 2016 06:17 (nine years ago)

one month passes...

Rewatched The Long Day Closes on CC Blu-ray... It has a good "South Bank Show" from '92 with on-set footage and Davies musing on his life and art. He says when the Trilogy first screened some critic scoffed that "it makes Bergman look like Jerry Lewis." "And it's true!" TD laughs.

Some great supps on the production design and lighting of TLDC too.

helpless before THRILLARY (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 20 July 2016 14:57 (nine years ago)

i watched distant voices, still lives last night, superb. admit that going into it i didn't expect to see an action movie running-away-from-explosions scene

lazy rascals, spending their substance, and more, in riotous living (Merdeyeux), Wednesday, 20 July 2016 16:26 (nine years ago)

Wait why is Whisky Galore mentioned on this thread? Oh, I see.

Miami Jeeves And The Ties That Bind (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 20 July 2016 16:41 (nine years ago)

two months pass...

early Dickinson review roundup

https://www.fandor.com/keyframe/daily-nyff-2016-terence-daviess-a-quiet-passion

seeing on the 16th at NYFF

The Hon. J. Piedmont Mumblethunder (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 5 October 2016 19:41 (nine years ago)

Looks like he's Chanelling Cries and Whispers, a film he's talked about, passionately, before. I hope it's good. The trailer... Well I dunno. I might like the whole thing but I don't really like the trailer.

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Wednesday, 5 October 2016 20:57 (nine years ago)

But, in a sense, I "taught" myself to like The House of Mirth.

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Wednesday, 5 October 2016 20:58 (nine years ago)

i hope not, C&W is one of my least fave Bergmans

xp

The Hon. J. Piedmont Mumblethunder (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 5 October 2016 20:58 (nine years ago)

I'm seeing Sunset Song tomorrow! Quite excited. Saw Distant Voices, Still Lives yesterday to prepare, and that's probably the best film I've seen in a loooong time. Also saw Of Time and the City, but honestly didn't like it as much as I'd hoped.

Frederik B, Wednesday, 5 October 2016 21:00 (nine years ago)

so weird-- terence davies came up (in a very apposite way!) on the blue nile thread just yesterday

I wish you could see my home. It's... it's so... exciting (Jon not Jon), Wednesday, 5 October 2016 21:10 (nine years ago)

Sunset Song is so underrated on critical aggregation sites (81% on RT, 72 on metacritic). I know these things don't really matter, but were a majority of critics really so not raving about a great TD movie?

calzino, Wednesday, 5 October 2016 21:15 (nine years ago)

uh those are majorities

aggregator site scores do not measure raves well

The Hon. J. Piedmont Mumblethunder (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 5 October 2016 21:36 (nine years ago)

I know I am pissing in the wind here, but just 2% better than Eddie The Eagle :p

calzino, Wednesday, 5 October 2016 21:44 (nine years ago)

Sunset Song uses harvest-time almost as much as Terence Malick uses dust. Oh, okay, now it's harvest again, I suppose... I liked it, was a tad slow in the beginning, but when things start happening it's brutal, and the last half hour or so - from the people seem to wander ghost-like over the corn fields - of course ripe and ready for harvest - - it becomes quite surreal in an upsetting way.

Frederik B, Thursday, 6 October 2016 15:13 (nine years ago)

Shame that that the Emily Dickinson biopic might be long. Nevertheless I am looking fwd to it.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 6 October 2016 21:06 (nine years ago)

Looks like he's Chanelling Cries and Whispers, a film he's talked about, passionately, before.

Yes - I remember seeing a thing on Channel 4 when I was about 16 (googled, called Movie Masterclass?) where he analysed and discussed it with some students for an hour. It blew my mind a bit at the time - the kind of attention he paid wasn't a way I came at film.

woof, Thursday, 6 October 2016 21:19 (nine years ago)

I remember that programme too!

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Thursday, 6 October 2016 21:30 (nine years ago)

Love Cries and Whispers, possibly my favourite Bergman.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 6 October 2016 21:33 (nine years ago)

Yes, I loved Movie Masterclass too - esp remember Lindsay Anderson doing My Darling Clementine

Persona is my favourite Bergman - as close to a perfect film as I know of - but Cries and Whispers is up there too

Foster Twelvetrees (Ward Fowler), Thursday, 6 October 2016 21:38 (nine years ago)

Fanny & Alexander! But that's for another thread, probably :)

Frederik B, Thursday, 6 October 2016 22:05 (nine years ago)

Davies wears his Bergmanisms a bit more lightly than Woody Allen, tho I think it might be interesting to see some of the same kind of fantasy as in Seventh Seal, Hour of the Wolf etc in a Davies movie.

Foster Twelvetrees (Ward Fowler), Thursday, 6 October 2016 22:14 (nine years ago)

four weeks pass...

I finally saw Sunset Song. I actually laughed out loud at the end because it was so bad. It's utterly ridiculous. The casting and the accents aren't event the main problem, I accept fairly well that a general "Scottish" sound is more understandable internationally than Scots Doric but at least give some kind of credence to the language the book was written in. Forget about Agyness, she was simply badly cast (given that she's not actually an actress) but Davies allows everyone to speak in either not-Scottish or Glaswegian. Peter Mullan should know better but I suppose he's played his particular game often enough that he's just going through the motions (incidentally, this is the third time I've seen PM weild a belt violently on film and for it to be the MO of his character)

But even within his own cast choices Davies makes the wrong ones. He should have cast the big guy, Douglas Rankine in the Kevin Guthrie role. That's a stupid decision. KG is just a wee boy.

His tin ear for dialogue In this is pretty clear and his lack of feeling - I heard this is a project he's worked for three decades to get made? - is clear. If you'd worked on something for three decades you may have thought he would have researched far enough to get the lyrics to Auld Lang Syng right. It's the pivotal scene. The fact he got them wrong ("for the sake of auld Lang syne" really? This line is a kind of gross insult) renders him a fool. Jesus Christ, this dude made Distant Voices, Still Lives, how in gods name could he have made this piece of trash?

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Thursday, 3 November 2016 05:20 (eight years ago)

They get the lyrics to Auld Lang Syne wrong in The Long Day Closes as well. Guess that's worthless trash too, then.

Frederik B, Thursday, 3 November 2016 09:36 (eight years ago)

My complaint from May still stands: the husband's collapse happened too soon.

The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 3 November 2016 10:37 (eight years ago)

Ewan? He definitely switched too fast but it's just one thing happening after another and none of it has much heft so I don't feel like it mattered much.

Frederik, English people in the 50s would have got the lyrics wrong, these characters wouldn't have.

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Thursday, 3 November 2016 15:36 (eight years ago)

Holy shit, A Quiet Season is amazing. Cynthia Nixon should win all the oscars, and the humor and confidence in every aspect of filmmaking is shocking, almost.

Frederik B, Monday, 7 November 2016 20:27 (eight years ago)

A Quiet Passion, sorry, was on a break between movie four and five of the day, my brain is kinda mush. Anyways, this film!! Funny as fuck, and there's one music piece that's absolutely shamelessly mindblowing that it's in there, which seems to have escaped most reviewers. I didn't believe it was in there until I stayed for the credits, but yup.

Frederik B, Tuesday, 8 November 2016 00:26 (eight years ago)

surely the "wrong" lyrics for "auld lang syne" are themselves authentic to the times and places that davies wished to recreate in his films? i have mixed feelings about most of his films since "long day closes," but the last thing he is is sloppy.

wizzz! (amateurist), Tuesday, 8 November 2016 04:32 (eight years ago)

could be authentic to deliberately depict an american person today talking about "paninis" or "a caffe latte with milk" while showing an italian american particularly of some generations past doing the same might be jarring to the point of unbelievable

suggest terence davies doesn't know the words to auld lang syne

conrad, Tuesday, 8 November 2016 06:45 (eight years ago)

Am, Did you see it? Because you're criticising my problems with the detail while saying (upthread) "I'm pretty sure this film will be a travesty" - it is one. And it's pretty sloppy too fwiw.

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Tuesday, 8 November 2016 16:18 (eight years ago)

Also, of time and the city and the deep blue sea were also pretty sloppy.

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Tuesday, 8 November 2016 16:21 (eight years ago)

you're pretty sloppy

The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 8 November 2016 16:45 (eight years ago)

x-post

the reviews of the film (the emily dickinson one) have heartened me a little. i was v. disappointed by sunset song--outside of a few nice moments, the best description of it might be "academic." you might be right about auld lang syne. but given that "long day closes" is mostly constructed from davies's childhood memories, i'm willing to give him benefit of the doubt.

wizzz! (amateurist), Tuesday, 8 November 2016 22:35 (eight years ago)

people who worry about casting choices are sometimes made out to be simps, and sometimes they are, but my first reaction to news about the dickinson biopic was that cynthia nixon was too old. but i think i had thought that dickinson died much younger than she in fact did. anyway.

wizzz! (amateurist), Tuesday, 8 November 2016 22:37 (eight years ago)

Deep Blue Sea is good but not his best - but that's as much to do with the ho-hum source material more than anything. iirc the opening sequence felt out of place too. Sloppy sounds right. I could be that TD was perhaps always limited in the kind of story he was able to tell.

The play was revived at The National Theatre - didn't catch it.

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 8 November 2016 22:48 (eight years ago)

Jack Greenlees as Chris's brother is good, I think. He's quite amazing looking, but there's the problem I think, there's something unbalanced, and perhaps questionable, in a film that pores so much attention over his beating while paying relatively cursory attention to the mother's suicide after killing her baby.

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Tuesday, 8 November 2016 23:29 (eight years ago)

Sorry, that's garbled but you know what I mean.

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Tuesday, 8 November 2016 23:30 (eight years ago)

Cynthia Nixon is absolutely amazing in this, and her comic timing is impeccable and surprisingly central in the film. It's definitely one of year's best. When will you all get to see it so I don't have to rant alone?

Frederik B, Tuesday, 8 November 2016 23:40 (eight years ago)

Amateurist, I realise that the incorrect words to ALS mean nothing to 95% of the audience and I don't want to beat a dead horse but, for what it's worth, the Variety review of A Quiet Passion, which I have just read, complains:

The wisdom of covering Dickinson’s entire adult life, as opposed to a judiciously chosen and dramatically crucial passage thereof, is most sorely tested when the Battle of Gettysburg rolls around: Though understandably budget-strapped, Davies questionably elects to cover it with a kind of cinematic PowerPoint presentation of colorized photographs, adding insult to injury by closing the montage on a shot of an inaccurately over-spangled American flag.

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Tuesday, 8 November 2016 23:59 (eight years ago)

(Admittedly, probably the production designer's fault)

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Wednesday, 9 November 2016 00:00 (eight years ago)

oof!

wizzz! (amateurist), Wednesday, 9 November 2016 00:00 (eight years ago)

Nah, that reviewer misses every willful anachronism but one, then complains about that one as if it ruins the whole movie. Also calls Jessica Hauser's askance compositions 'symmetrical', so is clearly blind.

Frederik B, Wednesday, 9 November 2016 00:07 (eight years ago)

This movie is WEIRD, and the images of flags are awesome.

Frederik B, Wednesday, 9 November 2016 00:07 (eight years ago)

i liked AQP fine til the two long death scenes. Dude loves death.

Keith Carradine only actor who knew how they pronounce "aunt" in Massachusetts tho.

Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 10 November 2016 22:21 (eight years ago)

five months pass...

Very oddly for me I just saw TWO Terence Davies films in two days.

A QUIET PASSION wasn't quite what I expected from TD but at least it had quality dialogue with tons of barbed back & forth put-downs. I had never known that Emily Dickinson was supposed to be so witty.

Then DISTANT VOICES, STILL LIVES. I had never known before that it was in two parts. I preferred the STILL LIVES. DISTANT VOICES was somewhat dominated by the father who was not pleasant. I'm not sure I understood this film or got much from it, except from the moments when the young women talked to each other - their talk was vivacious and colourful, unlike most of the rest of the film. But on reflection I think: I ought to welcome attempts to make films that work and tell stories in unusual and different ways.

the pinefox, Monday, 17 April 2017 22:52 (eight years ago)

Dickinson's letters are marvelous.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 17 April 2017 23:18 (eight years ago)

I have read a load of articles about her over the years, but that element never came through. Watching the film, I assumed that the wit must be drawn from letters, not just made up by TD.

I'm not sure the poems came across so well in the film - not always sure of Nixon's delivery of them (though she would surely be advised and directed on that), and hearing them without seeing them made them harder to follow anyway.

the pinefox, Tuesday, 18 April 2017 08:36 (eight years ago)

two weeks pass...

Interview: http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/movies/la-et-mn-terence-davies-a-quiet-passion-interview-20170502-htmlstory.html

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 5 May 2017 13:20 (eight years ago)

I had a qualm or two but overall AQP impressed me.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 12 May 2017 16:33 (eight years ago)

two months pass...

out on disc etc

http://www.slantmagazine.com/dvd/review/a-quiet-passion

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Friday, 28 July 2017 17:58 (eight years ago)

Excellen film.

Acid Hose (Capitaine Jay Vee), Friday, 28 July 2017 18:42 (eight years ago)

*Excellent

Acid Hose (Capitaine Jay Vee), Friday, 28 July 2017 18:42 (eight years ago)

I'm watching it again this Saturday night, appropriately sober this time.

calzino, Friday, 28 July 2017 18:53 (eight years ago)

well maybe not that much, but not shitfaced!

calzino, Friday, 28 July 2017 18:54 (eight years ago)

LOL Cal!

I'm make-believe. (jed_), Saturday, 29 July 2017 16:40 (eight years ago)

Cal's quiet passion.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 29 July 2017 18:15 (eight years ago)

four years pass...

New one about Siegfried Sassoon opens on Friday. I'm watching it tonight. Anyone seen it yet?

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 31 May 2022 21:54 (three years ago)

seven months pass...

Benediction is brilliant. I keep thinking about some of the hilariously vicious and cold dialogue from Novello and that very sad parting of ways when Wilfred Owen is packed off to his death. TD has still got it, man!

calzino, Monday, 16 January 2023 15:48 (two years ago)

Film of the year imo

عباس کیارستمی (Eric H.), Monday, 16 January 2023 16:03 (two years ago)

it really makes you think of regret and seemingly innocuous moments of mild drama in life that haunt you for the rest of your life. It's a great movie.

calzino, Monday, 16 January 2023 16:07 (two years ago)

like you get a strong sense of that one short moment of mild class condescension towards Owen is something Sassoon regretted for the rest of his life.

calzino, Monday, 16 January 2023 16:12 (two years ago)

Any film that brings the three of us together.

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 16 January 2023 16:12 (two years ago)

Davies has become a whiz at showing the passage of time: how it happens without your being aware of it, as the hurts linger.

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 16 January 2023 16:13 (two years ago)

I’ve somehow studiously avoided Davies all these years, but finally watched Summer Song last week and was hooked. I’ve been baptized, I’ve been baptized.

The Gate of Angels Laundromat (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 16 January 2023 16:25 (two years ago)

Ahem, Sunset Song

The Gate of Angels Laundromat (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 16 January 2023 16:26 (two years ago)

Sunset Song got criticised on here because the Auld Lang Syne in it wasn't authentically Scottish enough! I'm not beefing about it, it just amused me at the time.

calzino, Monday, 16 January 2023 16:34 (two years ago)

People seemed to like it on my Scottish language thread, despite or because of having to read the book in school. Or maybe it’s just the book they liked.

The Gate of Angels Laundromat (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 16 January 2023 16:59 (two years ago)

one month passes...

So why did you go to the Impressionists?
I only did it for the Monet.

after the pinefox (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 20 February 2023 02:00 (two years ago)

We’re here to enjoy ourselves. Come on, Micky, give us a song.

Huey “Piano” Smithers-Jones (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 27 February 2023 00:14 (two years ago)

seven months pass...

Quite lovely:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lS-boGJ8hd0

peanut filibuster parfait (Eric H.), Wednesday, 4 October 2023 14:51 (two years ago)

RIP

Dose of Thunderwords (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 7 October 2023 17:53 (two years ago)

fun list

https://www.instagram.com/p/CyGrwkrIsTH/

reggae mike love (polyphonic), Saturday, 7 October 2023 18:59 (two years ago)

i still think about my favorite professor showing us distant voices, still lives at byu. did he know the queer, closeted kids in the class needed to see it? was he somewhat queer himself? probably a little bit of yes to both. it was all so unspoken though.

ꙮ (map), Saturday, 7 October 2023 21:12 (two years ago)

Loved this bit from Michael Koresky:

At the conclusion of that deeply nurturing conversation, as I was nervously pressing stop on my audio recorder, Davies then looked up at me with a warm smile and asked, “So… what is your book about?” Concerned and amazed, I responded: “You! The book is about you.” Davies’ face turned red and lit up like a child, delighted but also humbled beyond belief.

“Me?!” It was an expression of unbelievable modesty coming from a man many agree was England’s greatest filmmaker of the last quarter century, but also evidence that Davies, never a commercially successful director in all the boring ways we measure such things, was always on the edge of being forgotten. It’s impossible to imagine, however, that Davies’ cinema will ever be forgotten by anyone who has seen a frame of it; his monumental films held candles as vigils to the form itself, and now without him, we will – we must – keep that flame burning.

https://www.bfi.org.uk/news/terence-davies-obituary

birdistheword, Sunday, 8 October 2023 05:18 (two years ago)

MK is living the life I wish I was. He’s the perfect person to pay homage to this particular director

insert nothing here (Eric H.), Sunday, 8 October 2023 06:18 (two years ago)

I'll watch his last couple of films. Really hope Davies is not forgotten :-(

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 8 October 2023 08:33 (two years ago)

My obt for him.

hat trick of trashiness (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 8 October 2023 17:05 (two years ago)

So lovely - the Capaldi contribution particularly.

Piedie Gimbel, Wednesday, 11 October 2023 16:29 (two years ago)

Yes, that was great, thanks!

Dose of Thunderwords (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 11 October 2023 16:44 (two years ago)

I'm getting the Koresky book from the library, this aspect of the description sounded really intriguing:

focusing on four paradoxes within the director's oeuvre: films that are autobiographical yet fictional; melancholy yet elating; conservative in tone and theme yet radically constructed; and obsessed with the passing of time yet frozen in time and space.

Halfway there but for you, Wednesday, 11 October 2023 16:51 (two years ago)

Koresky's good.

hat trick of trashiness (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 11 October 2023 16:59 (two years ago)

I have a mega critic-crush on him

insert nothing here (Eric H.), Wednesday, 11 October 2023 17:23 (two years ago)

I don’t know from him, just heard about him now on this thread. His book Films of Endearment has a cheesy title but maybe it’s good?

Dose of Thunderwords (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 11 October 2023 17:39 (two years ago)

I loved it, but as I said above ...

insert nothing here (Eric H.), Wednesday, 11 October 2023 17:49 (two years ago)

Glancing at it. Looks good. Had a shock for a minute when he said his mother went to Newton High and I misread it as Newtown High.

Dose of Thunderwords (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 11 October 2023 18:10 (two years ago)


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