I agree, or at least, it seemed kind of generically slick. But I thought it did a great job getting different POVs, and getting good interviews with interesting people.
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 13 June 2020 22:57 (four years ago) link
generically slick
lol, true to the exec producers
― brooklyn suicide cult (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 13 June 2020 23:01 (four years ago) link
glad I saw it
― Dan S, Saturday, 13 June 2020 23:06 (four years ago) link
but it feels like so many documentaries have the same earnest uninspired film-making style
Hale County This Morning This Evening, Cameraperson, No Home Movie, In Jackson Heights, The Act of Killing, I Am Not Your Negro, This Is Not a Film were all great I thought
― Dan S, Saturday, 13 June 2020 23:09 (four years ago) link
hadn't noticed that some of my favorite recent documentaries have a theme of negation
― Dan S, Saturday, 13 June 2020 23:49 (four years ago) link
Throne of Blood (Kurosawa, 1961)Water Lilies (Sciamma, 2007)Antigone (Straub/Huillet, 1992)Hoop Dreams (James, 1994)Tomboy (Sciamma, 2011)Love (Noe, 2015)Full Mantis (Meginsky, Young, 2018)Our Daily Bread (Kaul, 1970)The Stranger (Ray, 1991)
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 18 June 2020 20:52 (four years ago) link
We saw "Miss Juneteenth" as a family. It was pretty good! Slow moving in the best way, simple story but good acting (especially Nicole Beharie), and well shot.
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 20 June 2020 02:06 (four years ago) link
Throne of blood is maybe a top ten all time for me
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Saturday, 20 June 2020 02:33 (four years ago) link
That movie is so good. Best Shakespeare adaptation?
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 20 June 2020 02:38 (four years ago) link
It's one of the very best. I think the only other good one I've seen is King Lear (Peter Brook)
― xyzzzz__, Saturday, 20 June 2020 14:04 (four years ago) link
Oh, and Ran, of course.
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 20 June 2020 14:30 (four years ago) link
Arabian Nights (Pasolini, 1974)Beauty and the Beast (Cocteau, 1946)A Kiss Before Dying (Oswald, 1956)American Gigolo (Schrader, 1980)It Chapter 2 (Muschietti, 2019)Animal Crackers (Heerman, 1930)The Underworld Story (Enfield, 1950)Cléo from 5 to 7 (Varda, 1962)Farewell, My Lovely (Richards, 1975)The Hitch-Hiker (Lupino, 1953)
― A White, White Gay (cryptosicko), Saturday, 20 June 2020 16:34 (four years ago) link
A Scandal in Paris (Sirk, 1946) - 7/10Grass (Hong, 2018) - 8/10*My Night at Maud’s (Rohmer, 1969) - 10/10*Martha (Fassbinder, 1974) - 9/10*La Collectionneuse (Rohmer, 1967) - 7/10*Shanghai Express (Sternberg, 1932) - 10/10On the Occasion of Remembering the Turning Gate (Hong, 2002) - 8/10*Dishonored (Sternberg, 1931) - 10/10Yourself and Yours (Hong, 2016) - 8/10The Tarnished Angels (Sirk, 1957) - 8/10Sword of Trust (Shelton, 2019) - 3/10Charley Varrick (Siegel, 1973) - 8/10*Black Girl (Sembène, 1966) - 9/10*I Am Curious (Yellow) (Sjöman, 1967) - 8/10*Ali: Fear Eats the Soul (Fassbinder, 1974) - 10/10*Claire’s Knee (Rohmer, 1970) - 8/10Moonrise (Borzage, 1948) - 10/10*Je, tu, il, elle (Akerman, 1974) - 9/10Chicken with Vinegar (Chabrol, 1985) - 6/10Body Double (DePalma, 1984) - 7/10Death by Hanging (Oshima, 1968) - 9/10Casualties of War (DePalma, 1989) - 5/10Minnie & Moskowitz (Cassavetes, 1971) - 7/10Gone Baby Gone (Affleck, 2007) - 8/10Inspector Lavardin (Chabrol, 1986) - 6/10Reflections in a Golden Eye (Huston, 1967) - 6/10*Alphaville (Godard, 1965) - 10/10Tommaso (Ferrara, 2019) - 9/10Riot in Cell Block 11 (Siegel, 1954) - 9/10*The Devil, Probably (Bresson, 1977) - 10/10À Nos Amours (Pialat, 1983) - 8/10*Love in the Afternoon (Rohmer, 1972) - 7/10Pasolini (Ferrara, 2014) - 8/10
― flappy bird, Saturday, 20 June 2020 17:21 (four years ago) link
*Dreamchild (1985, Millar) 6/10The Homecoming (1973, Hall) 8/10Strike (1925, Eisenstein) 10/10*The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (1972, Bunuel) 9/10Hallelujah (1929, K. Vidor) 8/10A Chump at Oxford (1940, Goulding) 7/10The Killing Floor (1984, Duke)The Wedding Night (1935, K. Vidor) 6/10Original Cast Album: Company (1970, Pennebaker) 8/10*Crisis: Behind a Presidential Commitment (1963, Drew) 9/10
― brooklyn suicide cult (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 20 June 2020 17:45 (four years ago) link
The Killing Floor 7/10
Polanski made a brutish, fine Macbeth too:
https://letterboxd.com/fernandofcroce/film/macbeth-1971/
― brooklyn suicide cult (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 20 June 2020 17:48 (four years ago) link
Roadblock (Harold Daniels, 1951)Memory: The Origins of Alien (Alexandre O. Philippe, 2019)The Last Of Sheila (Herbert Ross, 1973)I Aim At The Stars (J. Lee Thompson, 1960)The Last Black Man in San Francisco (Joe Talbot, 2019)The Vast Of Night (Andrew Patterson, 2019)Trouble In Mind (Alan Rudolph, 1985)Cleopatra Wong (Bobby A. Suarez, 1978)H. (Rania Attieh, Daniel Garcia, 2014)7 uomini d'oro (Marco Vicario, 1965)Korla (John Turner, 2015)
I probably would have liked Trouble In Mind had I seen it new and not 35 years later but I suspect I was wanting it to be a different movie. The two fan documentaries are fannish, but the Korla Pandit doc has a lot of terrific footage I'd never seen before. Roadblock is a gritty RKO noir that stuck in my head far longer than the rest - recommended!
― Elvis Telecom, Sunday, 21 June 2020 02:49 (four years ago) link
Saw Trouble In Mind during lockdown, having missed a Rudolph-hosted screening at the museum that plays Divine’s house the week before. It’s not good per se, and moderately boring, but would still play better in an audience who had no particular expectations. It was fun matching the locations to IRL and seeing the changes, for sure. (The cafe that most characters converge around is now a marijuana shop.)Sitting at the drive-in rn, waiting for sunset, to see my first projected movie in months.
― an, uh, razor of love (sic), Sunday, 21 June 2020 03:35 (four years ago) link
thats awesome
― flappy bird, Sunday, 21 June 2020 04:02 (four years ago) link
Fabulous Baker Boys, Trouble In Mind, and McQ would make for a ridiculously great old Old Seattle triple team
― Elvis Telecom, Sunday, 21 June 2020 05:47 (four years ago) link
May/June
Vivarium (2019) 7/10Get On Up (2014) 7/10*King of New York (1990) 8/10*Scum (1979) 8/10The Magnificent Ambersons (1942) 7/10*Animal Farm (1954) 8/10England is Mine (2017) 4/10Ronin (1998) 7/10Fedora (1978) 7/10*Wayne's World (1992) 7/10Last Night (1998) 8/10Sully (2016) 5/10*Supersonic (2016) 8/10The Sacrifice (1986) 5/10*Logan (2017) 7/10Wax, or The Discovery of Television Among The Bees (1991) 7/10The Mule (2018) 6/10Every Day is Like Sunday (2016) 6/10The Trap: What Happened to our Dream of Freedom (2007) 8/10The Century of The Self (2002) 9/10Woman at War (2018) 8/10
― Saxophone Of Futility (Michael B), Sunday, 21 June 2020 12:51 (four years ago) link
Fabulous Baker Boys, Trouble In Mind, and McQ would make for a ridiculously great old Old Seattle triple teamFabulous Baker Boys is nearly all LA playing Seattle. Sub in Scorchy (1976 all-location flick that appears to have been written as a blaxploitation, then cast with a white lady), or Harry In Your Pocket (1973 pickpocket flick starring James Coburn, the only film directed by Mission Impossible creator Bruce Geller) for higher dosages.
― an, uh, razor of love (sic), Sunday, 21 June 2020 13:10 (four years ago) link
Daughters of the Dust (1991, dir. Julie Dash)
this is very good. have you all seen it? the setting is 1902, a Gullah family living on the Sea Islands off the coast of GA/SC, making a move to the mainland
― time is running out to pitch in $5 (Karl Malone), Sunday, 21 June 2020 16:32 (four years ago) link
That film is great! Apparently she is doing a biopic on Angela Davis
― covid coronenberg (wins), Sunday, 21 June 2020 19:39 (four years ago) link
Mention of “fan documentaries” above... this is a weird thing now, these kickstarted 9 hour dvd extras masquerading as actual films. Lots of them on shudder.Anyway I just watched the first ep of a very stupid and exploitative shudder doc on “cursed films”. It’s very insubstantial and you could just spend 2 minutes reading a wiki subsection, the talking heads they get (a film critic, a podcaster, a couple of professional sceptics) are all actual idiots with zero insight. Nobody bothers to mention that Julian Beck had already been diagnosed with cancer when he was cast so his death was hardly surprising, or consider whether the child actor nearly being choked by a malfunctioning effect might be more indicative of a lax attitude to worker protection in a production by a filmmaker who would produce a film the very next year in which two children died. The only thing that made it worthwhile viewing was a 5-minute interview with the director of poltergeist 3, who seems genuinely haunted by the experience. Also right at the end the effects supervisor from the first film shuts down the whole myth so definitively that you’re like: well, yeah, so wtf have we been doing for the last half hour?
― covid coronenberg (wins), Sunday, 21 June 2020 19:59 (four years ago) link
Also I have to say the behind the scenes footage of p3 where it’s clear heather o’rourke is very unwell was hard to watch
― covid coronenberg (wins), Sunday, 21 June 2020 20:01 (four years ago) link
need to rewatch Daughters of the Dust W/ subtitles on
― brooklyn suicide cult (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 21 June 2020 20:09 (four years ago) link
Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story (Haynes 1988)Spiritual Kung Fu (Lo Wei, 1978)$ (Brooks, 1975)The Hatbox (short - Mottola, 1985)Vera Drake (Leigh, 2004)Street of Crocodiles (short - Quay Bros., 1986)The Wayward Cloud (Tsai, 2005)Symphony in Black and Blue (short - Scotto, 1932)What's a Nice Girl Like You Doing in a Place Like This? (short - Scorsese, 1963)Michigan Avenue (short - Gordon, Benning, 1973)I-94 (short - Gordon, Benning, 1974)The Big Shave (short - Scorsese, 1967)Cab Calloway's Hi-de-Ho (short - Waller, 1934)Katzelmacher (Fassbinder, 1969) (best episode of "Friends" ever)Down There (Akerman, 2006)Rehearsals for Extinct Anatomies (short - Quay Bros., 1987)Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion (Petri, 1970)Coup de grace (Schlondorff, 1976)In Absentia (short - Quay Bros., 2000)The Phantom Museum (short - Quay Bros., 2003)Golden Eighties (Akerman, 1986)Italianamerican (Scorsese, 1974)In a Year of 13 Moons (Fassbinder, 1978)Toni (Renoir, 1935)Original Cast Album: "Company" (Pennebaker, 1970)
― Irritable Baal (WmC), Monday, 22 June 2020 01:59 (four years ago) link
Katzelmacher (Fassbinder, 1969) (best episode of "Friends" ever)
lmao
― flappy bird, Monday, 22 June 2020 04:23 (four years ago) link
South (1999; Chantal Akerman's look at the James Byrd murder in TX) 4/5* Melvin and Howard (1980) 4/5Bless Their Little Hearts (1983) 3/5Event Horizon (1997) 2.5/5Candyman (1992) 3.5/5Beware of a Holy Whore (1971) 3.5/5You Don't Nomi (2019) 3/5Married to the Mob (1988) 3.5/5
― Chris L, Monday, 22 June 2020 15:09 (four years ago) link
Harry In Your Pocket (1973 pickpocket flick starring James Coburn, the only film directed by Mission Impossible creator Bruce Geller) for higher dosages.
Terrific movie and ashamed I forgot it (stand corrected of FBB)
― Elvis Telecom, Monday, 22 June 2020 22:17 (four years ago) link
The depression/insomnia/existential dread has finally receded enough for me to start watching movies again, so in the last three days it's been:
Crimewave (the forgotten/discarded Coens/Raimi joint; shrill and dumb and way more fun than its reputation suggests) 3/5Antiviral (Cronenberg fils' debut picture which has been sitting on my shelf in shrinkwrap for like 6 years; see above re: depression- was surprised by how much I loved this) 4/5Seventh Curse (want to see a martial arts movie where Chow Yun-Fat does nothing but smoke a pipe and shoot a demon in the face with a rocket launcher? you should, it rules) 3.5/5
― You guys are caterpillar (Telephone thing), Wednesday, 24 June 2020 01:08 (four years ago) link
Just saw an excellent documentary called "An Uncomfortable Truth." The backstory is that my wife grew up in Arlington, Virginia, and one of her favorite teachers, Joan Trumpauer Mulholland, was a famous civil rights activist (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joan_Trumpauer_Mulholland). My wife sort of knew that, but she was probably too young at the time to appreciate it. Anyway, Joan Trumpauer Mulholland has two sons, Loki and Geronimo (how cool is that?), that my wife knew, and Loki specifically has gone on to make a couple of great documentaries, the first about his mom and the second, this one, which is simultaneously about the racist foundations of America but also about how he and his mom, this famous civil rights activist, have personally benefitted from that same racist foundation, stretching all the way back to his slave owning family at Jonestown. Anyway, it's really a beautiful story, told simply and powerfully, that gets to the heart of a lot of truths about this country that people don't talk much about or, maybe more accurately, are starting to talk about more right now.
Anyway, it can be streamed lots of places.
― Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 28 June 2020 20:42 (four years ago) link
Toni (Renoir, 1935)Whirlpool (Neill, 1934)Panique (Duvivier, 1946)Foolish Wives (von Stroheim, 1922)The 7th Voyage of Sinbad (Juran & Harryhausen, 1958)*It's a Gift (Fay, 1923)*Won in a Closet (Normand, 1914)A Waggin' Tale (de Haven, 1923)
― Life is a banquet and my invitation was lost in the mail (j.lu), Sunday, 28 June 2020 22:28 (four years ago) link
June:
Meshes of the Afternoon (Deren & Hammid, 1943) 9/10The Cat and the Canary (Nugent, 1939) 8/10GU04 (Strickland, 2019) 6/10Die, Monster, Die (Haller, 1965) 5/10A Study in Terror (Hill, 1965) 7/10The Case of the Scorpion's Tale (Martino, 1971) 7/10Exorcist II: The Heretic (Boorman, 1977) 4/10Moon Zero Two (Baker, 1969) 7/10Night of the Eagle (Hayers, 1962) 7/10Vera Cruz (Aldrich, 1954) 7/10Pieces (Simón, 1982) 7/10Sudden Fear (Miller, 1952) 8/10The Full Treatment (Guest, 1960) 4/10Swamp (Holt & Smithson, 1969) 9/10The Damned (Losey, 1963) 7/10You Only Live Once (Lang, 1937) 8/10Ten Seconds to Hell (Aldrich, 1959) 4/10Bloody Spear at Mount Fuji (Uchida, 1955) 8/10Your Vice is a Locked Room and Only I Have the Key (Martino, 1972) 7/10Calling All Police Cars (Caiano, 1975) 7/10
― Ward Fowler, Wednesday, 1 July 2020 05:52 (four years ago) link
two weeks, pretty light:
Great:Be Water (2020, Nguyen)The Jerk (1974, Reiner)
Consistently Pretty Good to Very Very Good:Where’s My Roy Cohn? (2019, Tyrnauer)El Campeón de Mundo (2020, Madiero and Borgia)Who You Think I Am (2020, Sebbou)
Almost Okay to Occasionally Pretty Good:Sometimes Always Never (2020, Hunter)Ringside (2020, Hörmann)Eating up Easter (2020, Mata’u Rapu)Booksellers (2020, Young)
For "Who You Think I Am" I spent a week collaborating with a french speaker to write English fansubs, first time I ever tried that. Watched the movie probably nine times. Happy to share if anyone's interested!
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 14:57 (four years ago) link
I'm also taking on a project of watching all the historical Looney Tunes shorts. The Bosko ones are repetitive, formulaic and racist but there are some truly hallucinogenic ideas and designs.
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 15:00 (four years ago) link
Getting back up to speed.
13 Ghosts (Castle, 1960)- 2.5/5 'salright*Miller's Crossing (Coen, 1990)- 4.5/5 damn near perfect film, not a fan of Burwell's score but that's just nitpickingThe Swimmer (Perry, 1968)- 3/5 unsure about the expansion from Cheever's story (haven't read it in ages but I feel like there was a more, for lack of a better term, magical realist dimension than "oh this dude crazy" as in the film) but the casting and seedy suburban-ness (that gross pool party with the big plastic dome!), and Marvin Hamlisch's overripe romantic-to-the-point-of-gothic score, are excellentSuccubus/Necronomicon (Franco, 1968)- 3/5 the first Franco film I've really vibed with; I'm not denying Franco's artistry but it's easier to come to grips with Succubus' art film pretensions than the usual Franco feel of "check out my partner's bush, it is fuckin righteous"
― You guys are caterpillar (Telephone thing), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 18:11 (four years ago) link
*Anatomy of a Murder (Preminger, 1959) 10/10 If You Could Only Cook (Seiter, 1935) 6/10 The Fountainhead (K. Vidor, 1949) 4/10 *Bunny Lake Is Missing (Preminger, 1965) 7/10 The Westerner (Wyler, 1940) 8/10 Drive a Crooked Road (Quine, 1954) 6/10 Phase IV (Bass, 1974) 8/10 *Bonjour Tristesse (Preminger, 1958) 10/10 That Certain Summer (Johnson, TV, 1972) 5/10 *The Lineup (Siegel, 1958) 9/10*Big Night (Tucci, Scott, 1996) 8/10 Captains Courageous (Fleming, 1937) 7/10 *Death Race 2000 (Bartel, 1975) 6/10
― brooklyn suicide cult (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 19:51 (four years ago) link
That Certain Summer (Johnson, TV, 1972) 5/10
Got a significant segment in the new AppleTV+ five-part series on the history of LGBTQ representation on American TV. Hard to tell if it was good but I'll certainly shop Hal Holbrook and young Martin Sheen.
― Get the point? Good, let's dance with nunchaku. (Eric H.), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 20:23 (four years ago) link
It's to 1972 what Philadelphia was to 1993; a timid foot in the door, a plea for tolerance. Holbrook gives a solid performance despite the limitations. There are some very enlightening video interviews online with Holbrook, William Link (one of the two Columbo/Mannix guys who wrote it), and the director Lamont Johnson, who says Martin Sheen approached him one day hoping to work a cure for homosexuality into the plot...
― brooklyn suicide cult (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 20:52 (four years ago) link
what do you think of Daisy Kenyon? I don't think I've seen that much Preminger
― flappy bird, Thursday, 2 July 2020 04:17 (four years ago) link
Dance, Girl, Dance (Arzner, 1940) - 8/10*Belle de Jour (Buñuel, 1967) - 9/10*Get Him to the Greek (Stoller, 2010) - 8/10L’enfance Nue (Pialat, 1968) - 9/10Summer Hours (Assayas, 2008) - 7/10*Vivre sa Vie (Godard, 1962) - 10/10The Town (Affleck, 2010) - 4/10*Mother Küsters Goes to Heaven (Fassbinder, 1975) - 10/10Strait-Jacket (Castle, 1964) - 9/10White Heat (Walsh, 1949) - 9/10The Most Dangerous Game (Schoedsack, Pichel; 1932) - 8/10Secret Ceremony (Losey, 1968) - 6/10*The 400 Blows (Truffaut, 1959) - 8/10Da 5 Bloods (Lee, 2020) - 8/10*Satan’s Brew (Fassbinder, 1976) - 9/10Postcards from the Edge (Nichols, 1990) - 7/10*A Married Woman (Godard, 1965) - 8/10Wasp Network (Assayas, 2020) - 7/10That’s My Boy (Anders, 2012) - 6/10Rebel Without a Cause (Ray, 1955) - 9/10Accident (Losey, 1967) - 6/10The Sleeping Beauty (Breillat, 2010) - 7/10Irresistible (Stewart, 2020) - 0/10Irma Vep (Assayas, 1996) - 8/10*Despair (Fassbinder, 1978) - 5/10Dark Victory (Goulding, 1939) - 7/10Police (Pialat, 1985) - 7/10Supernatural (Halperin, 1933) - 7/10*Les Biches (Chabrol, 1968) - 9/10Riff-Raff (Loach, 1991) - 8/10I Am Curious (Blue) (Sjöman, 1968) - 8/10
― flappy bird, Thursday, 2 July 2020 06:04 (four years ago) link
Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch (Taurog, 1934)It’s the Old Army Game (Sutherland, 1926)America (Griffith, 1924)Billy the Kid Versus Dracula (Beaudine, 1966)Shine Em Up (Davis, 1922)A Thrilling Romance (Robbins, 1926)*The Scarecrow (Keaton & Cline, 1920)
― Life is a banquet and my invitation was lost in the mail (j.lu), Sunday, 5 July 2020 20:50 (four years ago) link
Busy week and a half.
Great:Jasper Mall (Thomason and Whitcomb, 2020)The Personal History of David Copperfield (Iannucci, 2020)
Consistently Pretty Good to Very Very Good:Red Dog (Pinkston and Dick, 2020)Miss Juneteenth (Peoples, 2020)Pahokie (Lucas and Bresnan, 2020)Pipe Dreams (Tenenbaum, 2020)Aya of Yop City (Abouet and Oubrerie, 2013)Jump Shot (Hamiton, 2019)
Almost Okay to Occasionally Pretty Good:Inmate 1: The Rise of Danny Trejo (Harvey, 2020)
On-Deck:First Cow, Lynn and Lucy, Radioactive, Ghost of Peter Sellers, Fanny Lye Deliver'd, John Lewis: Good Trouble, Radioactive, Relic, Scheme Birds
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Friday, 10 July 2020 05:00 (four years ago) link
I thought "Palm Springs" was better than I expected it to be, if not really as good as it could have been, but it was still enjoyable. Great soundtrack.
Watched "The Seventh Seal," "Spirit of the Beehive" and "Some Like it Hot" with my daughter this week. Appreciated but I don't think liked the first, liked the second, but (of course) really enjoyed the third.
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 11 July 2020 02:51 (four years ago) link
where is Palm Springs? Netflix?
― flappy bird, Saturday, 11 July 2020 05:11 (four years ago) link
Hulu
― terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 11 July 2020 05:20 (four years ago) link
Booloo
― flappy bird, Saturday, 11 July 2020 05:32 (four years ago) link
ilplex too!
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Saturday, 11 July 2020 05:49 (four years ago) link
There should be a streaming service called Fomo.
I should say my *daughter* enjoyed those aforementioned movies to varying degrees (I'd already seen them of course). I'm always curious what a 2020 teen thinks of classic movies or "foreign" or art films. Will their iconic qualities transcend the language barrier, or the black and white, or the grainy image or the style of filmmaking? Or, as is frequently the case with her and classic American movies, the everyone-is-whiteness, or everyone-is-maleness. It's always satisfying to watch decades old classics still able do the thing they're classic for, but it's also interesting to rewatch classics that for whatever reason don't hold up or hold her attention. Everyone is different, but it's something we (or at least) generally can't recall, the moment when our brains shift when we're young from more or less mindless mainstream consumers to more discerning cineastes. Doesn't happen to everyone, obviously, and doesn't need to. There are plenty of movies to go around. Still, it's wonderful when you realize there's a whole section - or several floors - of the library you've never learned about before.
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 11 July 2020 12:29 (four years ago) link