Out of Singapore (Hutchison, 1932)That Goes Double (Henabery, 1933)The Lost Jungle (Schaefer & Howard, 1934)Ella Cinders (Green, 1926)Hawthorne of the U.S.A. (Cruze, 1919)Come on Danger! (Hill, 1932)The Hand of God (Sorrentino, 2021)
― Infanta Terrible (j.lu), Sunday, 5 December 2021 23:51 (two years ago) link
Forever Prisoner Alex Gibneyharrowing documentary about Guantanamo Bay detainee of 20 years Abu Zubaydah,Or possibly more about the network of lies and deception about why he has been imprisoned for 2 decades without a trial and tortured for no good reason since the process of torture is not a good way of extracting information from an individual. it is a good way of making somebody manual to say what teh torturer wants to try to stop the torture continuing, or rather what teh person thinks the torturer wants. & it struck me while watching this and listening to the podcast earlier today that talked about this film being broadcast last night, that Francis Bacon talked about this problem in the 16th century. So it has been known since then that the information extracted is not going to be reliable.Some of teh people employed by the US for this process who have actually come forward to be interviewed for this film appear to be soulless because they went ahead and applied techniques they were supposedly showing how to survive to another human being. I think this may leave you feeling a palpable sense of disgust
― Stevolende, Wednesday, 8 December 2021 00:29 (two years ago) link
I was just reading about that and both do and don't want to watch it. Everything about Guantanamo Bay makes me so angry and frustrated, but I seem to always watch and read a fair bit about it - I guess trying to (impossibly) makes sense of the whole terribleness.
― brain (krakow), Wednesday, 8 December 2021 11:10 (two years ago) link
That Uncertain Feeling (1941) 4/5* Get Carter (1971) 4/5The Beatles: Get Back 4/5The Power of the Dog (2021) 3.5/5* Shadow of a Doubt (1943) 4.5/5* Dune (IMAX; 2021) 4/5Lights in the Dusk (2006) 3/5Pig (2021) 3.5/5 * Point Blank (1967) 4.5/5Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band: The Legendary 1979 No Nukes Concerts (2021) 5/5The Night of the Iguana (1964) 3.5/5I Wake Up Screaming (1941) 3.5/5
― Chris L, Saturday, 11 December 2021 06:21 (two years ago) link
Good list and ratings!
― Raw Like Siouxsie (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 11 December 2021 15:03 (two years ago) link
World War Z drifted across my radar and I'd basically forgotten it existed (though I liked the book) so I watched. It was one of the most inept, pointless movies I've ever seen. Complete misunderstanding of the source material, zero logic even within the parameters of its own story, not one interesting performance... just two hours of staring into the void.
― but also fuck you (unperson), Saturday, 11 December 2021 16:09 (two years ago) link
Film is similar to A Perfect Storm in that it takes a source material that is varied anecdotal and tries to make it into an overarching narrative with one group in focus. Film may be most outstanding for having Capaldi in as a WHO Doctor just before he was announced to be Dr Who. Otherwise trying too hard to make something Hollywood friendly out of a book that handles narrative in a non traditional way.Human ramps of zombies may be the one image from the film that might stick with one too.I still haven't managed to get hold of the other Zombie book by the same author which seemed like it might be fun. I think its how to survive a Zombie Attack but hopefully has further backstory to various things.
― Stevolende, Saturday, 11 December 2021 16:17 (two years ago) link
Cronos (del Toro, 1993)Geometry (del Toro, 1987)Ma’s Pride and Joy (Pearce, 1932)My Cousin from Warsaw (Gallone, 1931)Raise the Rent (Newmeyer, 1920)A Muddy Romance (Sennett, 1913)Sherlock's Home (St. Clair, 1924)
― Infanta Terrible (j.lu), Sunday, 12 December 2021 21:54 (two years ago) link
xp mel brooks' kid!
― When Young Sheldon began to rap (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 14 December 2021 02:46 (two years ago) link
Enough (5.0)Spotlight (6.0)The Ernie Game (7.0)Notes for a Film About Donna and Gail (6.5)American Hustle (7.0)Christopher’s Movie Matinee (5.0)The Power of the Dog (6.5)The Rainmaker (6.5)You’re a Big Boy Now (5.5)C’mon C’mon (6.0)
Have to give some thought to C’mon C’mon. I thought it was an okay follow-up to 20th Century Women, but I was on the outside looking in the whole way...Recommend Claude Jutra's Notes for a Film About Donna and Gail (1966) to cryptosicko; basically a blueprint for Goin' Down the Road.
― clemenza, Tuesday, 14 December 2021 04:10 (two years ago) link
(You can watch the latter on YouTube or the NFB site.)
― clemenza, Tuesday, 14 December 2021 04:33 (two years ago) link
Watched Jules Dassin's Uptight a few days ago, had meant to watch it when it was streaming on Criterion and found it at the library recently. 1968 remake of John Ford's The Informer set among a Black militant organization in Cleveland. Pretty amazing, and hard to believe such a one-of-a-kind film, from a renowned director, with a fascinating story around it and a great, nearly all-Black cast, has gotten comparatively little attention. A lot of parallels to Night and the City with its desperate, doomed fuck-up on the run story. Learned while reading about it that there were FBI informants working on the crew, due to concerns that it would be too pro-militancy. (It doesn't exactly take a side, though the inclusion of King's assassination gives a lot of weight to the militants who have given up on non-violence, even if their plans for revolution seem pretty vague.)
― JoeStork, Tuesday, 14 December 2021 05:37 (two years ago) link
I tried to get that last summer. Maybe its still up on youtube buit I wanted to watch things on my tv cos it's more comfortable than sitting here. Did see a few other Dassin at the time though.I think I couldn't get the file to transfer so I could stick it on a memory stick and it failed. So would like to see taht . Shame that Virgin dropped youtube as an extra feature a few years ago. Not sure if everything that was accessible from desktop was accessible from the tv and the search engine typing was a chore. had to type by remote control letter by letter and having to find each letter from a line of letters etc. 1st world problem and defunct option anyway.
― Stevolende, Tuesday, 14 December 2021 10:22 (two years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=waZLHsSoPC8it is still there, not sure why I couldn't get it to transfer.
― Stevolende, Tuesday, 14 December 2021 20:12 (two years ago) link
Recommend Claude Jutra's Notes for a Film About Donna and Gail (1966) to cryptosicko; basically a blueprint for Goin' Down the Road.
Nice! I'll check it out. I really start going through the NFB online catalogue once I finish watching all those other things I gotta watch.
― Les hommes de bonbons (cryptosicko), Wednesday, 15 December 2021 02:21 (two years ago) link
As mentioned elsewhere on ILX, even with literally thousands of movies that I'd like to see at my disposal, I've gotten into the bad habit of avoiding embracing extended viewing. Some of it can be pegged to COVID monkeybrain, quite a bit to several years of chronic pain hitting an apex with a second surgery in November. Perhaps my attention is fading with age and the sugar drip of constant internet gorging of the immediate. Certainly I've reached a moment where writing thoughtfully without a dollar figure attached smells increasingly of useless exercise. I daresay this ennui is worth remedying for the sake of my long-term emotional health, so I'm gonna maybe have a go at utilizing this thread to depart the unconsidered and stop frittering with OCD deck-chair shuffling in favor of a few hours of snacks and sofa cinema and 30 postprandial minutes per film organizing my words.
The dish du jour for 12/17 was the British actor Philip Barantini's sophomore feature Boiling Point (2021), based on the short of the same name. I saw Baranti's first movie, 2020's Villain, last year. It includes a lot the same cast and a similar animus: a showcase for the director's technically well-organized but largely bloodless filmmaking. This potboiler bubbles over on a single evening in a poorly run and overstressed London restaurant. The head chef is clearly brilliant but falling apart. The maitre'd is a disaster. Half the staff are seconds away from murder. What happens on an overbooked Friday night when the lead investor, a testy reviewer, a racist prick, a group of douchebag Instafluencers and a Chekhov's gun of misreported food allergy all land in the same seating? Pretty much what you might expect. The overstuffed and predictably arced plot mostly holds together with the underpinnings of a strong ensemble, not least of whom is the veteran tough guy Stephen Graham. Where it fails is where it neglects to follow through; no less than ten frayed narrative threads are produced, then unceremoniously disposed of. This over-embroidery seems to suspiciously serve as either TV series proof-of-concept or an attempt at inflating a too-thin idea into festival circuit fodder.
Boiling's eye-catching gimmick is that it has been shot in a carefully continuous take, a'la Rope. For most of the runtime, that's a ballsy choice but whenever the story bogs down or we depend on a scene's emotion to carry us through, the rules of the game become not only restrictive but distracting, dragging the viewer down while the camera spins into place and the actors have to shuffle gamely out of the way. The wear is particularly bald in Boiling Point's laggardly beginning and lamentably overwrought end, hardly where you want to lose stride. The direction and camerawork are workmanlike but there's a definite sense of going through the motions as we cycle through the front and back of the house in patterns that resemble the dolly track they are more than worker's natural perambulations.
As someone who still has occasional nightmares about brunch service, I'd argue that - outside of the sharp acting - the reason to give Boiling Point a go isn't its double dutch degree of difficulty but its verisimilitude of experience. The intensity of any busy shift is nicely replicated, to the point that I had little pops of anxiety just watching. Baranti himself put in a decade in a toque and his perspective feels earned. I only wish he'd built more of a film around that clarity of vision.
― When Young Sheldon began to rap (forksclovetofu), Friday, 17 December 2021 07:00 (two years ago) link
No Time To Die.I quite enjoyed it but am confused as to the regeneration scene.I mean....Though did wind up having to watch it in 2 bits up to the forest scene and then onwards. Had a webinar booked that I wound up not getting visuals for then my computer freezing so I returned to the film.It's quite long at 2 3/4 hrs and are they going to reboot other characters in future films. Seem to be deceasing all the wrong people.Craig must love that Aston Martin or sumfin. & M has gone back to a similar vintage attitude. Been a while since I read Fleming but I take it he is depicted as an ex military type which Fiennes seems to be aping quite well.Anyway finally got to see this after being told there had been a decent quality edition circulating. So, great.
― Stevolende, Friday, 17 December 2021 08:52 (two years ago) link
an imperfect murder (toback, 2017) 5/10pig (sarnoski, 2021) 6/10undine (petzold, 2021) 6/10minari (lee isaac chung, 2020) 8.5/10adrienne (ostroy, 2021) 6/10the humans (karam, 2021) 6.5/10zola (bravo, 2020) 3/10king richard (green, 2021) 6/10black bear (levine, 2020) 4/10life of crime 1984-2020 (alpert, 2021) 10/10the ides of march (clooney, 2011) 8/10city of joel (sweet, 2018) 7/10the velvet underground (haynes, 2021) 7.5/10
― johnny crunch, Saturday, 18 December 2021 02:21 (two years ago) link
The 2010 remake of The Crazies really holds up. A tight, legitimately scary thriller.
― but also fuck you (unperson), Saturday, 18 December 2021 02:32 (two years ago) link
My Man Godfrey (Gregory La Cava, 1936) 7/10Hangover Square (John Brahm, 1945) 8/10*My Name is Julia Ross (Joseph H. Lewis, 1945) 5/10Somewhere in the Night (Joseph L. Mankiewicz, 1946) 8/10*It's a Wonderful Life (Capra, 1946) 6/10 the sad george scenes are the bestThe Sound of Fury (Cy Endfield, 1950) 8/10The Hitch-Hiker (Ida Lupino, 1953) 6/10*I Confess (Hitchcock, 1953) 8/10 better than I rememberedFuneral Parade of Roses (Toshio Matsumoto, 1969) 7/10Color Out of Space (Richard Stanley, 2019) 7/10Listening to Kenny G (Penny Lane, 2021) 8/10
tvThe Biederbecke Affair (1985) 6/10The Haunting of Hill House (2018) 6/10
― adam t. (abanana), Saturday, 18 December 2021 06:46 (two years ago) link
Zola is kinda like Lynch doing Spring Breakers with a bit of Uncut Gems in it. Really well cast.
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 18 December 2021 17:00 (two years ago) link
December (so far)
*Ghostbusters (Reitman, 1984) 7/10Onibaba (Shindo, 1964) 8/10Maeve (Murphy/Davies, 1981) 8/10The Power of The Dog (Campion, 2021) 6/10Benedetta (Verhoeven, 2021) 8/10Orpheus (Cocteau, 1950) 8/10Testament of Orpheus (Cocteau, 1960) 6/10Microhabitat (Jeon Go-Woon, 2017) 8/10*JFK (Stone, 1991) 9/10L'argent (Bresson, 1983) 10/10
― Saxophone Of Futility (Michael B), Saturday, 18 December 2021 18:32 (two years ago) link
Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn (2021) is an overstuffed absurdist art-film omelette; erudite, profane, funny, ugly, perilously obtuse, penetrating in any way you'd care to think of and several I bet you haven't. It is a story in three pieces: the first, a perambulatory exploration of a Westernized Romania, rife with anger and lack of privilege by degrees, that begins with a few minutes of fully-consensual, gonzo hardcore suburban sex. Our lead actress, Katia Pascariu, has been taped by her husband en flagrante delicto and the video has leaked out onto the internet. A teacher at a prep school, the students have discovered the tape and the PTA is calling for her head. Her travelogue around Bucharest, nearly hyperventilating beneath her mask, tempts the patient filmgoer with a soak in a city straining against COVID. The explorations are clever and dense, overheard conversations mixing with random passersby and insight into the rough, crumbling facade of civilization. Ruins gain gravitas and the notes of modernity radiate base plasticity. In this section, cards are clutched close to the vest.
In part two, a treatise by means of lexicon emerges. The director, Radu Jude, offers a Devil's Dictionary of definitions as a key to clearer understanding of his intent. Tongue lodged firmly in cheek, Jude presents TikTok-sized vignettes on the nature of patriarchy, Eastern European history, fucking, genocide, economics and cinema theory. Imagine Adam Curtis by way of The Kentucky Fried Movie and you're in the right zip code. The third and final act, labelled a "sitcom," is an Ionesco-esque play within a play as Pascariu faces a masked outdoor tribunal of parents, half demanding her resignation and most of the rest there to jeer. There is ample opportunity for opprobrium by all except our heroine who bravely withstands the madness of the crowd. The movie splinters into a series of endings, suggesting a viewer foolish enough to have made it this far and still demand narrative continuity deserves the Marvel-ous aftertaste of the punchline Jude rams down your throat.
"It's definitely not for everyone" was my impulse but Bad Luck is honestly more perverse than that: it is active in its desire to not be for anyone, apart from a selection of critics, dark souls and over thinkers. Which is to say, I really rather loved it.
― When Young Sheldon began to rap (forksclovetofu), Sunday, 19 December 2021 03:56 (two years ago) link
otm
― Santa’s Got a Brand New Borad (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 19 December 2021 05:47 (two years ago) link
No Way To Treat A Lady Somehow nor seen this though been aware of it since my early teens. Somebody was talking about the s/trk lp on FB which prompted me to d/ld a copy.Rod Steiger as a master of disguise serial killer, George Segal as a Jewish cop hen pecked by his mother who he lives with. Lee Remick as neighbour at first murder shown who becomes Segals love interest.Quite good though I did go and do a few things around the room as it was on.
Great Expectations The Jon Mills & Alec Guinness and loads of familiar faces late 40s version.My eyes spend a lot of time looking at the costumes in these Dickens films. I get ideas for things I want to make and then don't get to make them this year at least.could do with a set of stills though. Missed the beginning but I think it's a classic well acted version of the story.I was interested to note the presence of a black defendant in the court scene towards the end. Had noticed the somewhat tokenism presence of one black extra filling out scenes in French films of a similar time and had wondered if any British films of the time did the same. I hadn't thought they did. I think real life of the time depicted did have at least some BIPOC presence.
― Stevolende, Sunday, 19 December 2021 08:09 (two years ago) link
oh yeah thought there was another oneHitman's BodyguardSamuel jackson and Ryan Reynolds in hyper violent buddy movie where loads of henchmnen get beaten up and shot a lot.Including chase scenes in the streets and canals of Amsterdam and shoot ups in London and fun things like that.Well its beginningto look a lot like Xmas
― Stevolende, Sunday, 19 December 2021 10:08 (two years ago) link
"Cusp" was pretty illuminating (and not just because the whole thing seemed to be shot at magic hour). I had to keep reminding myself it was a documentary. I glanced at the background, and it was pretty fascinating, too. I guess the filmmakers were on the way back from shooting a commercial or something and stopped at this small Texas town for gas at 2:30 in the morning, where they met this trio of teen girls who invited them to go swimming. They ultimately spent 90 days following these girls around, and the results are frighteningly honest, almost uncomfortably so.
― Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 19 December 2021 14:23 (two years ago) link
Streamed it at home; if I get a second chance in a theatre, I'll see it again--I liked the quieter driving scenes, good visuals throughout. This is probably a genre by now, with a Florida version (this, Spring Breakers, Bully) and a California version (Palo Alto, The Bling Ring). I wouldn't know what to call it: something shorter and pithier than Loathsome People (Not Everyone) Photographed Dreamily. American Honey, for me, is the pinnacle, but I usually come away with something. I'd include the Clickettes here, a girl group I don't think I'd ever heard before.
― clemenza, Sunday, 19 December 2021 23:04 (two years ago) link
and The Florida Project!
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 19 December 2021 23:10 (two years ago) link
I listed that at first, then took it out for Bully--only because so much was focussed on the kids, otherwise it fits for sure.
― clemenza, Sunday, 19 December 2021 23:17 (two years ago) link
Between Zola and American Honey, I hope someone's working on a Riley Keough-Elvis thesis of some kind.
― clemenza, Sunday, 19 December 2021 23:30 (two years ago) link
Speaking of Florida Project, anyone see Red Rocket yet?
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 20 December 2021 00:03 (two years ago) link
The Saturday Night Kid (Sutherland, 1929)*Night Parade (St. Clair, 1929)The Last of the Mohicans (Beebe & Eason, 1932)Crashing Hollywood (Arbuckle, 1931)Three Women (Lubitsch, 1924)Absinthe (1913)The Spectacle Maker (Farrow, 1934)A Warm Corner (Saville, 1930)
― Infanta Terrible (j.lu), Monday, 20 December 2021 02:01 (two years ago) link
Between Zola and American Honey, I hope someone's working on a Riley Keough-Elvis thesis of some kind.?? (I have only seen half of one Elvis movie)
― dark end of the st. maud (sic), Monday, 20 December 2021 03:53 (two years ago) link
She's Elvis's granddaughter; in both films, she plays a female, Albert Goldman version of Elvis.
― clemenza, Monday, 20 December 2021 04:07 (two years ago) link
Right - saw @Zola, just didn’t get any Elvis refs.
― dark end of the st. maud (sic), Monday, 20 December 2021 05:01 (two years ago) link
Well, there is a scene where she uses a toilet and iirc does not flush.
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 20 December 2021 12:00 (two years ago) link
Just watched The Card Counter and wow, that sucked. I think of myself as a longtime Schrader fan, but looking at his IMDB page I realize I haven't liked anything he's done since Affliction, and that was in 1997. (I haven't seen First Reformed yet. Now I'm scared to.)
― but also fuck you (unperson), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 02:21 (two years ago) link
First Reformed was not bad, but Schrader seemed to think that the blatancy of his Bergman and Bresson imitations somehow made the film a commentary rather than a copy. Affliction was great, probably my favourite of his.
― Halfway there but for you, Wednesday, 22 December 2021 02:29 (two years ago) link
Copshop: a police station siege movie directed by Joe Carnahan, starring Frank Grillo and Gerard Butler, but the real star is Valerie Young, who should become a major star based on this. It's dumb, but smarter and funnier than it needed to be. Between this and Boss Level, Carnahan's on a streak.
Apocalypse Now: I love this movie so much. (Only the theatrical cut; every re-edit has been terrible.) If this was the only movie Coppola ever made — shit, if this was the only movie America ever produced — that would be fine with me. It's like Miles Davis's On the Corner; I notice something new every time.
― but also fuck you (unperson), Saturday, 25 December 2021 03:30 (two years ago) link
April Fool (Ross, 1926)*Hogfather (Jean, 20006)Honey (Ruggles, 1930)*The Thin Man (Van Dyke, 1934)The Insects' Chriatmas (Starewicz, 1913)Don't Look Up (McKay, 2021)Whoopee! (Freeland, 19300
― Infanta Terrible (j.lu), Monday, 27 December 2021 01:57 (two years ago) link
I really wanted to like Judas and the Black Messiah, and Daniel Kaluuya and LaKeith Stanfield were both great. But the movie just didn't fully come together for me.
― but also fuck you (unperson), Monday, 27 December 2021 02:22 (two years ago) link
Thelma (2017) 7/10Censor (2021) 7/10The Power of the Dog (2021) 8/10The Headless Woman (2008) 8/10Se7en (1995) 6/10
(The latter two a coincidence of timing, we weren't doing a headless woman marathon or anything.)
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Monday, 27 December 2021 05:13 (two years ago) link
John Wick 3 cos it's great Xmas Day viewingGentlemen Prefer Blondes as I ate dinner. & can get the book it's based on alter thsi week Carousel South Pacific cos I somehow haven't seen the original or at least not since childhood or early teens. Last time i saw it was on tv it turned out to be the remake
― Stevolende, Monday, 27 December 2021 11:14 (two years ago) link
this year's christmas crop/crap
Mixed Nuts (Ephron, 1994) 3/10Four Christmases (2008) abandoned*Home Alone (Columbus, 1990) 5/10A Christmas Tale (very french guy, 2008) 6/10
also The Great Muppet Caper, which doesn't have anything to do with Christmas but feels like Christmas to me, (Henson, 1981) 8/10
― adam t. (abanana), Monday, 27 December 2021 17:54 (two years ago) link
Last Christmas (very literal...)Bloody Spear At Mount FujiGunda: Mother, PigLove, ActuallyGrapes Of WrathThe Emperor's Naked Army Marches On
― koogs, Monday, 27 December 2021 18:25 (two years ago) link
I watched the first Hanzo the Razor movie last night without knowing anything about it and expecting something like Zatoichi or Lone Wolf...wtaffff o_O
Criterion's entirely anodyne one-sentence description borders on malfeasance
― rob, Monday, 27 December 2021 18:45 (two years ago) link
Licorice Pizza: Maybe PTA's worst film? It had moments but it really didn't add up to much for me. My fellow audience gasped in dismay at the John Michael Higgins scenes.
― reggae mike love (polyphonic), Monday, 27 December 2021 20:05 (two years ago) link
Mortal Engines Peter Jackson 2018Interesting premise in a post apocalyptic world cities are now mobile fighting vehicles that eat up smaller cities to keep them going.Result is semi enjoyable, helped pass the time. & I had wanted to go and see it when it was out. Not caught it until now when it was on Film4 last night.Could be better but so could a lot of things. I hadn't taken in that it was a Peter jackson film I don't think . It has some of his tropes i guess.So shoot em up steam punk adventure with a hidden evil and some lower status individuals showing they're as good as some aristos and things. But still viewing true aristos to be decent upstanding people.& the system to be something that can be corrupted but should be maintained for teh common good or something.I dunno, would it be better with a more leftists slant?
― Stevolende, Wednesday, 29 December 2021 13:58 (two years ago) link
Saw and mostly enjoyed "Red Rocket," which definitely fits the/an ongoing trend of sweaty, sleazy and desperate indies a la this year's "Zola," "Uncut Gems," etc. indirectly addressing class, capitalism, ethics and politics in America.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 29 December 2021 14:43 (two years ago) link