Briefly talk about what you've seen recently

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And I don't give a damn about the ILE thread similar to this. If ILF is going to prosper, I'm gonna talk about my viewings here.

Feel free to say as much or as little as you want. Some people only list the films; some people go on for paragraphs. I like to write about a line or so, myself.

Afterlife - This one being the 1998 Koreeda Afterlife. Wow, so simple, so static, and yet very poignant. A less gimmicky conception of the afterlife, and a wonderful meditation on memory, identity, and time...without shoving those themes in your face with the aim of a conclusive idea.

The Wild Bunch - Eminently watchable. Certainly didn't feel that long. As mentioned on another thread, it really needs a new version on one DVD side, though. Holden, Borgnine, and Oates are totally classic. (Is it just me or does Warren Oates look like Matt Sweeney?) Extras' reaction after the general's death at the end...heheh...

Now talk, damn you all! Yes, you.

Girolamo Savonarola, Sunday, 28 March 2004 17:52 (twenty-two years ago)

Oh, and one more:

La belle noiseuse - Yes, but...um... Oh, forget it. Worth the four hour length, yes. But I'm not certain if the payoffs really were properly set up. Really, I mean, when Rivette casually explains the ending in a DVD extra, that was completely not what I thought was going on, although it certainly makes sense. So I'm saying that it's good up until the last sequence.

Girolamo Savonarola, Sunday, 28 March 2004 17:55 (twenty-two years ago)

The Marriage of Maria Braun - good stuff. I wonder how much of it is especially "german" and therefore beyond my understanding, but it was very interesting and fassbinder's framing is beautiful as always.

Open Range - this was really good! depends on your tolerance for a little bit of corn here and there (but hey there is far less here than a typical john ford western in my opinion). someone somewhere said it was like a terrence malick wester, and it is to some extent. beautiful, taciturn dialogue and great acting all around. costner even achieves a kind of inspiration with the final shootout.

ryan (ryan), Sunday, 28 March 2004 18:20 (twenty-two years ago)

Interesting thing about your comments on Fassbinder - a German friend of mine recently opined that he wished that all German films were dubbed into English instead of being subtitled, because apparently you lose a lot in a written, as compared to spoken, translation. Dunno...I think that Fassbinder is Fassbinder.

Girolamo Savonarola, Sunday, 28 March 2004 18:34 (twenty-two years ago)

I saw Kanto Wanderer on the weekend. The most conventional (story / editing-wise) Suzuki movie I've seen, its a little sluggish but was interesting to see a more restrained side to the director. Some fantastic scenes and it looks gorgeous, I think I'll warm to it more with repeat viewings.

Monster - very good (both Theron and Ricci) but it's not the type of film I'd want to revisit again.

Y'know it was only last year that I saw The Wild Bunch, and I can't remember a single thing that happened in the movie (though I enjoyed it at the time).

Mil, Sunday, 28 March 2004 21:58 (twenty-two years ago)

salo, or the 120 days of sodom - i downloaded a version of this (shame, shame) without english subtitles and i don't know a lick of italian (although i did catch "MANGIA LA MERDA!") but in a way it just made everything else seem all the more horrific. i like how pasolini made the horrifying depravity of it all seem moreso by using odd little flourishes of beauty here and there (the guards dancing at the end, the set design). not sure yet if i'll ever watch it again.

the grandmother - the early david lynch short. i almost cried when i saw this. so beautiful and strange and dark.

eternal sunshine... - i think i've finally given up on charlie kaufman. all the gimmickry about the erasure of memory is shoved in your face to hide the fact that he really has nothing to say. (although i've explored the possibility that the lack of any sort of emotional attachment i had with the characters has something to do with the fact that i've never been in a bad breakup myself, that alone couldn't account for my dissatisfaction with it.)

joseph (joseph), Sunday, 28 March 2004 23:08 (twenty-two years ago)

Tokyo Story for the second time, still great. kind of picked up on some things i didnt notice before.

ryan (ryan), Monday, 29 March 2004 04:18 (twenty-two years ago)

Bon Voyage: Stylized French crime-thriller-farce set during the German occupation. Vapid (or "fun" depending on your viewpoint)characterization and writing, but well acted with a great ambience (thanks in equal parts to costuming/set design, cinematography, and the impressive coreography of a large frenetic cast of extras).

Eternal Sunshine of the spotless mind: Likable film, decent writing and wonderful direction (the minimal use of special effects forces the actors to get into their roles more), though the love story is a little difficult to believe, and there is at least one problem with the continuity (something which really bothers me in a movie more or less ABOUT continuity) - namely (SPOILER)

...that one of the drawings Jim C's character tears out of his journal when he takes his stuff in to the memory erasing company is the drawing he made of Clemintine when they meet for the first time AFTER the memory erasure is complete on the train back from the beach. My girlfriend thinks this was intentional just to screw with people who might notice.

(end SPOILER)

...so not really as creative as Being John Malcovich (though it relies heavily on ideas developed in BJM), but more rewarding than Adaptation.

I will probably see Dogville, The Dreamers, Broken Wings, and Wilber Wants To Kill Himself soon.

Ryan McKay (Ryan McKay), Monday, 29 March 2004 07:54 (twenty-two years ago)

Two of James Benning's films recently:

One-Way Boogie Woogie - A lot more fun than I thought it was going to be from the description (60 one minute takes of outdoor locations with a static camera), with some clever vignettes and a surprising amount of sex appeal. Also surprisingly inspiring; wish I could view again sometime.

El Valley Centro - Basically the experience that I thought I'd have with One-Way Boogie Woogie; interesting political angle; technical problems kept me from getting into it as much as I'd like but it was still rewarding to have seen it.

Also some flicks from Hong Kong on DVD:

Once a Thief - Shockingly goofy and old fashioned comedy from director John Woo. Some really broad slapstick comedy, especially from Chow Yun Fat, yet also some serious violence. More of a standard HK programmer than I expected, but at least it had Leslie Cheung in it.

Okinawa Rendevous - Pleasant romantic comedy; I basically rented it because it had Faye Wong in it, but her part wasn't very large or particularly illuminating. She has an interesting mystique about her, but I don't know that she's necessarily a good actress. Tony Leung Kar-fai was amusing in it; it also features Leslie Cheung, who was always pretty good in whatever he did.

Chris F. (servoret), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 03:45 (twenty-two years ago)

Today I saw James Benning's Los: part two of his California trilogy, 35 two and a half minute shots taken at different locations around Los Angeles. Really brilliant in spots, and even better than El Valley Centro, I thought. A film really worth seeing, in the theater, if possible.

Chris F. (servoret), Wednesday, 31 March 2004 04:56 (twenty-two years ago)

Over the past weekend I watched a three Korean films:

A Good Lawyer's Wife
The Day A Pig Fell Into The Well
Camel(s)

I really enjoyed all three, but A Good Lawyer's Wife really tore me up. It's an incredible film -- the best I've seen this year, and the single greatest acting job (Moon So-ri) that I've seen in many years. Everybody MUST see this film.

You can read my full write-up here.

Camel(s) is a more experimental feature. Shot on video, it depicts one night with two 40-somethings who are having an affair. However, they seem to lack any connection, nor do they have much to say to each other. Sure to piss off many, this is an incredibly claustrophobic film that is mesmerizing to watch.

The Day A Pig Fell Into The Well is the first film from Hong Sang-soo. While not as good as Turning Gate it is an impressive feature nonetheless.

The one thing almost all these new Korean films have in common is adultery. It seems that everybody in Korea (or Seoul at least) is having an affair. Interesting.

BabyBuddha (BabyBuddha), Wednesday, 31 March 2004 15:23 (twenty-two years ago)

Theater: Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind I thought this was really good. The Kaufman movie really bend reality. I thought the movie was sad at parts and super-creepy at others. I loved it.

Rented: American Splendor Good movie. Five out of five stars. I love comics and I thought the comic feel to this movie was a lot better than Ang Lee's attempt with the Hulk (which felt too forced). It felt like a documentart, movie, video history, etc all rolled into one.

About the Korea adultry thing... I'm going to have to ask my mom about that. She Korean.

Vermont Girl (Vermont Girl), Wednesday, 31 March 2004 17:30 (twenty-two years ago)

Hey Chris F, Where have you seen those James Benning films? I saw 11 by 14 earlier this year and I've badly wanted to see more.

The Ladies Man (1961 Jerry Lewis)
Probably the best Lewis film I've seen thus far. In this one, Jerry swears off women and moves into a giant dollhouse run by an ex-opera star. Wildly creative. I've yet to see Lewis' trademark willingness to bodily embrace and surrender to absurdity and child-like sentimentality more affectively showcased. Jerry (portraying Herbert H. Hebert) passive-aggressively goes to slapstick war with an army of beautiful women.

theodore fogelsanger, Thursday, 1 April 2004 00:59 (twenty-two years ago)

I attend the Milwaukee branch of the University of Wisconsin, which has been sponsoring the showing of his work over the last few days-- today I saw Sogobi, the last film in the California Trilogy. Benning is in town partly to show his movies and also apparently partly to scout out locations for a new project. His film Four Corners plays in Madison at the Wisconsin Film Festival this Sunday; I think I'm going to go and try to get in on standby, since it's currently sold out. Watching the California Trilogy in sequence has been a rewarding experience; I'd have to say that I recommend it, although apparently it's much harder to see his work here in the States than it is in Europe. He should have some new films coming out soon-- one called Thirteen Lakes and one called, I think, Ten Skies. They sound interesting, and I'm hoping to see them through the good graces of the curator of our film program here on campus; dunno about opportunities to see Benning's stuff in the US, outside of an academic context.

Chris F. (servoret), Thursday, 1 April 2004 03:58 (twenty-two years ago)

Currently in the middle of Welles's The Stranger, and I can't deny that I'm very impressed. Edward G. Robinson as Edward G. Robinson, Orson Welles as evil Nazi-cum-son-in-law-of-liberal-Supreme-Court-justice. Wonderful camera moves that actually do something worthwhile. In a way, it's like Kane without the cultural baggage of Kane.

Only annoying thing is the watermark that pops up periodically on the DVD, but oh well. Oh, and they have an introduction on the disc by Tony Curtis, but I have no idea why he's doing the introduction.

Girolamo Savonarola, Thursday, 1 April 2004 11:23 (twenty-two years ago)

Hey Vermont Girl! Wow, didn't think there was another Vermonter on this list--where are you from?

Speaking of Vermont, I'm extremely jealous of all of you who have been able to see the James Benning films because we get next to nothing for art cinema in this podunk little state.

I've been in Maryland on a business trip this week & haven't seen much of anything except for "Tombstone"--it was one of those strange films where some elements in it I thought were pure genius, and others absolute garbage. Homage or not, the random shots of the lawmen on horses, riding towards the camera and randomly firing their guns was unintentionally hillarious, as was cliched "NOOOOOOOOO!" in slow motion as Wyatt Earp rushes into the water during the shootout. It's just hard to take Kurt Russell serious in anything. New found respect for Val Kilmer though.

jay blanchard (jay blanchard), Thursday, 1 April 2004 14:05 (twenty-two years ago)

Recently all I've been watching has been Neon Genesis dvds. Can't wait to watch the director's cut edition of the last 6 episodes.

Last night watched Raising Victor Vargas. A sweet movie that was good when you want nothing bad to happen to anyone.

Jeff-PTTL (Jeff), Thursday, 1 April 2004 18:29 (twenty-two years ago)

"New found respect for Val Kilmer though."

I dig Val Kilmer in the same sense that my favorite actors (James Woods, Crispin Hellion Glover, Jerry Lewis) tend to be legitimately crazy and I have been rooting for him to make a comeback after awful films like "The Saint" and the one where he's blind with Mira Sorvino. The Salton Sea, in which Val is mutli-tattooed and mohawked, was not the comeback vehicle it should have been. I'm curious if anyone's seen the new Mamet film "Spartan" in which Kilmer stars.

Also, Kilmer has a fine eccentric cameo as an animal wrangler in the interesting Bob Dylan failure "Masked and Anonymous."

theodore fogelsanger, Thursday, 1 April 2004 21:21 (twenty-two years ago)

Ah I love Val Kilmer. He's generally more interesting than the movies he chooses.
"Spartan" is a cool little b-movie with a paranoid anti-establishment theme struggling to get out. Mamet's genius for constructing instantly dramatic scenes is obvious from the start and he strips the genre down to a near-abstract level : for the first ten minutes nothing is explained, all of the exposition is brief and couched heavily in lingo, whereas your standard hollywood thriller uses dialogue to spoonfeed info to the audience. Like "Heist", the action scenes are probably the worst-handled scenes in the movie, but visually Mamet is improving as a filmaker. Kilmer is restrained in it - his performance reminded me of his work in "Heat" in its focus. He also showed up recently in a cameo in "The Missing".

I love his Doc Holliday-by-way-of-Oscar-Wilde in "Tombstone" (which is a sort of pop-Western, like a medley of old classics played by a bar-band or something) but find it hard to choose between him and Dennis Quaid's incredible performance in "Wyatt Earp"...

David Nolan (David N.), Thursday, 1 April 2004 23:04 (twenty-two years ago)

Saw Ran today on the big screen, my first time seeing it. Wow.

Chris F. (servoret), Friday, 2 April 2004 06:22 (twenty-two years ago)

Watched Monsieur Ibrahim for work. Pretty bad, although Sharif is worth watching. He's not even very good--his character's change of manner/relationship with the protagonist is a bit abrupt, to say the least (of course the director obviously doesn't know what he's doing, so who knows). That said, he is very charming.

Tried watching both Veronica Guerin and The Magadalene Sisters on successive nights and, in turn, gave up and went to sleep after about a half hour both times. Somehow I didn't realize that Joel Schummacher was responsible for the former until the credits came up--probably wouldn't have bothered if I had known. Pat, boring, predictable, bleh. Magdalene Sisters was a little more interesting, but I felt like I knew exactly where it was going from the first scene.

I liked Eternal Sunshine, though not enough to defend it against those who wanna hate on it. And despite all the praise for Jim Carrey's "understated" performance, he just HAD to go and do one "Jim Carrey" bit (you know the one I mean). Sigh. Likewise, I laughed at a lot of The Ladykillers, but it was a minor pleasure at best. The Coens seem to be attempting to sell out but can't figure out how.

Saw Dirty Pretty Things at last and was fairly impressed. Audrey Tatou was whatever, but the guy in the lead was great, as was Sergi Lopez. There's a great recurring shot, too, of a clock sitting next to a brassy lamp, with all sorts of creamy blue radiosity oozing all over it. Yum. Demonlover didn't strike me as a good film, exactly, but it was a pleasure watching cool Connie Nielsen strutting around looking badass for an hour and a half. And that bit with Chloe Sevigny playing video games naked is already a deathless classic.

Lee G (Lee G), Friday, 2 April 2004 17:09 (twenty-two years ago)

Oh, and a second (or third) amen on VK in Tombstone. Of course, my favorite out-of-control-Val film of all time is The Island of Dr. Moreau. I love the bit where he walks into a room and takes off his hat to reveal . . . another hat.

Lee G (Lee G), Friday, 2 April 2004 17:11 (twenty-two years ago)

Finally got a chance to catch Bring Me The Head Of Alfredo Garcia yesterday, and it was brilliant. Loved how Benny's costume (white suit and shades) really said so much about the character and his actions as the film progressed, simple but very effective.

I also saw The Cabinet Of Dr Caligari, which I find difficult to judge as I haven't seen any other horror films from that period to use as a reference. It was a struggle. I can appreciate its set design, score and special effects, but story and performance wise I felt absolutely nothing.

Mil, Friday, 2 April 2004 22:44 (twenty-two years ago)

Arabian Nights - Pasolini wraps up his trilogy very nicely. Finally a mature rendering of the tales (some of them, anyway). Franco Citti with dyed hair playing a sadistic demon, Pasolini regular Ninetto Davoli as the romantic dunce who abandons his wedding for an affair that results in his castration, an fatally unlucky plate of rice, a slave girl becoming king by accident, love lost and found again. What more could one want?

Now working on Nuri Bilge Ceylan's Clouds of May. Beautifully shot, but I'm still trying to figure out what the hell is actually going on underneath the dialogue.

Girolamo Savonarola, Saturday, 3 April 2004 08:40 (twenty-two years ago)

Mil, do a rewatch of Calligari keeping in mind the political climate in Germany at the time of the film's creation--the story will become much more appropriate.

jay blanchard (jay blanchard), Saturday, 3 April 2004 13:52 (twenty-two years ago)

The Damned : Fascinating in parts, but the awful camerawork and heavyhandedness made me lose interest quickly. I can't seem to appreciate Visconti so far.

Onibaba : Dark and effective, though the ending seems rushed. I'm surprised this was from 1964. Seems ahead of its time. Amazing score, too.

F For Fake : Great fun via Welles and his editing table.

Jay Vee (Manon_70), Saturday, 3 April 2004 20:55 (twenty-two years ago)

Mil, do a rewatch of Calligari keeping in mind the political climate in Germany at the time of the film's creation--the story will become much more appropriate.
-- jay blanchard (kinojay3...), April 3rd, 2004.

Yeah I will give it another shot, the place I saw it (middle of the day in a tiny library cubicle) wasn't exactly the best viewing space either.

Mil, Saturday, 3 April 2004 22:32 (twenty-two years ago)

The Bad News Bears go to Japan
Some interesting commentary on the profitability of international antagonisms, which both baseball teams rise above in developing a friendship with each other. Ultimately the movie values more than winning and losing, too bad it's a generally lifeless affair and the director has no comic timing. Destroy everything except the brief smile inducing moment of the Japanese little leaguers appearance on a television gameshow, in which they "take me out to the ball game" in their own langauge. This mini-sequence, repeated again in the closing credits posessed a strangely inspiring cuteness; a feeling that is unlikely to be shared by those of you hyper-sensitive anything and everything potentially racist. The singing could have could have gone on and on and on and my happiness would have held on.

Memoirs of an Invisibile Man
Just as dull as I remembered as a kid. I wished better for Chevy and Carpenter. Darryl Hannah was gorgeous though. All and all forgettable yet much better than the Hollow Man.

theodore fogelsanger, Sunday, 4 April 2004 23:03 (twenty-two years ago)

Lost in Translation - Didn't really start to hit me until 2/3 of the way through, but then it really felt urgent and key. Finally a "European" artfilm that the American mainstream at least was willing to give a chance, even if for the wrong reasons (names). In any case, lots of familiarity with many of those situations (though not Nippon-centric) = a punch in the gut.

On deck: The Black Stallion, Castle in the Sky, Kiki's Delivery Service, Charge of the Light Brigade. Is Criterion's Complete Monterey Pop Fest worth the effort?

Girolamo Savonarola, Monday, 5 April 2004 03:06 (twenty-two years ago)

Goodbye Lenin - I was a bit disappointed. Too long, really uneven, several tired jokes.

Purple Rain - I've seen it several times, but it never struck me before how much better Morris Day comes off than Prince. And it's really quite a misogynistic film.

Ripley's Game - Really, really enjoyed it much more than I had a right to.

@d@ml (nordicskilla), Monday, 5 April 2004 06:27 (twenty-two years ago)

The Dancer Upstairs - almost really great. gets to be nearly abstract at times.

ryan (ryan), Monday, 5 April 2004 15:19 (twenty-two years ago)

Hellboy! I loved it! I read in the NYT that del Toro passed up on directing Harry Potter #3 for Hellboy. I thought the movie stayed really true to lots of aspects of the comic and that Ron Perlman did an awesome job. (Of course, I became a devoted Perlman fan after seeing The City of Lost Children.)

[And for jay blanchard who asked a long time ago, I'm in Windsor County]

Vermont Girl (Vermont Girl), Tuesday, 6 April 2004 12:02 (twenty-two years ago)

Just saw Twilight, a pretty insipid attempt to do for film noir what Unforgiven did for the Western. Nontheless, it's entertaining and good to see Paul Newman in the lead of a film that's not totally worthless.

Chuck Tatum (Chuck Tatum), Tuesday, 6 April 2004 17:56 (twenty-two years ago)

Scooby Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed
I felt the first one was underrated and unjustly maligned. The colors were bright and fun, the monsters were detailed and interesting in their design, and Mathew Lillard is astounding as Shaggy. The sequel strangely underuses the always dependable Seth Green and the fights became tiresome. I'm strangely sympathetic to non-musical films which conclude with the entire cast dancing together.
Hardcore
Paul Schrader fascinates me, personalities comprised of disparate halves often do. Even his unsuccessful films are thoughtful, weird, and worth seeing. Strictly relgious Protestant business man George C. Scott searches for his runaway daughter in Los Angeles' porn underground. The opening scenes which establish the Protestant community in Grand Rapids, Michigan (Schrader's home town) were well paced, tender, and foreboding. Once the plot's in motion things grow hokey and unconvincing. Schrader's directing totally bites Antonioni moves throughout. Sometimes this is neat.

theodore fogelsanger, Tuesday, 6 April 2004 18:35 (twenty-two years ago)

just watched passolini's "salo".

i feel dirty. can't---get---rid--of---dirt.......

seriously though, i thought it was incredible. the grotesque and depravity has always appealed to me in the cinema, probably because i lead such a tame life in reality & i prefer to fulfill any of my baser desires vicariously through film. that's what film's all about anyway, right, being a voyeur? i love todd solondz films, i just discovered gaspar noe & he's one of my favorites now.

the degree of detachment passolini was able to achieve is astounding. the film would not be so frightening if an opinion was expressed, which becomes immediately apparent as soon as the camera moves in. The wide long shots of the orgy rooms reminded me of the hotel in "the shining" and how much more frightening a huge empty space can be than the claustrophobic scenes commonly used in horror flicks.

it's a miracle this film every was made, but i'm glad it was. it was (and continues to be) an immense political and artistic achievement.

As Godard stated in "Weekend", the only way to fight the horror of the bourgeoisie is with more horror.

jay blanchard (jay blanchard), Wednesday, 7 April 2004 00:19 (twenty-two years ago)

demonlover -- very entertaining, and connie nielson is hot, but hmmmm. i mean i THINK i kind of get it but who knows?

ryan (ryan), Thursday, 8 April 2004 03:56 (twenty-two years ago)

the spirit of the beehive- ok, you have to see this movie. right now its only out on dvd in region 2, but holy fuck this was good. it single-handedly made my purchase of an all-region dvd player worthwhile. its beautiful, haunting, mysterious, just amazing. i cant remember the last time i was so floored by a movie.

ikiru- kurosawa at his best maybe? this was really great and sad and happy. it was slow, but well worth it.

through a glass darkly- bergman is the man, this is one of his greats. cant say much more than that.

todd swiss (eliti), Thursday, 8 April 2004 05:38 (twenty-two years ago)

That's an incredible trilogy Todd. Almost too good to watch back to back.

The Spirit of the Beehive is really one of those films one just has to experience. No talking or writing about it will ever suffice.

BabyBuddha (BabyBuddha), Thursday, 8 April 2004 13:42 (twenty-two years ago)

Richard Pryor: Live in Concert
Much of the social satire of Pryor's black people do this/white people do that schtick has aged poorly, unless your one of the many inexplicable fans of the fairly recent eddie griffin comedy Undercover Brother, though the comedian's recognized brilliance as a stand up still remains apparent. Pryor's effortless slipping in and out of characters is often mesmerizing, as is his spontaneous chatter with an all too eager photographer who pops out of the audience. It's a must see for anyone who only remembers the comic as an actor who made mostly shitty comedies.

Greetings
Early Godardian comedy from Brian Depalma with Gerrit Graham ("Beef" from Phantom of the Paradise) and Robert Deniro as two friends who try to help another friend fail his Vietnam draft exam. Depalma's visual inventiveness is own display, despite a clearly limited budget to prove it, as is the director's career consistent theme of sexual voyeurism. Nice comic riffs on materialism and JFK conspiracy obsession make it an interesting time capsule piece for anyone curious about late 60s America. Apparently there's a sequel to this entitled "Hi Mom!" which I might have to try to track down.

Manson
Exploitation documentary patched together soon after the murders by a filmmaker who shot interviews and footage of "the family" at Spahn Ranch shortly before the Helter Skelter killings. Strangely the film won an Oscar despite, or due to, its psychedelic shock cut scare tactics and its tabloid tv-ish voice overs. If I had been watching a far out fictional film, and not actual footage and interviews with the perpetrators of a criminal atrocity, then I would feel somewhat less guilty about my attraction to some of the Manson family women; hair-cropped and wild-eyed, clutching those rifles.

theodore fogelsanger, Thursday, 8 April 2004 21:37 (twenty-two years ago)

Today I saw The Lady Vanishes at my local revival theater. Entertaining Hitchcock movie, but not great. Turns surprisingly grim for a moment or two at the climax.

Chris F. (servoret), Friday, 9 April 2004 03:56 (twenty-two years ago)

...that one of the drawings Jim C's character tears out of his journal when he takes his stuff in to the memory erasing company is the drawing he made of Clemintine when they meet for the first time AFTER the memory erasure is complete on the train back from the beach. My girlfriend thinks this was intentional just to screw with people who might notice.
Or maybe Kaufman wants us to believe that a lot of things that happened at the second meeting also happened at the first one. That explains why he didn't know the song My Darling Clementine, because that's something that was erased, though she most likely sang it at some point on their first meeting.

Jonathan (Jonathan), Friday, 9 April 2004 15:08 (twenty-two years ago)

Saw Murnau's Der Letzte Mann today, in a theater with live accompaniment as part of a program of film that also included, totally inappropriately, an old Walter Lantz cartoon and a Mack Sennett comedy. Pretty darn good, but I think that it had been trimmed pretty badly, since the IMDB lists a runtime of hundred minutes for the German release and the version that I saw ran about seventy.

Chris F. (servoret), Sunday, 11 April 2004 07:19 (twenty-two years ago)

The imdb lists The Last Laugh with a standard running time of 77 minutes. There is a German version at 101, but often times the other running times listed are for variant versions that have been chopped and recompiled from other footage (esp. with silents). I dunno if you can buy a 90 or 101 minute version, but just to note...

Anyway, I've only seen a few things recently; most notably the first season of The Office...nice... and rewatching Matrix Revolutions - which I still contend is a much much better film than the conventional wisdom claims.

On deck:
Spider
Plan 9 from Outer Space
Landscape in the Mist

Girolamo Savonarola, Sunday, 11 April 2004 18:17 (twenty-two years ago)

GOTHIKA
Pretty trashy, stupid bad and perverted. Kind of a souless suturing of The Sixth Sense vs. The Ring. Halle Berry and Penelope Cruz are dumb enough to take the shit seriously though. The director made The Crimson Rivers which I've been mad curious about. The trailer seemed like an homage, parody of American serial killer thrillers; a genre in desperate need of deconstruction.

PERSONAL BEST
Robert Towne's exploits in making this lesbian love affair set in the world of track and field were joyously recounted in Biskind's RAGING BULLS AND EASY RIDERS (a book that is a must read for any fan of modern American movies and the conflicts between commerce and art in hollywood). Most of the film is brilliant. The complicating tensions between love and the single minded drive required for career ambition is movingly illustrated. The shaggy hair-cuts, the golden hues of sunlight, Fleetwood Mac and The Doobie Brothers, the marijuana clouds, and Laverne and Shirley on television provide the background atmosphere of a 1970s daydream punctuated by the physical and mental stresses of physical endurance. I haven't seen a better movie about athletes except for Kon Ichikawa's TOKYO OLYMPIAD.
Some guilt-mongering critics say Towne's feverish direction is fetishistic toward the women but this is not accurate. I'd say it was tender and body concious. The ending, unfortunately sells out in valueing straight above gay and careerism above love.

ACE VENTURA: WHEN NATURE CALLS
Jim Carrey's big post success power play. His brilliant physicality taken to the limit. References reoccur throughout of how annoying many Americans find Carrey's divisive and successful Pet Detective character. This is perhaps the closest the Jerry Lewis inspired Carrey gets to Lewisian auteurist statement. Carrey is an unleashed animal here, getting primal revenge on the white imperialist forces in Africa. I'd forever admire Carrey's balls if he brought the character back into the zeitgest for a 3rd time. I've always rooted for the success of the sensitive outsider in Carrey, more present in the CABLE GUY, TRUMAN SHOW, ANDY KAUFMAN, and the new Charlie Kaufman picture but their is a shameless audacity to ACE which must be viewed as a kind of required freedom for the performer. Sometimes we must take things as far as they can go, to the point past breaking to know what it is to feel. The bad lets us know what's good and satan is ultimately a pathway to god. Thank you Jim Carrey. Your success and freedom is important to us all. Remember all of the clowns who martyred their pride before you and your joy shall never subside.

theodore fogelsanger, Sunday, 11 April 2004 20:26 (twenty-two years ago)

I saw Nekromantik on DVD a few days ago; it was much more stupid than I had expected, although I wonder if the main character was supposed to be an ironic commentary on the gorehounds who I suppose would be the movie's primary audience. I also saw Alex Cox's Three Businessmen on DVD at roughly the same time; goofy punchline at the end, but nice locations and camerawork, with some amusing acting from the lead.

Now I'm about to leave to go see Eyes Without a Face at my university's theater. Will it be as boring as most posters on the IMDB seem to indicate it is? It's been a few years since I saw it last, so I'm not sure how much I'm going to enjoy this...

Chris F. (servoret), Monday, 12 April 2004 00:21 (twenty-two years ago)

It wasn't boring, but people pretty much laughed at the film for its campiness. I was also surprised at how slight the material in the film is that its reputation is based on; i.e., the "mystical" shots of Edith Scob with her face mask on, which don't add up to more than a few minutes of the movie and seemed a little bit too self-conscious and silly after the melodrama that the audience was laughing at. La belle et la bête this movie was not.

Chris F. (servoret), Monday, 12 April 2004 03:09 (twenty-two years ago)

Plan 9 from Outer Space - not unexpected, but more awful than imaginable. It's almost impossible not to go into MST3K mode when watching it; worse, it's more boring than a film like Ed Wood would hint at. Although I'll probably go back on this later, I doubt I'll ever watch another Wood film again.

Oh Woe Is Me - Godard, why must you punish us so? Actually not so horrible once it gets going...too bad it takes half the movie to get to whatever it was supposed to be about. Not that great, either. There's a good reason I'd never heard of this one before.

Spider - Impressive, subtly moving along w/o too much happening, and an ending that doesn't bend over backwards to be gimmicky, but isn't much obvious until just a few moments before the reveal. I like. Too bad there wasn't much Cronenbergian "flesh", unless you count that odd eel-like meal in the bowl that we see for three seconds. Oh, and they filmed a part of it at my local pub. Nice.

The Curse of the Jade Scorpion - I appreciate Woody Allen's attempts at various points in the last twenty or so years of his oeuvre to remake genre works, but this just doesn't have enough going. Too flat, too flacid, too unfunny.

Fear, Anxiety, and Depression - Decent Solondz. Obvious, but forgivable, first-effort pitfalls, but ultimately a well done, if somewhat too tame start to a great career. If you're already a fan, I'd recommend giving it a shot, but if not, don't bother.

On deck:
Landscape in the Mist
The Damned
Return of the Secaucus 7

Girolamo Savonarola, Monday, 12 April 2004 04:06 (twenty-two years ago)

ooh Landscape in the Mist is like a punch in the stomach! (in a good way)

ryan (ryan), Monday, 12 April 2004 04:42 (twenty-two years ago)

La Strada - I want to go back in time and impregnate Giulietta Masina.
All the Real Girls - See comment in that thread.
Onibaba - Loved it, the part where she is cowering in the corner and turns around coming into the light is really creepy.

Jeff-PTTL (Jeff), Tuesday, 13 April 2004 12:38 (twenty-one years ago)

I picked up "brazil", and tarkovsky's "solaris" from hmv last week. Damn, both as great as I remember!

Pashmina (Pashmina), Tuesday, 13 April 2004 14:22 (twenty-one years ago)

Mon Oncle comes close, I think.

Remy (x Jeremy), Friday, 15 April 2005 06:53 (twenty years ago)

one month passes...
Werner Herzog's "The White Diamond" -- I'd seen a couple of his older doc things before, but they weren't as memorable as this. The airship-designer / academic whom WH accompanies on his Guyana expedition is a gentler, more humane (but no less tortured) Fitzcarraldo. Great hi-def images of the flora, fauna and falls.

Gilliam's "Brazil" -- The second half most definitely flags, which wasn't my opinion in 1985. And the European cut is too long.

Araki's "Mysterious Skin" -- One of the performances of the year by Joseph Gordon-Levitt, a strutting but wounded cocktease of a Kansas teen hustler. All the other perfs (save Bill Sage as the predatory Little League coach) are all either passive or inscrutably rendered in '90210' fashion.

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 14 June 2005 16:19 (twenty years ago)

i just watched "Brazil" last night myself.

latebloomer: We kissy kiss in the rear view (latebloomer), Tuesday, 14 June 2005 16:23 (twenty years ago)

I definitely hadn't seen it in 12-15 years, as I never knew Jim Broadbent played Katherine Helmond's cosmetic surgeon.

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 14 June 2005 17:49 (twenty years ago)

Punch-Drunk Love
I could love this based on aesthetics and style alone, but I also happen to love PT Anderson's scriptwriting, direction, pacing, etc. Some scenes were just amazingly authentic in a way that I don't usually see in film... but it's hard to describe. I didn't realize what was going on with the lighting at first, I just noticed that it was peculiar; I'll have to watch again to see.

Yi Yi: When I started to watch this, I was a bit turned off by two things: 1) netflix apparently sent me the winstar fox/lorber version which has super-shitty video quality -- it looks like a worn VHS tape on a bad TV; 2) the tone set by the opening credits, which made me feel a bit underwhelmed/bored. I decided to go on watching it anyway, and about 15 minutes later I'd forgotten about all that and was already completely drawn into the lives of the characters. Unfortunately the disk was also damaged, and my DVD player choked only 40 minutes through! I'm having trouble dissecting what exactly is so special about this, probably due in large part to my unfamiliarity with Asian cinema the language... but I'm so anxious to see the rest, I'm going nuts.

All About Lily Chou-Chou: Sprawling and mesmerising. I'm surprised at how much I liked the music. The short "reload" sequence used throughout was a little annoying even if it acheived its intended effect, but that's a small gripe.

Tarnation: What a trip. It was an utterly foreign movie-watching experience to me, yet it wasn't difficult to digest at all. By turns funny, fascinating, and heartbreaking. Could be seen as a somewhat narcissistic endeavor, but that's not something I took issue with.

Julien Donkey-Boy: I can't seem to form a single opinion on this. There were aspects that I admired and parts that were quite funny (mostly courtesy of Herzog), but there are also aspects I have issues with. I'm glad I watched it, but I'm not so sure that I actually liked it. (Actually, the same could be said of Happiness, but for different reasons). Oval on the soundtrack was a plus though, and it was used well.

sleep (sleep), Tuesday, 14 June 2005 18:34 (twenty years ago)

House of Wax-
Eliza Cuthbert's heroine was too well intentioned to be likeable. The whole story, interestingly, pits one set of twins against another but I'm very tired of the use of creepy rednecks in horror films. Some inventive gore, but I would have rather the orchestrated carnage sprung from off from some sort of ethos rather than a nice and neat story.

Downfall-
Hitler's final days rendered with reailistic detail. Pretty fun througout though I wish more people could see, Hitler: A Film from Germany which I bought from subterranean cinema this year. Overall thematically more coherent than I was expecting as it nicely visualizes moments when the Third Reich had to put into action their absolutist ideas of self sacrifice in the face of failure.

Crash-
Some old white liberal really liked Magnolia so he remade it with a message of nice guy racial tolerance. Not seeing the racism, I guess, in the Arab and Asian steriotypes presented therein. The whole thing feels leftover from the early 90s for some reason. Rapper Ludacris, surprisingly good, as is Tony Danza's tv producer cameo, and Sandra Bullock needs to only play unlikeable people from hereafter. Oh, and it ends with an Aimie Mann (or a reasonable facsimilie) song on the soundtrack. Yuck!

theodore fogelsanger (herbert hebert), Tuesday, 14 June 2005 19:23 (twenty years ago)

I really enjoyed Lilly Chou Chou as well and had some similar gripes with the internet motifs. It's worth noting how it radically alternates moments of serene peace juxtaposed with wretched hate and sadism. It's probably worth seeing again now that you've brought it up.

theodore fogelsanger (herbert hebert), Tuesday, 14 June 2005 19:34 (twenty years ago)

Ninja 3: The Domination (1984 Same Firstenberg)
An aerobics enthusiast Jennifer Beal flashdance knock-off becomes possessed by the spirit of a deadly ninja. She begins to assasinate the army of cops who executed the resilant Asian assassin who possessed her body after the film's opening epic battle. Producers Golan-Globus posit a sophisticated satiracle juxtaposition between the violently spiritual discipline of Japanese assasins with the healthy obsessesions of the Califorinia lifestyle of the 1980s. There's also a sex scene involving the then popular V8 brand tomato juice.

theodore fogelsanger (herbert hebert), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 18:49 (twenty years ago)

kingdom of heaven -
disappointed in this: scott works best when he has modern/urban settings allowing exaggerated use of artificial light and colour - maybe if it had been set in more sumptuous landscapes it would have allowed more eye-candy too, but the flat, bright and dusty settings and relatively restrained color palette made it more visually monotonous than i expected (the extreme use of colour & scenery in the likes of 'hero' may have skewed expectations towards the unrealistic)

thought it was going to be more hardcore and brutal and reductionist/harsh in tone after seeing the 1st 20 mins or so - but it all went a bit errol flynn as it went on
(a clip of a battle scene from the jovovich joan of arc film seemed to have more of that blood'n'muck aspect about it - but i have not seen the film)

the evident uselessness of 'god's will' as any kind of discriminating explanatory function rendered the depiction of any of the characters using it in anything other than an aware and self-serving game-playing political tool somewhat incredible

scott seems to like the striking look of ornately metal-masked characters - the king here, a gladiator in one of his previous - probably just as well he isn't doing an adaptation of Iron Man, we'd probably get Stark's moustache on the outside of the helmet

hippity hoppity, Wednesday, 22 June 2005 12:02 (twenty years ago)

three weeks pass...
Tropical Malady - "Joe's" films don't get me on one viewing (all I've had of the 3 released here); I'd rank this one behind Blissfully Yours, as the Part 2 jungle trek just didn't reach transcendence. The first half does have maybe the sexiest movie-theater grope scene ever, and something bordering on lightness (potsmoking aunties and all).

The Fire Within - 1963 Louis Malle psychodrama of suicidally depressed alcoholic (Maurice Ronet) visiting rich friends. Had never even heard of it, straight and grim without as much chest-beating as much Bergman of the era. Crisp b&w by Ghislain Cloquet (Linc Ctr had a fine print).

Kings & Queen - Emmanuelle Devos was too much of a cipher, I was grateful for Mathieu Amalric's goofy tantrums. The jump cuts n' all are cool, and it's a recovery from the dire Esther Kahn, but I really don't know what Desplechin's after besides family often resembling desperate strangers.

The Joy of Life - Likely my favorite feature of the year so far. Butch dyke narrator with tenuous sex life, gorgeous San Francisco dusk and dawn shots, Golden Gate Bridge suicides.

http://www.mediarights.org/news/articles/report_from_sundance_2005_documentaries_in_action.php?page=3


The White Diamond / Wheel of Time - 2 recent Werner Herzog nonfic forays, the first a lush DV expedition with a holy fool / aeronautic engineer into the Guyanese jungle with an experimental airship; much sublime imagery and human surprises. The second is a more familiar but
watchable Buddhist pilgrimage / Dalai Lama vehicle, mostly shot on 16mm.

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 13 July 2005 20:08 (twenty years ago)

Oh, yeah. I remember hearing about that Golden Gate suicide one. I hope that shows up at the Mpls. doc fest this fall.

Eric H. (Eric H.), Thursday, 14 July 2005 01:24 (twenty years ago)

My Summer of Love - low-key teenage Sapphic love. Quiet, observant, distant, very good but I was constantly distracted by the inevitable fallout and outcome - whether that ending came from the filmmaker (as adults, we're supposed to view the relationship as one-sided, dishonest and doomed, but the teenage girl wouldn't) or whether it was just fitting into its particular cultural niche (couldn't have a serious/indie romance like this with a happy ending), I don't know.

milozauckerman (miloaukerman), Thursday, 14 July 2005 01:40 (twenty years ago)

I recently saw the Thai film Sixty-Nine (or perhaps 6ixty-Nin9, according to the box), and was rather disappointed. Part of my disappointment just came from the fact that the box sold it as a dark comedy-thriller, whereas it was mostly just dark. I also found it painfully slow, often predictable, and the end was pretty much a cop-out.

Hurting (Hurting), Thursday, 14 July 2005 04:42 (twenty years ago)

Still, one of the more amusing mafia bosses I've seen in movies... the pink plastic comb pretty much covers it.

Eric H. (Eric H.), Thursday, 14 July 2005 16:03 (twenty years ago)

The Joy of Life

is this the film where the director got permission to train cameras on the bridge for 24-hour periods, surveillance-style, and caught a lot of people jumping to their death, thereby making city officials really furious when they figured out what was going on? because i read something about that... but this could be totally different. it sounds intriguing at any rate.

a spectator bird (a spectator bird), Thursday, 14 July 2005 17:07 (twenty years ago)

xpost The deaf henchman was kind of amusing.

Hurting (Hurting), Friday, 15 July 2005 02:46 (twenty years ago)

>caught a lot of people jumping to their death<

No, nothing so graphic. All the suicide material is in the narration. Apparently the city is finally moving on a barrier for the span though.

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Friday, 15 July 2005 12:45 (twenty years ago)

Doubtful. They've been moving on that barrier for about 25 years now.

gygax! (gygax!), Friday, 15 July 2005 18:26 (twenty years ago)

OK, it's not imminent, but Jenni Olson takes partial credit for a "feasibility study" here (she also discusses the other film, about the jumpers):

http://www.greencine.com/article?action=view&articleID=220

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Monday, 18 July 2005 14:48 (twenty years ago)

***WARNING--SPOILERS ABOUT "THE MANSON FAMILY", "AUDITION" & "THE PIANO TEACHER" **

"The Manson Family"-- The newest Manson family film, by Jim Van Bebber. I actually liked it quite a bit more than I expected. Although flawed (overdramatic actors, cheesy meth-punk Manson fans in modern day killing a newsman doing a story on Charlie, etc.) the film succeeded on two important counts.

Firstly, it addressed the whole "Manson Cult" thing both not-so-subtly (said meth-punk group) and in more subtle ways (recreated "interviews" with family members from their jail cells today, shot off of televisions to look like bad VHS dubs of documentary footage purchased from Subterranean Cinema or aes-nihil.com).

Secondly, it was the first Manson flick I can remember that addressed the lure of sexuality as being a much stronger influence than psychedelic drugs or Charlie himself. I've heard critiques of this film complaining about the amount of skin, but I don't feel it was gratuitous at all. It's obvious that it was the orgies that kept Tex and the other male members (no pun intended) around, and it was Manson's role as pimp rather than preacher that kept the guys around.


"Audition"-- I'd seen one Miike film before this ("Ichi the Killer", which I liked but didn't love) so I thought I knew what to expect. Instead, I watched what seemed like a pretty standard narrative about a man who lost his wife & tries a rather sad way to find a new one. And then the film completely turned on me--vomit eating creatures in bags, sadistic ballet teachers, long needles & sawed-off limbs...wow. It was clever and visually interesting (especially the bag), but overall it didn't really leave much of an impact on me. The exploration of the woman's psyche and past seemed pretty superficial, as well as the character development of the lead male character.


"The Piano Teacher" -- This was the first Haneke film I've seen (I rented "Time of the Wolf" but haven't watched it yet) and I was greatly impressed. An incredibly strong story that was translated brilliantly to film and wonderfully casted. Haneke builds an incredible atmosphere that really draws you in to the work. The lead character's walk through the mall to the pornography shop was effective in defining the character's distance/animosity towards everyday conventions, yet the shop shows her deep desire to be a part of it. This is one of the most perfect films I've seen in a while.

jay blanchard (jay blanchard), Monday, 18 July 2005 21:23 (twenty years ago)

"The Piano Teacher" was effective for me as well when I saw it last year. I thought it explored the subject of the character's masochism pretty brilliantly. A very hurtful film but insightful, if that makes sense.

I've wanted to see the Manson Family for a while, I'm planning to purchase the DVD, along with "George Baitalle's Story of the Eye" next week. Van Bebber and Andrew Repasky McElhinney are two of the more exciting independent feature filmmakers around now I think.

theodore fogelsanger (herbert hebert), Wednesday, 20 July 2005 18:41 (twenty years ago)

I've heard nothing but scathing reviews about "Story of the Eye" which, as usual, makes me want to see it even more. Bataille's book is one of my personal favorites.

jay blanchard (jay blanchard), Saturday, 23 July 2005 21:31 (twenty years ago)

"Versus"
excuse me, what the hell?
this was crap. I go for things like "Koroshiya 1", but this was too dull.
there were some funny moments though, gotta admit that.

"The Piano Teacher"
amazing performances by Isabelle Huppert and Benoît Magimel, it didnt show too much and managed to really touch me.

"Paris, Texas"
great. i loved the photography, especially in the desert. i watched the whole thing twice, once with Wender's commentary, which is really insightful.

aeh (aeh), Sunday, 24 July 2005 17:33 (twenty years ago)

Bad News Bears remake - complete piece of shit, not even worth complaining about anymore

Hustle & Flow - likable, great music, nothing amazing

milozauckerman (miloaukerman), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 01:30 (twenty years ago)

I posted this on the "Last Days" thread, but what the hey:

Synopsis: Cobain wanders around muttering a lot, evidence of his genius, insulated, by drugs and liquor, from all the "phoniness" that besieges his "realness" (booking agents, bummy hangers-on, Boyz II Men videos). No one really cares about Kurt, and not a soul in the theatre either, and then he offs himself. Comic relief provided by young mormon twins and a yellow book ad salesman, both of which would pretty much be pat indie comedy a la Napoleon Dynamite if it weren't for the latter's staggeringly good acting. Comic relief also provided by a stupefied Kurt doing a freshman dorm-style looping pedal jam with himself.

Hurting (Hurting), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 03:24 (twenty years ago)

I've been watching old Woody Allen films. So far, mostly the very early ones, before he figured out what he was doing and when they mostly sucked. I can't decide whether to watch the classic period next or watch a bunch of the recent ones that suck. (I've seen many of the classic ones before, of course.)

Casuistry (Chris P), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 04:59 (twenty years ago)

"Last Days" - I really don't think the Mormon twins were acting. Tho it was less broad, I did find the Yellow Pages scene as unfunny as anything in Napoleon D. I liked the nature shots and that long reverse track when Blake is messing around in the music room, but the film is just impenetrable and not as risky (or transcendent) as GVS's last two.

"On the Outs" - DV melodrama of three drugging young Jersey City women, in and out of detention. Reasonably gritty/fake, one fine lead perf (the gal from Raising Victor Vargas) and one stinker.

"Caterina in the Big City" - overdetermined metaphorical comedy of rural teen moving to Rome. Effective star and mise en scene, all else lacking.

"Rize" - fun, truthful when it sticks to verite and not splicing in African folk ritual (egad).

Woody Allen didn't make a film that sorta sucked til "September" (1987).

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 13:07 (twenty years ago)

Last Days was both impenetrable and hollow -- an impenetrable shell of a movie.

Hurting (Hurting), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 13:25 (twenty years ago)

I haven't watched all of the pre-"Annie Hall" movies yet, but "Bananas" and "Sleeper" both more or less suck, and "Everything/Sex" hardcore sucks for the most part (points for Gene Wilder and for Woody as Italian, but neither is enough to make me think anyone should ever watch this movie ever). I've never been able to get past the first ten minutes or so of "Tiger Lily" but I'll give it another go and report back. "Play It Again, Sam" was pretty good although he didn't direct that one.

Casuistry (Chris P), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 16:50 (twenty years ago)

but "Bananas" and "Sleeper" both more or less suck

Oh no she din't.

Eric H. (Eric H.), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 16:53 (twenty years ago)

"Bananas" is worth it just for the National Review gag and "I brought a cake."

And EvAboutSex features one of Tony Randall's best roles. "I attend New York University..." "We're in!" (the only skit that dies painfully is Lou Jacobi cross-dressing)

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 20:03 (twenty years ago)

Tony Randall deserved better than that. And the only worthwhile part of "Bananas" is the great vapid conversation that Woody and Louise Lasser have when she's breaking it off with him. "I can't give unless I receive" etc.

The only good thing about Sleeper was the architecture.

Casuistry (Chris P), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 20:31 (twenty years ago)

You both forgot that Bananas has, for one fantastic scene, Charlotte Rae.

Eric H. (Eric H.), Wednesday, 27 July 2005 05:29 (twenty years ago)

The scene's not fantastic, but it was a surprise and delight seeing her.

Today I watched "Interiors" and "The Purple Rose Of Cairo", which were both great, especially Cairo.

Casuistry (Chris P), Wednesday, 27 July 2005 05:40 (twenty years ago)

"I met a wonderful man... He's fictional, but you can't have everything." Did you know Michael Keaton was fired from the Jeff Daniels role?

Being too old to have seen any value in The Facts of Life, I usu try to forget Charlotte Rae (tho she dances w/ Treat Williams in "Hair").

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 27 July 2005 14:15 (twenty years ago)

two months pass...
"Wanda" - a 1970 Cassavetesesque indie about a down-and-out Pennsylvania coal-country woman cut loose from hubby and kids who hooks up with a schlumpy armed robber. Grit (in the mise en scene and on the image) supplied by actress/director Barbara Loden, ex-model and muse/second wife of Elia Kazan. Tips into improv/longtake indulgence on occasion, but without bathos and about-facing from most possibilities of melodrama. Introduced at aBAM screening by Isabelle Huppert, who bought the rights and re-released it in France... more here:

http://www.sensesofcinema.com/contents/02/22/wanda.html


"Henri Langlois: Phantom of the Cinematheque" - Knew the name for ages, got most of what I needed to know about the Father of Preservation here (except that he was reportedly gay, which goes unmentioned to play up his fractious, shiftily passionate relationship with partner-in-emulsion Mary Meerson). Somewhere between the attempt to bury him in '68 and his ill-fated cinema museum things get a teeny bit parochial -- but this cut is apparently 90 minutes shorter than the original. Best quote is where he dismisses note-takers at screenings as misguided -- what would New York's Cinemaniacs think? (and my God, they gave him an Oscar in '74; imagine that happening now.)

http://www.filmforum.org/films/henri.html


"Mouchette" - I'd forgotten about that hand-biting in the fight in the forest, which got quite a yelp in the audience. And those chiming bells come in at precisely the right split-seconds in the last reel.

"Gabrielle" - Solid Chereau, with the kind of grotty, messy emotions spilling all over the decor only the French seem to do dependably in period films. Huppert to Greggory: "I'm sick at the thought of your semen inside me." Dependably dumb Lincoln Center Q&A followed with Chereau accused of endorsing marital rape.

"Three Times" - Medium Hou three-in-one, with the middle (a dialogue-free 'silent' w/ title cards) best, lackluster contemporary closer.

"Forty Shades of Blue" - The Russian gal steals it from Rip Torn.

"Junebug" - Chicago couple visits his Southern family; Alexander Payne-ish without the recent condescension. Played with straight civility by Embeth Davidz, with Amy Adams sweetly reckless, Celia Weston complexly mistrustful, Scott Wilson perfectly watchful.

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 14:55 (twenty years ago)

I watched "Altered States" for the first time and man was it great.

Also I watched Cronenberg's "Rabid" and was underwhelmed but it made for great MST3K-styled viewing.

polyphonic (polyphonic), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 22:54 (twenty years ago)

one year passes...
'junebug' - awesome
'brick' - film school
'the new world' - awesome/boring
'good night and good luck' - whatever

the original hauntology blogging crew (Enrique), Tuesday, 16 January 2007 10:00 (nineteen years ago)

For the get-stoned-and-watch-bad-movies film festival:

The Apple: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0080380/
This is an important film if you like to watch bad movies and laugh at them.

The Party Animal: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0087889/
This is a slightly less important film if you like to watch bad movies and laugh at them.

Left Behind: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0190524/
This was a hoot!

Riding the Bus with My Sister: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0420128/
The copy my housemate bought off the Internet was an Emmy screener copy. Ha! Rosie O'Donnell gives the worst performance I have seen in recent memory, and Andie MacDowell is almost as bad! "DIRECTED BY ANGELICA HUSTON" is something I repeatedly said aloud while watching this pile.

Yor, the Hunter from the Future: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0084935/
Yor is a much bigger pimp than Conan, believe that.

polyphonic (polyphonic), Tuesday, 16 January 2007 20:13 (nineteen years ago)

I caught a few minutes of the Apple at donut bitch's place the last time Ned was in town. That was nice! But I wasn't able to stay for it all...

Casuistry (Chris P), Tuesday, 16 January 2007 23:20 (nineteen years ago)

I caught a few minutes of the Apple at donut bitch's place the last time Ned was in town. That was nice! But I wasn't able to stay for it all...

If you haven't seen the last fifteen minutes (which are complete lunacy), you haven't really seen it.

polyphonic (polyphonic), Tuesday, 16 January 2007 23:45 (nineteen years ago)

Tomorrow Never Dies - Shitty in exactly the way it oughtta be shitty. Fun, boring, funny, boringer, stupid, then (mercifully) over.

Body Melt - 80s-style cheapo body horror splatter from Australia. Kinda psychedelic, kinda totally incoherent. Fucking rad.

verbose, bombastic, self-immolating (Pye Poudre), Thursday, 18 January 2007 19:33 (nineteen years ago)

Alpha Dog - Larry Clark for 'tweens.

milo z (mlp), Thursday, 18 January 2007 19:57 (nineteen years ago)

"An American In Paris" turned out to be almost entirely without redeeming qualities.

"The Ten Commandments" was rather nice.

Sick days are great for movies.

Casuistry (Chris P), Friday, 19 January 2007 06:49 (nineteen years ago)

six months pass...

Been catching up on miscellaneous new releases DVDs inexplicably in my parents' collection.

Harry Potter 1 - was alright, but nothing special in my book.

X-Men 2 - I only remember Part 1 being extremely boring for so much of the first half that the rest of the film seemed a lame attempt to catch up. The sequel, however, is exactly what the X-Men films should have always been. The White House scene, Magneto's prison break, and pretty much all of the last 40 minutes were perfect.

Daredevil - the less said the better. If the director's cut really adds to the film, I pity the souls who caught the theatrical release. Kudos to Affleck for remaining the only key member of the film opposed to a sequel.

All That Jazz - if only all musicals were as good as this! Still as revolutionary as when it was released, IMHO.

Female Trouble - Pink Flamingos may be the more-cited one, but to me, this is the quintessential pre-Hollywood Divine film.

Long Live Death - a curiously neglected reminiscence of Greek tragedy, based on the director's childhood during the Spanish Civil War. A clear influence on Spirit of the Beehive and Pan's Labyrinth. I believe that Jodorowsky and Arrabal also were close; Fando and Lis is an adaptation of Arrabal's book.

Girolamo Savonarola, Tuesday, 24 July 2007 18:34 (eighteen years ago)

In the last week or so, I watched:

La Balance- A Trashy French thriller from the early 80s. Nathalie Baye plays a hooker caught in the middle of a street war between the vice squad and a mobster with a nack for wasting informers. It's practically a crime film buffet unto itself--part noir, heist film, police procedural, and revenge film. Highly entertaining, altough the ultimate denouement is kind of cheesy in a very 80s way. I wonder if William Friedkin was paying as much attention to films like this when he did To Live and Die In LA as he had with numerous new wave classics when he shot The French Connection. Includes an extremely homoerotic execution scene.

Story of Women-Had missed this during the Huppert fest last year. Luckily, this is one of the few titles from it that has received a wide DVD release. Claude Chabrol directed this "based on a facts" account of an occupation-era abortionist. Since the story is kind of famous (the inspiration for Huppert's character was one of the last women to be guillotined), you already know how ugly it will end. But Chabrol's (and Huppert's) simple but detail-heavy touch cannot be denied. The DVD has a terrific selected scenes commentary from Chabrol that's basically a film school in 20 minutes. BTW, a belated RIP for Marie Trintignant.

Black Orpheus-Opening night of the local stop of the Janus tour. Good fun, great music and dancing, altough the symbolism had no subtlety whatsoever, which in end was probably appropriate.

Walkabout-More from the tour. I trust everyone's familar with this one, eh? A fairy tale with boobies, and the best Roeg I have seen. Loved the use of "Gasoline Alley" during the father's suicide. Best use of a song I've seen in anything--new or old--in a while.

Cruel Story of Youth-Finally seen by me thanks to TCM. Early Nagisa Oshima, before he got really wild. Some people consider this a Japanese Breathless, which makes sense in hindsight, altough I'm not sure if that's what Oshima intended. Amazing cinematography. It's too bad Oshima's 60s stuff hasn't really been widely revived in rep or given a lavish (and legal) DVD treatment. Otherwise, he'd be regarded as highly as Godard or any other 60s autuer one would care to name.

Pick of the bunch: Had to say. La Balance was the most entertaining, while Story of Women and Walkabout cut deepest. Call it a draw.

C. Grisso/McCain, Wednesday, 25 July 2007 01:30 (eighteen years ago)

All That Jazz - if only all musicals were as good as this! Still as revolutionary as when it was released, IMHO.

Female Trouble - Pink Flamingos may be the more-cited one, but to me, this is the quintessential pre-Hollywood Divine film.

Yes and yes.

Eric H., Wednesday, 25 July 2007 03:45 (eighteen years ago)

Recently...

Les Assassins De L'ordre : Jacques Brel(!) as a judge trying to get to the bottom of a police corruption scandal. Zippily directed by Marcel Carne. But Brel is the main reason to watch.

Franz : More Brel, this time also directing and co-screenwriting. He plays an introverted oddball in love living in a rooming house full of other oddballs. One minute it's a love story, the next a comedy and then you have a neat little heartbreaker of a tragedy on your hands. This one's all over the map but stick wih it and it'll pay off - again - because of Brel's remarkable performance. Paraphrasing Miles Davis: "That cat was a motherf***er".

The Phantom Carriage : Haunting and intense. The way he directed without going into the over-the-top melodrama inherent in most silents is tremendous.I need to see more Sjostrom silents.

Capitaine Jay Vee, Friday, 27 July 2007 12:56 (eighteen years ago)

Oh, yeah. And then there's the Warner Film Noir Classics #2 box set (Narrow Margin is especially WHOAH) and the three films watched out of the Eclipse Late Ozu box, which I'm still savoring before I jump on to the final two films.

Capitaine Jay Vee, Friday, 27 July 2007 13:02 (eighteen years ago)

OTM about The Phantom Carriage. A seriously overlooked silent classic. (As is most all of Sjostrom's work.)

Harry Potter 2 and 3 - I'm not gonna read the books, but I did read their summaries on Wikipedia out of casual interest. I figured better to read the whole story arc and THEN watch the films. (Actually, I'd already seen a couple upon release, but I don't remember which...) Anyway, out of all of them, I think it's a close call between 2 and 3 for the best yet. I think that the first one spends too much time setting up the whole story and laying down the conventions to actually hit the high notes, which is understandable. 2 and 3 take the template and twist it in new ways. 2 wins for humor, but 3 wins for darkness.

Transformers - was doing decently well for a Mickey Bay film until the big robot FITE towards the end. The robots are too spiny and baroque, they're constantly transforming, they're mostly gray so I have no idea who is who, the camera is shaking all over the place, and the edits are coming about one cut a second. I can't be bothered to care anymore.

family home movies - Imma gonna need to tweak the color balance on some of these...

Girolamo Savonarola, Friday, 27 July 2007 20:56 (eighteen years ago)


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