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Post by delon on Nov 10, 2018 15:33:24 GMT
Comments/ratings/recommendations/film posters are welcome and much appreciated
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Post by Deleted on Nov 10, 2018 15:41:41 GMT
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Post by politicidal on Nov 10, 2018 17:12:00 GMT
The Moderns (1988) 8/10
When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth (1971) 6/10
Tanganyika (1954) 5/10
Serpico (1973) 7/10
Hotel Artemis (2018) 710
Pirates of Tortuga (1961) 3/10
Species (1995) 4/10
The Lookout (2007) 5/10
Men of War (1993) 3/10
Sphere (1998) 4/10
Dreamscape (1984) 6/10
The Yellow Rolls-Royce (1965) 7/10
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Post by teleadm on Nov 10, 2018 19:58:18 GMT
This weeks mixed bag: I must be getting old, because I couldn't find any enthusiasm whatsover watching this, for me it was a dark and depressining action movie that took nearly 3 hours. Yet another Rom-com GF forces me to watch, not bad but... I love this one even if it's not perfect. The Kind of movie I wished was around when I was a kid. Very French, or too French movie for me to embrace, and they lighted new cigarettes all the time, in every scene, since I noticed that more than the story, it wasn't a movie for me. Though I do like Piccoli, Schneider and Massari in other movies. The last chapter of the Fly saga, not as horrible as I thought it would be, but not good either, Low budget is evident. There is actually no fly whatsover in this chapter, it's only talked about. Roma città aperta aka Rome Open City 1945, Some movies are called classics, this one IS a classic!! Watched the Italian speaking version with subtitles Who knows what next week will bring...
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Post by mikef6 on Nov 10, 2018 21:07:22 GMT
The Adventures Of Sherlock Holmes / Alfred L. Werker (1939). The second of the 14 Rathbone/Bruce films and, perhaps, the best. The opening credits say that this is based on the William Gillette’s 1899 play but having seen the 1916 silent film of the play (with Gillette himself in his only film appearance), the John Barrymore 1922 (also silent) version, and the early sound edition from 1932, I can say definitively that Gillette’s play is nowhere to be found in this movie. George Zucco, wonderful as the evil Dr. Moriarty, has a plan to pull off the crime of the century and ruin Sherlock Holmes at the same time. His devious scheme involves not one, but two, distractions to put Holmes off the scent. The first is the threat to the life of Ann Brandon (Ida Lupino) whose father and brother had been murdered by a flying instrument that both strangles and beats the head of the victim. The revelation of this mysterious murder weapon is a great moment in the whole series. But Holmes has to dig much deeper to discover Moriarty’s real plan. Is this the best Sherlock Holmes film ever made? Could be. Sherlock Holmes And The Voice Of Terror / John Rawlins (1942). Only the 3rd of the Rathbone/Bruce films and Holmes has already moved from the 19th century to the present day of the film’s release. A note at the beginning explains: “Sherlock Holmes…is ageless, invincible, and unchanging. In solving significant problems of the present day, he remains – as ever – the supreme master of deductive reasoning.” Holmes is called in by the high council of England to uncover the identity of the Voice Of Terror, a radio broadcaster for Nazi Germany who calls German sabotage and bombing as it is happening. Although the themes of “Voice Of Terror” are not noir (but rather war propaganda), director John Rawlins uses many noir techniques such as skewed camera angles, shadows on faces, and extreme close-ups. Universal Studio’s scream queen Evelyn Ankers co-stars as Kitty, whose husband – an informant of Holmes’ – was killed by Nazi spies. She goes undercover to learn the plans of Mead (Thomas Gomez, Key Largo), head of the spy ring. A pretty good entry even though at the end Holmes pulls quite a huge rabbit out of his hat with information withheld from the audience until then. Also, near the start look for the train wreck scene from “The Invisible Man” (1933) even to the track controls moving by themselves. NOTE: “Voice Of Terror” introduces the strange haircut with curls that Holmes will sport for the next few films. Basil Rathbone and Evelyn Ankers King Lear / Peter Brook (1971). Peter Brook was a stage and film director who was never known to take a traditional approach to his material. His film of “King Lear” is an example. His setting is a cold, snowy wasteland of a kingdom where travel is difficult and people are all wrapped in heavy clothing. It even makes speech sluggish as he has instructed his actors to, mostly, stick to a monotone without much variation or inflection. The great Paul Scofield plays the aging and deluded King and who almost convinces in this approach just by letting his audience get used to the delivery. This is a good and interesting “Lear” and I recommend it as long as it is not your first Lear. I would suggest other films or videos before this one. The clip below demonstrates my point and, as a bonus, it ends with an FSQ (Famous Shakespearian Quotation). 60 sec clip from Brook’s King Lear Ye Yan (The Banquet, aka Legend Of The Black Scorpion) / Xiaogang Feng (2006). Sumptuous and lush historical epic with flying-through-the-air martial arts à la Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon (2000) and starring Ziyi Zhang, who rose to stardom in that earlier picture. “The Banquet” claims to be based on “Hamlet” but really it just uses some of that play’s plot points. It begins in a familiar way: the Emperor dies suddenly. Instead of his heir, the Emperor’s brother not only takes the throne but marries the Empress, his brother’s wife (Ziyi Zhang). Meanwhile, the crown prince (U.S. born actor Daniel Wu) is elsewhere. After an attempt is made on his life, he returns to court suspecting his uncle of the murder of his father. Everything leads to the title banquet. Beautiful to look at but with a lot less action and fight choreography than you would expect to see. Bad Times At The El Royale / Drew Goddard (2018). Tarantino’s earliest two films from the 1990s still strongly influence movies in 2018. The current example is this one. We first get a prologue set in 1959 or thereabouts. A man checks into a motel room, pushes all the furniture to one side, rolls up the rug and pries up the floorboards. He drops a handbag into the hole in the floor and puts everything back the way it was. Later, some one knocks on his door. When he opens it he is killed by a shotgun blast. Jump ahead 10 years. The El Royale outside of Reno, Nevada has seen better days. There is only one employee, Miles (Lewis Pullman), who is only able to repeat a memorized history of the place and collect quarters for the coffee. But four people show up at the same time to register: a Catholic priest (Jeff Bridges), a talkative traveling salesman (John Hamm), a lounge singer (Cynthia Erivo), and a hippie girl (Dakota Johnson). Who are they – really? Are they looking for the hidden handbag or do they have an agenda of their own? The movie is divided into chapters in which we learn about the four. There is some time shifting, for example, one shocking scene is observed three times from different perspective as we go back in time to see how each participant came to be where the event happened. Director/writer Goddard keeps things moving without allowing the movie audience to guess what’s going to happen next. He keeps it fun and twisty…until the final half hour when the cult leader Billy Lee (Chris Hemsworth) shows up. When that happens, Goddard has run out of ideas and the stretched out coda taxes one’s patience. However, even though Bridges is great as usual, the movie is worth seeing for Erivo and Pullman. This is just Cynthia Erivo’s second feature film release but she gives an astonishing dramatic performance. Her face-to-face with Billy Lee should win her an Oscar if the universe were fair (it isn’t). Lewis Pullman is the son of Bill but about 8x more talented than dad. I really look forward to seeing more of both of these incredibly talented young actors. John Hamm, Jeff Bridges, Cynthia Erivo Lewis Pullman Annihilation / Alex Garland (2018). Another recent thriller (this one in the science fiction realm) which begins with a great premise but whose resolution cannot - and doesn’t – match the set-up and has to be a let down. Lena (Natalie Portman) is a former military combat veteran and a grieving widow. Her husband Kane (Oscar Isaac), who is still on duty, has failed to return from his last assignment. One year after his disappearance, he shows up back home but doesn’t know how he got there or where he has been. Lena soon learns of a mysterious phenomenon that the government calls The Shimmer. It covers part of a national forest but is growing and threatening the world. They know they can’t keep it secret much longer. All expeditions into the Shimmer have disappeared. Only Kane has returned. To help find a cure for Kane, Lena volunteers for the next mission to try to penetrate the Shimmer. Her mates on the mission are played by Jennifer Jason Leigh, Tessa Thompson, Gina Rodriguez, and Tuva Novotny. There are a few creepy episodes and explosions of violence but it turns mainly into a standard soldiers-behind-enemy-lines adventure. There are some good parts here and sincere acting, but I can’t give a recommendation.
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Post by OldAussie on Nov 10, 2018 22:14:42 GMT
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Post by Feologild Oakes on Nov 10, 2018 22:24:35 GMT
Alien (1979)
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Post by wmcclain on Nov 11, 2018 6:01:13 GMT
And these shorts: Act Without Words II (2001) Catastrophe (2000) Come and Go (2000) Ohio Impromptu (2000) ...from:
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Post by claudius on Nov 11, 2018 14:43:03 GMT
THE MAN WHO LAUGHS (1928) 90th ANNIVERSARY Universal’s Victor Hugo Novel adaptation about a deformed freak with aristocratic roots. First saw a clip of this film on a 20/20 documentary sketch of the upcoming BATMAN movie in 1989 (commenting about how Conrad Veidt’s visage (by Jack Pierce) gave Bob Kane- and Bill Finger- ideas for a comic book villain), then read this from Everson’s CLASSICS OF THE HORROR FILM. Finally got to see the film on DVD in 2003. Kino DVD.
SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE (1978) “Steve Martin/Van Morrison” 40TH ANNIVERSARY. Sketches include ‘What If? (Eleanor Roosevelt could fly?), ‘Theodoric of York’ (where Laraine Newman almost drowned, a piece of intrest for me back when this was shown on edited form in THE BEST OF SATURDAY NIGHT on Nick at Nite back in the early 1990s), Garrett Morris as Diana Ross (with reference to THE WIZ), and the cold opening where Steve has Bill Murray jump through a burning hoop. Universal DVD.
CHARMED (1998) “Dream Sorcerer” 20TH ANNIVERSARY Paramount DVD.
DEMON CITY SHINJUKU (1988) 30TH ANNIVERSARY this Year. This Apocalyptic Thriller was my first major intro to Anime on the Sci-Fi Channel’s ‘Anime Week’ in 1995. US Manga VHS.
SUPERMAN (1988) “Superman and Wonder Woman VS The Sorceress of Time/The Birthday Party.” 30TH ANNIVERSARY. Wonder Woman guest-stars (designed after the pre-Crisis version- blue bracelets, straight hair, high heels- although Queen Hippolyta is in her George Perez-created Post-Crisis form). Warner DVD.
FRIENDS (1998) “The One With the Yeti” 20th ANNIVERSARY. Netflix.
SWING KIDS (1993) 25TH ANNIVERSARY this Year. Somber tale of 1930s German misfits dealing with Nazi corruption within their circle. The ending music by James Horner gets me. First saw this on PayPerView in 1993. Showtime Flix Broadcast on VHS.
INSPECTOR GADGET (1983) “Pirate Island,” “No Flies on Us”, “Luck of the Irish.” “King of the Gypsies.” 35TH ANNIVERSARY.
THE DEVIL’S CROWN (1978) “Lion of Christendom” & “The Caged Bird Sings.” 40TH ANNIVERSARY this year. Richard the Lion-Hearted’s reign from his failed Crusade and his Austrian imprisonment. Youtube.
JANE EYRE (1983) “Episode Five” 35TH ANNIVERSARY BBC VIDEO DVD.
EDWARD AND MRS. SIMPSON (1978) “The Little Prince” 40TH ANNIVERSARY. This 7-part serial caused a stir in Britain, depicting a controversial incident for the Royal Family. Was introduced to it by Terrence O’Flaherty’s MASTERPIECE THEATRE: A CELEBRATION OF 25 YEARS OF OUTSTANDING TELEVISION, then saw much of it on the History Channel in 1996. A&E DVD.
THE CLEOPATRAS (1983) “Episode Seven” 35TH ANNIVERSARY this year. Cleopatra goes from Caesar to Antony. Youtube.
UNKNOWN CHAPLIN (1983) “My Happiest Years” 35TH ANNIVERSARY this year. Kevin Brownlow and David Gill (with Composer Carl Davis and Narrator James Mason) do their second multi-part Silent film documentary, spotlighting Chaplin’s deleted scenes & outtakes of his Mutual short films. I remember first spotting this by accident on The Learning Channel in 1992, thinking it might be HOLLYWOOD, then continued watching it and its return broadcast two days later (I was introduced to BUSTER KEATON: A HARD ACT TO FOLLOW at the same time). Later, when I found out HOLLYWOOD was out of print, getting this documentary on VHS was a good substitute. HBO Video/Thames Video VHS with an introduction by Chaplin’s daughter Geraldine.
FULLMETAL ALCHEMIST (2003) “The Alchemy Exam.” 15th ANNIVERSARY This adaptation builds up on the source material by developing several characters like Maes Hughes and Nina Tucker.
STAR! (1968) 50TH ANNIVERSARY this Year. Robert Wise and Julie Andrews in another Musical Spectacular. What can go wrong? Well, this bio on Gertrude Lawrence became a twice flop for 20th Century Fox (it was reissued and retitled) and Andrews’ first. Oh well, I do love the ‘Ballad of Jenny’ number, first seeing it on American Movie Classics back in 1993. Fox Video DVD.
DRAGON BALL (1988) “Reunion Before the Storm” 30TH ANNIVERSARY. I resume my anniversary watching of the Anime version of the Piccolo Arc, this segment referred to as the 23rd Tenchi-ki Budokai Arc. Akira Toriyama wanted his fights to be more realistic and felt Kid Goku kicking arse wasn’t convincing anymore. So, despite editor complaints, he decided to grow his character up. This development debuts in this episode, which also introduces a more adult Kuririn (who will not grow any further), Yamucha with scars on his face, and the definitve version of Piccolo. Funimation DVD.
MURDER BY DECREE (1979) November 9 marks the 130th anniversary of the Jack the Ripper murder of Mary Kelly, so I finish up my anniversary viewings with the second Sherlock Holmes take on the subject (with Christopher Plummer and James Mason, with Holmes/Ripper Alumni Anthony Quayle and Frank Finlay returning). Based on the Walter Sickert-Stephen Knight ‘Royal Conspiracy’ theory (since debunked), although it changed the names in favor of Sir William Gull (something JACK THE RIPPER and FROM HELL didn’t do). It is a rather somber film, one that knocked me when I first saw it on TNT back in 1992 (Oh well, at least they didn’t make Holmes the Ripper, like in one story). Nevertheless I think of it as one of my favorite Holmes films. I showed it to my FROM HELL fan friend once (He was also a fan of GLADIATOR, which led to me showing him THE FALL OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE). Lionsgate DVD.
A DIFFERENT WORLD (1988) “Three Girls Three.” 30TH ANNIVERSARY. TV One Broadcast on VHS
THE CROWN (2017) “Hyde Park Corner,” “Act of God.” This week I watched the beginning of the Edward-Wallis affair in EDWARD AND MRS. SIMPSON. Here I see the ugly aftermath, with the former King’s reunion with his not-very-happy-to-meet-him family after George VI’s death. Netflix.
BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER (1998) “Band Candy” 20TH ANNIVERSARY. Fox Video DVD.
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Post by morrisondylanfan on Nov 11, 2018 21:28:24 GMT
Hi all,I hope everyone is having a good weekend,and I watched: Noir duo: Interpol (1957) 8 Made as the wheels on British "genre" cinema were starting to gain traction, the movie offers a glorious preview over what awaited, thanks to co- producer (with Irving Allen) Albert R. Broccoli making his mark, and director John Gilling bringing in future Hammer Horror stars André Morell and Yvonne Romain, an on the cusp of fame Anita Ekberg, and rounding it up with a cameo from Sid James. Closely working with future 007- Connery era cinematographer Ted Moore, director Gilling gives this globe-trotting Film Noir a slick sun-kissed atmosphere by glittering the locations with stylish low-lighting which gives off an "exotic" vibe, and also displays McNally's attempts to stop Sturgis capturing him in the light. Displaying a sharp eye for stylisation which would later make his Hammer Horror films stand out, Gilling uses dissolves with a real precision in creating a disturbing impression of each murder, and up close and personal camera moves to give the punch-ups Sturgis' takes to locate McNally a frantic, rough and tumble edge. Knotting Sturgis's family into McNally's murderous underworld dealings, the screenplay by John Paxton keeps the pressure from McNally firm with stealth kills on any former associate who tries to help Sturgis out. Putting her between both sides, Paxton builds up the Film Noir doubt by Sturgis attempting to gain the trust of courier Broger, in the hope that she will turn, and become a courier for McNally's arrest. Brushing off his gentlemen image, Trevor Howard gives a dastardly turn as hard man McNally, whose fists Howard slams against anyone who raises a disagreement. Crossing the globe to nab McNally,Victor Mature gives a very good performance as Sturgis, holding his nose to the grindstone Mature keeps Sturgis simmering with anger to get his revenge. Seductively performing a song number which hints at what was to come with 1958's Screaming Mimi, Anita Ekberg gives a fetching, sultry Femme Fatale twist as Broger, who Ekberg has become filled with nervousness over being caught between McNally and Interpol. Red Pier (1958) 10 Treating the transfer with the same respect given to Seijun Suzuki's work in the set, Arrow present an image which is crystal clear, a soundtrack that is clean and well-paced English subtitles. Lifting a rich Film Noir atmosphere from the opening murder via crane, co-writer/(with Ichirô Ikeda) director Toshio Masuda & cinematographer Shinsaku Himeda unveil gorgeous stylisation in the crisp white clothes Tominaga lands in the port with reflected in pristine white lights lining every street and crashing against the waves, whilst subtly outlining the murky deals taking place under the pristine port. Hitting his targets with a mighty swagger, Masuda and Himeda give their loner bags of Film Noir chic spun from off-kilter camera angles curling round to follow Tominaga make his escape, and fluid, hand-held camera moves following each punch Tominaga offers up. Taking the basic outline of Julien Duvivier's classic Pépé le Moko (1937) (a Film Noir loner flees to the outskirts to avoid the cops) the screenplay by Masuda and Ikeda brilliantly draw up the sketch to comment on the youthful Post-WWII era of Japan, by having Tominaga be one of the new "water trade" (a black market many people worked in to survive during the aftermath of losing the war) gangsters, who is a free-wheeling loner who does not follow the pre-WWII codes of "loyalty" the underworld lived by. Smoothly crossing Film Noir with the popular "Sun-Tribe"/Zoku genre, the writers hits the early sugar rush of the French New Wave by Tominaga (played by a wonderfully dashing and slick Yûjirô Ishihara) being unable to let his secret love Keiko Sugita (a very good Mie Kitahara) cross his personal space, as a harmonica plays music from the heart of Tominaga across the red pier. Others: Gates of Paris (1957) 10 Pre-dating the British "Kitchen Sink" films by a decade, co-writer/(with Jean Aurel) directing auteur René Clair splashes his distinctive surreal aspects into the sink of Poetic Realism. Whilst Juju listens in on local mutterings, Clair slides pass to dip through the looking glass/ window to follow the play fighting of children which uncannily matches the locals descriptions of Barbier's crimes. Keeping Barbier out of sight in The Artist house, Clair holds down his surreal stylising to instead give the poetic crane shots down the winding streets of the town and the whip-pans down to the loft an earthy, proto- Kitchen Sink grit, rubbed from the house being given a confined, run-down appearance. Opening the gate to Juju and The Artist friendship in their adaptation of René Fallet's novel, the screenplay by Clair and Jean Aurel tantalisingly give plenty of breathing space for the friendship to gradual cover the screen as Artist and Juju have tiffs in the house they share, but make up by singing songs in the pub. Putting a dent in the friendship with the run-in of Barbier, the writers subtlety place a Film Noir long-con bubbling in the background to explore the themes of loneliness and mistrust, poured from Juju placing a much greater level of trust on Barbier's "friendship" than The Artist, and Juju's misplaced love for pub barmaid Maria. Bringing a real warmth when hanging out together, Pierre Brasseur and Georges Brassens give fantastic performances which compliment each other, via the bohemian vibes Brassens wraps The Artist in,and the slowly sinking himself into exile edge Brasseur gives Juju. Getting in the middle of the friends, cute Dany Carrel gives an innocent sweetness to kind-hearted Maria, whilst Henri Vidal keeps wanted criminal Barbier's back up against the wall, as the gates of Paris close. Bakumatsu taiyôden (1957) 8 Presenting a title loved in Japan but largely unknown in The West,Masters of Cinema present a great transfer, with the picture retaining a film grain, the soundtrack being clear,and the subtitles being easy to follow. Released the year that the Japanese government took a hard line on prostitution and other vices, co-writer/(with Hisashi Yamanouchi and Shôhei Imamura) director Yûzô Kawashima & cinematographer Kuratarô Takamura take the viewer on a tour of the 19th century Shogunate-era brothel with magnetic fluidity,pulling the doors open for the camera to zip pass, and winding tracking shots along the maze of corridors within the building. Holding Saheiji at the brothel with a mountain of debt, Kawashima has Saheiji pay back with a criss-crossing comedic relish from the odd jobs of pointing a prostitute towards a new life on by a sea edge, and attempting to handle a group of samurai. Created as part of the studios Nikkatsu sun-tribe/teenager genre/ output, the writers deliver a sharply allegorical edge, over the samurai group being frustrated with the treaties that the Shogunate region had signed with the US, taping into protests taking place in Japan over the post-WWII treaties (a "Free Japan" sword is shown on screen.) Thankfully not letting the title be weighed down by politics,the writers allow the movie to blossom with a wicked comedic wit, playfully spun by the prostitutes using all their enticing charms to leave clients empty handed and waiting. Threading the whole tale together,Furankî Sakai gives a dazzling performance as Saheiji, with Sakai keeping Saheiji's physical comedy exchanges flow with a rapid-fire zest, and a charming, breezy manner for the smooth comedic word-play of witnessing the last days of the Shogunate.
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Post by vegalyra on Nov 11, 2018 23:55:26 GMT
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Post by rudeboy on Nov 12, 2018 0:39:58 GMT
I'm on a bit of a kick watching films I missed from 2002.
Over the past few days:
7/10
Attack (1956) Robert Aldrich **It takes its time to get going but, other than a miscast Eddie Albert, this is splendid stuff. Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress (2002) Silje Dai
6/10
25th Hour (2002) Spike Lee 24 Hour Party People (2002) Michael Winterbottom Spider (2002) David Cronenberg
4/10
Adventures of Don Juan (1948) Vincent Sherman **overlong, disappointing swashbuckler with a well past his sell-by date Errol Flynn.
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Post by marianne48 on Nov 12, 2018 0:45:30 GMT
Two films that I've seen several times, but I just had to watch them again:
Gojira (1954)--Forget CGI; this and the original King Kong (which has just been made into a Broadway musical, which will likely bomb as loudly as other Broadway musical horror shows such as Carrie and Frankenstein did) are the two greatest giant monster films of all time, even with the so-called "primitive" special effects of both films. Having grown up watching the Raymond Burr version, with edits made to accommodate Burr's inclusion and his constant exposition which gave the story a detached atmosphere, I always wanted to see the original version; when it was released on DVD a few years back, it was almost like seeing a different, superior movie altogether. The opening credits, with Godzilla's pounding footsteps and that inimitable roar, is still chilling. The suspense is well done; the love triangle is more defined than in the Burr version; Doctor Yemane has a bigger, more complex role; and the references to the atomic bomb and Japan's tragic relationship with it are not whitewashed. Yeah, Godzilla is played by a guy in a dinosaur suit kicking around cardboard buildings and toy cars and trains. It's still better than the more recent versions. The iconic musical score is one of my favorites of any film.
For the 100th anniversary of the Armistice: La Grande Illusion (1937)--my first foreign film (not counting Godzilla, King of the Monsters! which I knew as a kid only in its dubbed, Raymond Burr version) which I saw when I was 11 and immediately fell in love with it. Also my first DVD purchase, I have to see it about once a year. A still relevant take on the alliances of wars and the outdated notion of war. Unfortunately, that was the illusion; WWII was already revving up by the time this movie was made, and Renoir and much of Europe was probably well aware of it.
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Post by morrisondylanfan on Nov 12, 2018 1:12:25 GMT
I'm on a bit of a kick watching films I missed from 2002. Over the past few days: 7/10 Attack (1956) Robert Aldrich **It takes its time to get going but, other than a miscast Eddie Albert, this is splendid stuff. Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress (2002) Silje Dai 6/10 25th Hour (2002) Spike Lee 24 Hour Party People (2002) Michael Winterbottom Spider (2002) David Cronenberg 4/10 Adventures of Don Juan (1948) Vincent Sherman **overlong, disappointing swashbuckler with a well past his sell-by date Errol Flynn. Hi Rudeboy,I hope you had a good weekend,and how did you find the Madchester of 24 Hour Party People to be?
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Post by rudeboy on Nov 12, 2018 1:37:18 GMT
I'm on a bit of a kick watching films I missed from 2002. Over the past few days: 7/10 Attack (1956) Robert Aldrich **It takes its time to get going but, other than a miscast Eddie Albert, this is splendid stuff. Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress (2002) Silje Dai 6/10 25th Hour (2002) Spike Lee 24 Hour Party People (2002) Michael Winterbottom Spider (2002) David Cronenberg 4/10 Adventures of Don Juan (1948) Vincent Sherman **overlong, disappointing swashbuckler with a well past his sell-by date Errol Flynn. Hi Rudeboy,I hope you had a good weekend,and how did you find the Madchester of 24 Hour Party People to be? Hello morrisondylanfan! I really enjoyed the recreation of time and place. The Hacienda crowd was a generation which I missed by just a couple of years, but I was at university in the 90s and was a huge fan of the music. It was great to hear so much of it again. The film itself was engaging and went down easily, although I would have appreciated a little more focus on certain characters - it seemed to rush through the era at breakneck speed ( as if ecstasy fuelled, one might say) without giving much breathing room to some of the more important or interesting figures. Then when it finally did settle for a while, it was on The Happy Mondays, never one of my favourite bands of the time. But an enjoyable film - and Steve Coogan, whom I tend not to appreciate when not playing Alan Partridge - was quite memorable as Tony Wilson.
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Post by morrisondylanfan on Nov 12, 2018 2:03:07 GMT
Hi Rudeboy,I hope you had a good weekend,and how did you find the Madchester of 24 Hour Party People to be? Hello morrisondylanfan! I really enjoyed the recreation of time and place. The Hacienda crowd was a generation which I missed by just a couple of years, but I was at university in the 90s and was a huge fan of the music. It was great to hear so much of it again. The film itself was engaging and went down easily, although I would have appreciated a little more focus on certain characters - it seemed to rush through the era at breakneck speed ( as if ecstasy fuelled, one might say) without giving much breathing room to some of the more important or interesting figures. Then when it finally did settle for a while, it was on The Happy Mondays, never one of my favourite bands of the time. But an enjoyable film - and Steve Coogan, whom I tend not to appreciate when not playing Alan Partridge - was quite memorable as Tony Wilson. With 24 Hour,I agree about the feeling of it moving at a breakneck speed, which I think is partly down to how many acts/events and "characters" round the scene (like Bez and the Mondays) it wants to cover in under 2 hour. One (unintended?) aspect which has come into focus for me thanks to going to gigs/nights out in Manchester since seeing the movie, is how The Factory has gone from being on the outskirts of the music scene and The Hacienda having countless (how should we say this) "problems" with the council, to now the names being plastered on every building in the city!
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Post by mikef6 on Nov 12, 2018 5:55:14 GMT
I'm on a bit of a kick watching films I missed from 2002. Over the past few days: 7/10 Attack (1956) Robert Aldrich **It takes its time to get going but, other than a miscast Eddie Albert, this is splendid stuff. Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress (2002) Silje Dai I thought Eddie Albert was perfect, cast against type as he was. According to one source, "Attack" was the first studio war movie to be denied the official cooperation of the Army.
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Post by jeffersoncody on Nov 12, 2018 9:11:07 GMT
and all of Ken Burns' THE VIETNAM WAR is one of the most detailed, insightful and brilliant documentaries I have ever seen. As heartbreaking as it is riveting, it left me shattered and in tears. A truly masterful and humanistic work. 10 out of 10. It absolutely consumed me while I was watching it. fact is, everything else you watched this week must have seemed rather trite by comparison.
PS. Did you and your son have a game of battleshits after watching NOT ANOTHER TEEN MOVIE Aussie? Or, did you just watch it because you are a Ed Lauter completist?
PPS. Have you seen the Oscar-winning, 8-hour long O.J. MADE IN AMERICA? It is a must-see, and right up there with THE VIETNAM WAR when it comes to excellence and insight.
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Post by OldAussie on Nov 12, 2018 9:31:15 GMT
Ken Burns' THE VIETNAM WAR is one of the most detailed, insightful and brilliant documentaries I have ever seen. As heartbreaking as it is riveting, it left me shattered and in tears. A truly masterful and humanistic work. 10 out of 10. It absolutely consumed me while I was watching it. fact is, everything else you watched this week must have seemed rather trite by comparison.
PS. Did you and your son have a game of battleshits after watching NOT ANOTHER TEEN MOVIE Aussie? Or, did you just watch it because you are a Ed Lauter completist?
PPS. Have you seen the Oscar-winning, 8-hour long O.J. MADE IN AMERICA? It is a must-see, and right up there with THE VIETNAM WAR when it comes to excellence and insight.
I think you've picked up on my viewings - all 7 movies were my son's choices, The War I watched right through on my lonesome. Of the others, Doc Jeckyll and Sis Hyde, A Serious Man and The Faculty were good enough, the rest quite a chore to get through. Haven't seen the O.J. documentary but I'd like to.
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Post by jeffersoncody on Nov 12, 2018 9:34:26 GMT
and all of Oops Old Aussie, I thought you were talking Burns' recent 10-PART masterpiece THE VIETNAM WAR.
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