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Post by OldAussie on Nov 12, 2018 9:37:34 GMT
I've just started this one so hopefully I'll get an uninterrupted run so I can finish it this week.
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Post by jeffersoncody on Nov 12, 2018 9:39:35 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. lol. You are just trying to deflect from the fact you were playing battleshits the whole weekend OldAussie.LOL. No, I get it, you are saying that in the case of your son the apple fell very, very far from the tree when it came to good taste in movies.
Haven't seen the O.J. documentary but I'd like to. I hope you get to watch it one day. It is a truly extraordinary viewing experience.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 12, 2018 9:55:07 GMT
Details are fleeting.
Monday I think, or maybe Sunday I watched Spirit of the Beehive. That was delightful, but serious. Serious without busting your chops. I'm hit and miss on child point of view stories but it worked great for me. The two sisters were great and the younger sister's imagination boundless and plentiful. Their sensitivities deep and their resemblance to their parents not at all because in the background of this story, they're living on the wealthier side of what's still a dictatorship and deal with it by retreating into themselves. Parents retreat in, children retreat out. It's really a nice movie, well worth being included on that top 100 foreign language movies that just came out. It's Spanish.
I watched Rashomon because I was feeling sort of blue and wanted to watch something but didn't feel up to watching something I hadn't seen before. Rashomon's always good. It's interesting because it makes me feel like an important event. The case, the trial, the players. The perfect confluence of characters and timing that turned an ordinary day into a complicated tragedy that people might puzzle over for generations. In the Rashomon extended universe, which doesn't exist. It's a very neat, compact and finite story whose brief significance became the single most important occurrence of that day, and almost nobody knows about it save for the people involved in the trial.
I watched Leon the Professional on Netflix. I've been meaning to for as long as I can remember. That was really good. Deliciously violent, thoughtful, sensitive, quirky, full of good performances. Natalie Portman gets better with age in both directions since it's her first movie and she's like 12. Jean Reno is sympathetic, dangerous, and really kind of a good man in ways that are controversial to recognize him for because lets be honest, he's a hitman. But their relationship was taboo and sweet and the ending where she plants his plant friend in the ground was very touching. I'm also relieved he killed Gary Oldman. I really thought for a second he was going to stand over Leon, shot, and just gloat until he fades into the next life but no no, Leon's a professional. He took him out with him.
Twelve Angry Men. Again, I was feeling blue and couldn't handle new material so I watched Twelve Angry Men. It's one of my favorites, I've watched it twelve or thirteen times by now. I learned a lot from it. I've appreciated it and embraced it on so many terms it almost lacks punch in explaining it. The movie played a big part in my thought process, how I perceive things and how and with whom to be careful, to try and be in control, to service my open-minded point of view without open-mindedness servicing personal bias. It's one of few movies I've ever seen that I genuinely feel is required viewing. Every character is worth looking at and considering, the mystery is deep, in some characters self control belies a deeper rage; sometimes that rage betrays their calm and sometimes their calm betrays their rage. Almost every fallacy was touched on, several perspectives represented, and it's a kind of movie I like that involves one setting, a few characters and minimal dialogue. Entirely a debate, battle of wits story all in one room or place.
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Post by jeffersoncody on Nov 13, 2018 5:23:49 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, LOL. Sorry OldAussie, my memory is clearly not what it used to be. After some reflection I have realized that while there is a memorable scene of a girl pooing in NOT ANOTHER TEEN MOVIE, the hilarious battle shits scene is in one of the HAROLD AND KUMAR movies. My bad dude.
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Post by Lebowskidoo 🦞 on Nov 13, 2018 13:51:44 GMT
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