pretty much still feel the same as those comments, in re synecdoche. if anything i feel more negative about it, it's just too much of a sadsacky drag. there is great stuff in it, but i really don't want to see it again.
― hellzapoppa (tipsy mothra), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:04 (sixteen years ago)
Samantha Morton is fantastic in it - love her
― The Tommy Westphall Universe Hypothesis (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:04 (sixteen years ago)
didn't know men did it for you at all, nrq
well true but i can "see why" with some widely reputed man-hotties, not so much w. damon.
i liked 'synecdoche, ny' to a extent -- v surprised it charted.
― the highest per-vote vag so far (history mayne), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:05 (sixteen years ago)
xpostshe is, and so are most of the women in it. and psh is fine, i just sort of hate his character. if we have to be trapped in someone's existential daydream, i'd rather it was someone more interesting.
― hellzapoppa (tipsy mothra), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:06 (sixteen years ago)
i liked synecdoche kinda, slept through part of it, surprised anyone voted for it
― ice cr?m, Friday, 5 February 2010 19:06 (sixteen years ago)
Samantha Morton is basically fantastic in everything
― queen frostine (Eric H.), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:06 (sixteen years ago)
enjoyed the house on fire, shifting roles gags
― ice cr?m, Friday, 5 February 2010 19:07 (sixteen years ago)
agree about the unattractiveness/lumpen nature of PSH being a bit much over the course of the film - the self-absorption required to maintain that level of depression is a bit of a distancing factor, you wanna just shake the guy and tell him to snap out of it.
― The Tommy Westphall Universe Hypothesis (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:08 (sixteen years ago)
Synecdoche is one of many half-super movies on this list.
Morton never better, also first time I liked PS Hoffman in eons.
But started being painful for the sake of it when all the redundancy began to pile up in the last third. Unwieldy. The structure hid whatever heart was there. (ie, what ppl say about CF's scripts for Malkovich and EtSunshine, where I totally disagree)
― Rage, Resentment, Spleen (Dr Morbius), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:08 (sixteen years ago)
otm
― hellzapoppa (tipsy mothra), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:09 (sixteen years ago)
wait waht I thought Morbz dug Eternal Sunshine (or am I misreading that post)
― The Tommy Westphall Universe Hypothesis (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:09 (sixteen years ago)
you are misreading.
Since foreign films have gone away for awhile, I know we're gonna get something like City of God any minute...
― Rage, Resentment, Spleen (Dr Morbius), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:10 (sixteen years ago)
CK not CF
― Rage, Resentment, Spleen (Dr Morbius), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:11 (sixteen years ago)
i liked synechdoche but i have a weakness for big movies (and books) that have Important Things to say about Art and Life
― max, Friday, 5 February 2010 19:11 (sixteen years ago)
how high will Eternal Sunshine place I wonder (if Synechdoche made it than I assume ET - which is definitely superior - will too...)
― The Tommy Westphall Universe Hypothesis (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:12 (sixteen years ago)
Oh geez - back to Far From Heaven
Whoever said it was/felt like an academic exercise, I agreed with - though I really appreciated it and this movie was one I voted for. When it came out, the first thing I thought was that it was Haynes' tribute to "MCM 66: Cinematic Coding and Narrativity" - one of the intro classes in the MCM department at Brown (called Semiotics back when Todd Haynes took it), because All that Heaven Allows was on the syllabus and we spent a lot of time discussing it.
It was also really beautiful visually, and I felt the manneredness of the performances worked with the concept of the film.
― sarahel, Friday, 5 February 2010 19:13 (sixteen years ago)
That is the worst film by miles to appear on this list so far. What is it even doing here?
― DavidM, Friday, 5 February 2010 19:13 (sixteen years ago)
IIRC ESotSM came in #2 in the 2000-2004 poll.
― Roomful of Moogs (C. Grisso/McCain), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:14 (sixteen years ago)
haha which movie u talking about?
― goole, Friday, 5 February 2010 19:14 (sixteen years ago)
― The Tommy Westphall Universe Hypothesis (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, February 5, 2010 2:12 PM (19 seconds ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
im thinking #2
― ice cr?m, Friday, 5 February 2010 19:14 (sixteen years ago)
mcm is the weirdest department <3
― kicker conspiracy (b. favre ha ha) (daria-g), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:15 (sixteen years ago)
I wouldn't be surprised if Eternal Sunshine came in at #1
― Dan S, Friday, 5 February 2010 19:15 (sixteen years ago)
Above The Transporter 2? No way.
― Oi'll show you da loife of da moind (Noodle Vague), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:15 (sixteen years ago)
eternal sunshine + mulholland are the inevitable top two imo
no clue about #3-5
― iatee, Friday, 5 February 2010 19:17 (sixteen years ago)
Sunshine beating Drive for the #1 slot would be a travesty.
― queen frostine (Eric H.), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:17 (sixteen years ago)
Little Miss Sunshine, I mean.
sarahel did you 'major' in mcm btw?
― kicker conspiracy (b. favre ha ha) (daria-g), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:17 (sixteen years ago)
I know Elephant as the only movie Mike D'Angelo gave a 0 out of 100.
― abanana, Friday, 5 February 2010 19:17 (sixteen years ago)
good times
― Roomful of Moogs (C. Grisso/McCain), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:18 (sixteen years ago)
xpostlol. ES is a movie that I wansn't really into when I saw it, but I'm eager to revisit it
― Dan S, Friday, 5 February 2010 19:18 (sixteen years ago)
apart from park chan-wook stuff, the only korean movie i can bring to mind from this decade is Take Care of My Cat, which i remember as really charming but don't actually remember too well. besides the green planet, am i missing lots of awesome stuff?
― men lie, women lie, hips don't (zvookster), Friday, 5 February 2010 02:19 (16 hours ago)
someday I'll start my rolling korean film review thread
― 鬼の手 (Edward III), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:20 (sixteen years ago)
xp - daria - yes I did - and it was a fellow MCM major and member of Brown Film Society that told me that I had to see Synecdoce, New York which I opined plenty about in the thread about that movie.
― sarahel, Friday, 5 February 2010 19:21 (sixteen years ago)
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v212/etienne_saint/artificial-intelligence-ai-jude-law.jpg
at the end of spielberg's "artificial intelligence," the movie goes from being pretty good or nearly great into being a goddamned masterpiece.
― Eric H.
if the rest of the movie had been as good as the last portions, i think it could've really cleaned some clocks.
the earlier sections were better as the short story the movie was based upon.
― msp
Just because he wasn't breathing behind the camera doesn't mean his vision isn't stamped on the film (in a quite dominant way too). I've said this before millions of times (including somewhere on ILX I'm sure) but there are moments in that film that Spielberg could never have created and moments Kubrick could never have created. Thus I sleep VERY well at night stating that A.I.: Artificial Intelligence is the best film by BOTH directors (unless Spielberg turns into Mizoguchi in his remaining time here).
- Kevin John Bozelka
#66
A.I. Artificial IntelligenceSteven Spielberg2001United States(274 points, 17 votes)
― ('_') (omar little), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:21 (sixteen years ago)
Pro: It is amazing.Con: My pullquote.
― queen frostine (Eric H.), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:22 (sixteen years ago)
synecdouche is 100% concept, 5-10% execution... would have liked to actually care about i don't know the story or the characters in the 2nd act rather than just introduce a new complicated twist and then waste it by introducing another twist just as forgettable as the one from 5 minutes previous. total rush job by the third act that was convenient as everybody (incl the filmmakers apprently) couldn't wait for it to end. Easily the worst movie on this list that i spent $10 on.
― ┌∩┐(◕_◕)┌∩┐ (Steve Shasta), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:22 (sixteen years ago)
Amazing film.
― DavidM, Friday, 5 February 2010 19:23 (sixteen years ago)
xpost- oh wicked, i had no idea. i took a grad seminar there, so i know the place. off to read the other thread.
― kicker conspiracy (b. favre ha ha) (daria-g), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:24 (sixteen years ago)
i saw ai as the third leg of a self curated tripple feature following pootietang and the fast and the furious at the battery park cinema on a v hot day - its sucked - who the fuck are you people
― ice cr?m, Friday, 5 February 2010 19:26 (sixteen years ago)
had A.I. 26th. Most terrifying Abandoned by Mother scene ever. Maybe Jude Law's best performance. A caliber of imaginative world-making no other pop filmmaker can approach.
Saw 2x in theaters in '01; bought the DVD a few years ago and haven't watched it yet...
― Rage, Resentment, Spleen (Dr Morbius), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:26 (sixteen years ago)
and i usually luuuv ott retardo future bullshit
― ice cr?m, Friday, 5 February 2010 19:27 (sixteen years ago)
"It’s crap. Science fiction has to be logical, and it’s full of lapses in logic." Dunno if I agree with Aldiss that sci-fi HAS to be logical but all the nonsense in AI is definitely a negative.
― The Tommy Westphall Universe Hypothesis (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:28 (sixteen years ago)
One third of the way through, one of my votes shows up. (AI = my #39)
― the end times are coming, but they're just the beginning (WmC), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:28 (sixteen years ago)
AI is ridiculous. had more endings than The Return of the King iirc.
― jed_, Friday, 5 February 2010 19:29 (sixteen years ago)
I don't remember anything about AI, in fact I think it is one of the rare films that sent me to sleep in the cinema. Have no inclination to ever watch it again.
― 80085 (a hoy hoy), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:29 (sixteen years ago)
You guys are getting me excited to rescr**n this.
― Inculcate a spirit of serfdom in children (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:30 (sixteen years ago)
had more endings than The Return of the King iirc.
Really not Kubrick's fault that you don't know what an ending is.
(and the script treatment Kubrick developed was essentially intact)
― Rage, Resentment, Spleen (Dr Morbius), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:33 (sixteen years ago)
is rescr**n like "F star star"?
― sarahel, Friday, 5 February 2010 19:33 (sixteen years ago)
A.I. kind of fell apart toward the end, but the simultaneous creepiness and poignance of the scenes with the robot-boy David were worth it. Agree with Morbius that the child abandonment scene was terrifying and heartbreaking. I think this movie speaks to anyone who felt out of place as a child
― Dan S, Friday, 5 February 2010 19:34 (sixteen years ago)
couldn't care less that kubrick's script treatment was intact. it didn't make the film any less awful.
― jed_, Friday, 5 February 2010 19:35 (sixteen years ago)
I prefer to consider this fable/fantasy not SF, as with E.T.
― Rage, Resentment, Spleen (Dr Morbius), Friday, 5 February 2010 19:36 (sixteen years ago)