those dudes who play the killers at the beginning are pretty great in their small roles, stephen mchattie especially.
― ('_') (omar little), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 19:39 (sixteen years ago)
I saw it knowing so little about it that I was actually surprised by Viggo's dodgy past. This was before I ruined moviegoing for myself by reading too many reviews and threads.
― gotanynewsstory? (Dorianlynskey), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 19:41 (sixteen years ago)
I'm on-board with both 24HPP and HoV and am glad the latter placed above Eastern Promises. Viggo is a great foil for Cronenberg in both, but HoV just seemed to have more depth to it, it seemed more mythic/fable-like in its construction. only criticism of 24HPP is the handheld action gets kinda nauseating after awhile - but the tone and script and jokes are all A+.
― mark kerfuffalo (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 19:49 (sixteen years ago)
i love love love the scene on the front lawn when you finally find out who viggo is.
― caek, Tuesday, 9 February 2010 19:51 (sixteen years ago)
Fuuuck yeah to the last three placements, esp ASM
― Simon H., Tuesday, 9 February 2010 19:51 (sixteen years ago)
wow i need to watch AHoV again, and this time finish it without being put off by the shitty acting and script? (ie i have obviously misjudged it badly)
― quiz show flat-track bully (darraghmac), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 19:51 (sixteen years ago)
really didn't feel the moving camera was a problem in 24 Hour Party People at all. was much more queasy at the sweeping crane-like cgi of stuff like Moulin Rouge.
― chronicles of ridic (zvookster), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 19:55 (sixteen years ago)
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v212/etienne_saint/brokebackmountain.jpg
It's definitely the film's intention to be controversial, and watching Heath Ledger ride Jake Gyllenhaal bareback will likely cause some people to squirm, but the film unconsciously reassures their prejudices: two queers can't live together cuz they ain't normal and their lives are sad, so let's watch this movie as our good deed of the year.
A more legitimately controversial film would have shown Ennis and Jack having fun fooling around whenever they got away to Brokeback Mountain, but perhaps Lee thought this would have violated Proulx's intentions.
― Alfred Soto
Yup, I saw it last Friday, right after I finished my Christmas shopping. Yeah, you're right, Jack is probably gay: the Mexico scene of courses reinforces this. But I was the one who argued against Chris Cooper's character being gay in American Beauty long after it became apparent that he obviously was (but that was just me wishing the film was more ambiguous than it actually was).
― jaymc
Lotsa dull dull domestic melodrama, and there's hardly any carnality (or eroticism) in it after the spit-lube. The way the next-to-last scene with the daughter panders to the hetero 'mainstream' made me kinda ill. Bet the Best Picture Oscar, and I wonder if Heath will keep up the Novocaine Mouth in his acceptance speech.
Boys with that brand of bizarre, oversized features can crawl in my tent too.
― Dr Morbius
I don't think this was a gay film at all. It was a conventional "women's picture". It has the same appeal to the same audience as A River Runs Through It, The Horse Whisperer etc etc. It's all about hunky, tough yet sensitive guys who don't say much. The buttsex angle is something of a red herring.
Compare/contrast slash fiction, written and read almost exclusively by heterosexual women.
― dream logic
Come Anticipate "Brokeback Mountain" With Me
#36
Brokeback MountainAng Lee2005United States(425.5 points, 20 votes)
― ('_') (omar little), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 19:59 (sixteen years ago)
loved HoV until Hurt showed up - can't say i felt the terror or wanted to applaud the comedy of his "ham-on-rye"
― da croupier, Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:03 (sixteen years ago)
never saw BBM lolz
― mark kerfuffalo (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:06 (sixteen years ago)
The fact that I voted for so few of the movies that've placed so far makes me feel like I probably voted for, like, everything in the top 25. Because there's a lot of my nominees that I know are still going to place.
― SNEEZED GOING DOWN STEPS, PAIN WHEN PUTTING SOCKS ON (Deric W. Haircare), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:09 (sixteen years ago)
i think BBM is a pretty good melodrama
― wall•egina (s1ocki), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:10 (sixteen years ago)
I have to agree with the quoted comments about Brokeback Mountain. It looked beautiful, had fine actors, and it made me cry when I saw it, but it was also a very typical "gayness as tragedy" story, and even as a more universal drama about unattainable love it didn't have anything particularly original to say. A good tear-jerker and a good movie, but not great in any sense.
― Tuomas, Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:10 (sixteen years ago)
it might not be want u want it to be, but it's good at being what it is.
i mean, i agree that a truly adventurous movie would show a happy gay couple that nothing bad happens to, but it wouldnt make for a good weepie
it's funny that nobody really makes big hetero forbidden love movies anymore except for maybe titanic
― wall•egina (s1ocki), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:11 (sixteen years ago)
Well yeah, that's what I was trying to say. But what it is has been done so many times that, even though it was good at it, BBM didn't leave a particularly strong impression on me.
― Tuomas, Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:13 (sixteen years ago)
if morbs likes bizarre, oversized features so much then why hasn't he seen Inglorious Basterds yet?
― chronicles of ridic (zvookster), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:14 (sixteen years ago)
yeah History of Violence totally fell apart at the end for me
xpist
― some dude, Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:15 (sixteen years ago)
Well yeah, but it's not only that it's a weepie. It's true that being gay in that era and in a place like that was often tragic, and I have no problem if a movie want to depict this, but it also seems to oddly lack any anger and fury towards that tragedy. The movie kinda makes it seem like it's the fate of these noble but oh-so-tragic men to suffer in silence, and to me that doesn't feel right in a movie made in the 00s.
― Tuomas, Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:20 (sixteen years ago)
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v212/etienne_saint/badsanta.jpg
Amazing. Like a comedic version of Bad Lieutenant - as in, the plot of the movie is right there in the title, and seldom veers from said plot (or lack therof) - BillyBob is terrific (tho I must admit I have sat through each of his movies, including the abhorrent Pushing Tin - I'm a big fan) and the movie is definitely worth seeing. I'm already psyched for the DVD!
― roger adultery
This is one of the best movies ever, certainly one of the best of the last 5 years. Those sequences with Bernie Mac and John Ritter are pure genius. I can't believe all these "eh its pretty funny I guess" nonsense. Easily better than Ghost World. There is not a wasted line in the film, all the acting is top notch, story is from the Coen bros. so you know its good.
― deej
i watched bad santa again this year, on christmas eve. so many great funny details, esp. all the jokes about the stuff thurman murman is picking up from billy bob. like when he identifies lauren graham as "mrs. santa's sister"
― s1ocki
the only funny "hit in the nuts" gag that I can think of, like, in all of history.
― kenan
BAD. SANTA.
#35
Bad SantaTerry Zwigoff2003United States(433 points, 20 votes)
― ('_') (omar little), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:21 (sixteen years ago)
Morbs first charmed me when we tousled endlessly on that BBM thread.
― Inculcate a spirit of serfdom in children (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:21 (sixteen years ago)
sorry the BBM abbreviation keeps making me lol
― sarahel, Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:22 (sixteen years ago)
tousled? I never touched your hair.
― Fusty Moralizer (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:23 (sixteen years ago)
I don't think BBM is a great film, but I don't agree with "The movie kinda makes it seem like it's the fate of these noble but oh-so-tragic men to suffer in silence" at all.
It wouldn't necessarily be a problem if it were true either, just because it's a film made in the 2000s.
― caek, Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:24 (sixteen years ago)
I'm on a very slow connection, and the reveal of that BAD. SANTA. still as it loaded was hilarious
I'm very, very...ambivalent about BBM now. Maybe now we can watch it as a movie instead of as a Cultural Phenomenon About Spit-Lube.
― Inculcate a spirit of serfdom in children (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:25 (sixteen years ago)
I really feel like Brokeback's virtues are being taken for granted. It made gay romance safe for straight audiences, but wasn't neutered like something like Will & Grace, and featured two huge stars in the lead roles. That is a big deal, and it's a damned good movie on top of all that.
― Your body is a spiderland (polyphonic), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:29 (sixteen years ago)
http://www.thefilmjournal.com/images/idaho.jpg
― Fusty Moralizer (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:32 (sixteen years ago)
^^^haven't even seen BBM and I'm 99% positive My Own Private Idaho is the better film, shakespeare soliloquies and all. love that movie.
― mark kerfuffalo (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:33 (sixteen years ago)
Brokezzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
― queen frostine (Eric H.), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:34 (sixteen years ago)
Box office:
Idaho: $6,401,336BBM: $178,062,759
― Your body is a spiderland (polyphonic), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:35 (sixteen years ago)
― Tuomas, Tuesday, February 9, 2010 3:20 PM (11 minutes ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
i disagree, there is so obviously a simmering anger beneath the surface, what else do you want, a rage against the machine song over the end credits? seems like you always want your politics to be super-overt in movies you like. i don't think that makes for good movies.
― wall•egina (s1ocki), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:35 (sixteen years ago)
Nothing wrong with super-overt politics in movies.
― Inculcate a spirit of serfdom in children (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:37 (sixteen years ago)
loved the super 8 stuff, the salmon & the road and all that, and the portrayal of the hustler lifestyle and the riotous funeral, but surely keanu was too wooden and the whole Henry IV thing didn't come off.
― chronicles of ridic (zvookster), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:37 (sixteen years ago)
but BBM is the wrong movie to condemn, Tuomas. I mean, the short story on which it's based is no polemic.
glad to see 'a serious man' and 'bad santa' -- the best things the coens were involved in all decade.
'24HPP' is great, kind of surprised to see it so high, but no complaints.
'brokeback mountain' is mediocre and oscary imo, don't hate it but ehh; 'history of violence' just generally mediocre, and i doubt the superior 'spider' will beat it.
― pro bono publico (history mayne), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:38 (sixteen years ago)
― Inculcate a spirit of serfdom in children (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, February 9, 2010 3:37 PM (26 seconds ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
not always. but i don't need movies to reassure me we're on the same page either.
― wall•egina (s1ocki), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:38 (sixteen years ago)
ugh fuck brokeback mountain.
― arch-enemy Gay Cowboy Monster (the table is the table), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:39 (sixteen years ago)
Ha ha. Bad Santa! I was begining to wonder whether it was gonna show. I'm glad that it did. It's one of the few solid comedies from the past decade that still delivers after multiple viewings.
― SNEEZED GOING DOWN STEPS, PAIN WHEN PUTTING SOCKS ON (Deric W. Haircare), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:40 (sixteen years ago)
bbm, which I like, should really be measured against The Notebook instead of Idaho
― da croupier, Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:42 (sixteen years ago)
bad santa is a coen bro movie? cool.
bbm was aiight. Anne Hathaway and Jen were the best things in it though and I feel like I don't need to see again for another 20 years.
― 80085 (a hoy hoy), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:42 (sixteen years ago)
Yeah, and that's how I think it'll be regarded in the future.
― Inculcate a spirit of serfdom in children (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:43 (sixteen years ago)
I don't give a shit; by that standard "Will & Grace" is more important.
Never bought Jake & Heath as anything more than fuckbuddies, and the funny mustaches didn't help.
― Fusty Moralizer (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:43 (sixteen years ago)
That's where the movie cheapens the story.
― Inculcate a spirit of serfdom in children (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:44 (sixteen years ago)
I really feel like Brokeback's virtues are being taken for granted. It made gay romance death and tragedy safe for straight audiences, but wasn't and was neutered pandering like something like Will & Grace, and featured two huge stars in the lead roles. That is a big deal, and it's a damned good movie on top of all that. fucking shame.
― arch-enemy Gay Cowboy Monster (the table is the table), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:44 (sixteen years ago)
no, philadelphia made gay death and tragedy safe for straight audiences
― da croupier, Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:45 (sixteen years ago)
I prefer the gay romance btwn Julie Andrews & James Garner in Victor/Victoria. LE JAZZ HOT!
― Fusty Moralizer (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:46 (sixteen years ago)
hasnt gay death and tragedy always been safe for straight audiences
― max, Tuesday, 9 February 2010 20:46 (sixteen years ago)
nothing breeders like more than a couple sad and/or dying homos