children of men would be the last movie i loved before zodiac, but zodiac is better
pans labyrinth was tim burton/vertigo comix bullshit
― and what, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:24 (eighteen years ago)
crazy talk!
― horseshoe, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:27 (eighteen years ago)
i liked it ok esp capt vidale & the chekovian doctor but the goth fantasy crap was boring and gay
― and what, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:29 (eighteen years ago)
i thot children of men was pretty great but i have to say as much as i liked zodiac (a lot!) it wasnt my fave movie of the year by a long shot. but maybe i dont get what the criteria are? honestly i dont really like the "what was the last truly GREAT movie" conversation, it strikes me a useless excuse to show off and act like a dick
― max, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:29 (eighteen years ago)
honestly i dont really like the "what was the last truly GREAT movie" conversation ilx, it strikes me a useless excuse to show off and act like a dick
-- max, Friday, January 18, 2008 4:29 PM (32 seconds ago) Bookmark Link
― and what, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:30 (eighteen years ago)
lazy joek
pans labyrinth was fuckin great i thot, incl the boring gay goth fantasy
― max, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:31 (eighteen years ago)
yes i loved the boring gay goth fantasy and i never go for stuff like that. it wasn't really a fantasy...OR WAS IT?
― horseshoe, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:33 (eighteen years ago)
fargo is so fucking good and lol @ morbius of ny arguing w/ southerners and midwesterners that fargo is offensive but raising arizon isnt
im standing halfway between and what and slocki here
― deej, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:33 (eighteen years ago)
i liked pans labyrinth until the end!! cant believe they felt the need to make sure you knew it was just her imagination
― deej, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:34 (eighteen years ago)
i didnt think it was that clear cut deej but i was really fucking high
― max, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:36 (eighteen years ago)
ha I was just about to say "that's precisely what wasn't made sure of!" but i wasn't sure i could talk about it clearly. pan's labyrinth is so cool about realism v. allegory.
― horseshoe, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:37 (eighteen years ago)
yeah listen to horseshoe shes smart
― max, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:38 (eighteen years ago)
i mean if you're still throwing down confident pronouncements about a movie you haven't seen since 1996
I've seen Raising Arizona twice in the last 6 months. It def condescends to its characters, its pretty mean-spirited throughout.
many x-posts
― Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:38 (eighteen years ago)
whatevs I'm just echoing you, dude!
xpost
― horseshoe, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:39 (eighteen years ago)
to me it wasnt enough ambiguity .... there's that reveal shot where someone (some people? i forget) see her standing by herself while she sees herself w/ the goat dude that is pretty :-/
― deej, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:39 (eighteen years ago)
I would have liked it more if there was way more of the underworld crap
― dmr, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:40 (eighteen years ago)
actually my sense was less that it was clearly "goth fantasy is REAL" (or "goth fantasy is FAKE" for that matter) and more that it didnt really matter in the end--that searching for the hard truth of what "actually happened" is sort of antithetical to the movie's project
― max, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:42 (eighteen years ago)
i didn't think it was that clear either. it's kind of important morally that she refuses to sacrifice the baby, and if it's just her imagination then that didn't even happen, right? i guess part of the question is what you think paganism represents in the film.
― tipsy mothra, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:44 (eighteen years ago)
so much of it is about the creation/projection of reality; everyone in the movie is creating their own world & purpose & ethics--to single out the girl's adventure as specifically up for debate in terms of real or unreal strikes me as unfair
― max, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:45 (eighteen years ago)
what you think paganism represents in the film
yeah and the structure of the film purposely muddies this, I think? god i want to rewatch it right now so i can make sure. so smartly made, i remember thinking.
― horseshoe, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:46 (eighteen years ago)
i mean purposely muddies the representational one-to-one-ness of the allegory.
― horseshoe, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:47 (eighteen years ago)
yeah its actually a really difficult movie to read
― max, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:47 (eighteen years ago)
for something that i thought was going to be a spanish kids movie when i bought my ticket
― max, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:48 (eighteen years ago)
everyone in the movie is creating their own world
right and the captain's world revolves around violence and torture and martyrdom, blood sacrifice handed down through generations, etc. very roman catholic. the pagan world though makes the girl re-enact isaac and abraham, with the twist that the key is in her refusal to make the sacrifice rather than her willingness to. which i don't think makes the movie just anti-catholic (although it is, arguably) so much as anti-authoritarian at a fundamental level.
― tipsy mothra, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:51 (eighteen years ago)
man i dunno max, i wanted it to be how yr describing but that reveal shot seemed to undercut it. Everyone else can affect their own reality except her, as a kid she's suffering under all these other forces, so it was like the story betrays her when they don't let her story stand on equal footing
― deej, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:54 (eighteen years ago)
i have to see it again
― deej, Friday, 18 January 2008 21:55 (eighteen years ago)
i mean if you're still throwing down confident pronouncements about a movie you haven't seen since 1996 it's hard to believe you're that interested in engaging with something which you've already decided
Yeah JD, I'm not interested in "engaging with it" bcz I made up my mind as a 30+ year old about said film and don't have time to rewatch blah stuff cuz it won Oscars and is worshiped by Coen cultists - life's too short.
deej, what I'm arguing is RaisAriz is funny and touching and Fargo ain't. The End.
― Dr Morbius, Saturday, 19 January 2008 17:23 (eighteen years ago)
the problem with Pan's Labyrinth was that the dude with eyes in his hands had less screen time than a stuttering freedom fighter. false advertising!
― da croupier, Saturday, 19 January 2008 17:28 (eighteen years ago)
and no max, I'm not trying to act like a dick. When ppl say they saw 5 or 6 "great" American big-studio films this year, I just instinctively react Cheeee-rist, save that shit for ILM and albums. (normally I'd ask WHY IS IT GREAT, but ppl don't like to answer that)
― Dr Morbius, Saturday, 19 January 2008 17:29 (eighteen years ago)
Dunno why people putting a stock anti-fascist story and a stock "little girl's metaphor fantasy" story together would add up to a great movie.
It was better than Lives Of Others, though.
― da croupier, Saturday, 19 January 2008 17:30 (eighteen years ago)
I mean, at least it didn't have to have five "2 years later" scenes to seek that all important happy ending.
― da croupier, Saturday, 19 January 2008 17:31 (eighteen years ago)
Pan's Labryinth and "Armond White" don't belong on the same thread.
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Saturday, 19 January 2008 17:38 (eighteen years ago)
and im not sure why "power corrupts" and "people are cruel" are considered naive politics?
-- ryan, Friday, 18 January 2008 20:09 (Yesterday) Link
they're apolitical statements -- or, they lead, as in 'there will be blood', to Bad Emblematic Figures because the filmmakers are politically naive. so it's not capitalism, really, in 'dogville' or 'twbb', but mean people, not common economic exploitation that, in reality, is deemed acceptable, but (in 'dogville') really obvious and morally objectionable stuff that the bad people do. 'power corrupts' is kind of nihilistic; 'people are mean' -- yeah, if they get the chance, but these films don't get into that.
― That one guy that hit it and quit it, Saturday, 19 January 2008 17:47 (eighteen years ago)
was sophocles politically naive? i mean, to argue ad absurdum, you can reduce the greeks and shakespeare to simpleminded thesis statements too. (stipulating that pta and lvt are not sophocles or shakespeare.) i agree that neither movie is as economically astute as something like ruby in paradise or the dardennes, but they're working on a different scale. dogville is in a social-fable tradition, brecht to arthur miller to whatever. twbb is in the american-tragedy tradition, dreiser to gatsby to kane etc. you could call both those traditions essentially naive if you wanted, but i wouldn't. and of course being in those traditions doesn't automatically make either movie good, although i think they both are -- because they are energetic and self-aware of their own traditions and imaginative in approaching them. (also because i was completely entertained by both of them.)
― tipsy mothra, Saturday, 19 January 2008 18:13 (eighteen years ago)
raising arizona is bullshit. dismissing fargo as "smug funny-accent travesty" and then riding for that garbage is psychotic
ethan I think it's time you switched to sanka
― J0hn D., Saturday, 19 January 2008 18:24 (eighteen years ago)
no the thing of shakespeare is, you can't do that, can't reduce things down to thesis positions. hard to bring him up without making the comparison, but plainview is not a full character the way shakespeare's were. obviously the mode of presentation is so different that the comparison is dicey anyway.
i would say 'dogville' is on about the same level, politically, as the dardennes -- ie pretty low. 'dogville' is probably better in that sense, in that it isn't vitiated by catholic mysticism. dardennes make films about poor people, but they don't have much in the way of socio-political insight. they make better films than LVT.
'kane' seems more politically smart (taking into account the circumstances it was made under) to me than 'twbb', 'gatsby' more psychologically true.
― That one guy that hit it and quit it, Saturday, 19 January 2008 18:24 (eighteen years ago)
'raising arizona' is the coens' worst pre-'oh brother' film.
― That one guy that hit it and quit it, Saturday, 19 January 2008 18:25 (eighteen years ago)
john goodman is pretty good as usual but yeeesh.
― That one guy that hit it and quit it, Saturday, 19 January 2008 18:26 (eighteen years ago)
i like almost all the movies mentioned here except for raising arizona and dogville
― latebloomer, Saturday, 19 January 2008 18:40 (eighteen years ago)
i like food, it tastes good
― latebloomer, Saturday, 19 January 2008 18:43 (eighteen years ago)
"When ppl say they saw 5 or 6 "great" American big-studio films this year, I just instinctively react Cheeee-rist, save that shit for ILM and albums."
Yeah good job policing what folks like, Morbs. You stay on that.
― Alex in SF, Saturday, 19 January 2008 19:15 (eighteen years ago)
I seriously have no idea what qualifies as being "great cinema" for you Morbs, but one thing I am completely clear on is that whatever elusive quality it may be it's not something that I give much of a shit about or would expect most other people to.
― Alex in SF, Saturday, 19 January 2008 19:16 (eighteen years ago)
I don't read Morbs as taking issue with quality so much as quantity. Rather than reserving 'great' for something mind-blowing, it gets tacked on to a bunch of films (even when they might account for a fifth of what someone saw in a year) because they're reasonably well-made and because there's so much shit out there in general.
― milo z, Saturday, 19 January 2008 19:28 (eighteen years ago)
definitely. i'm just saying that's twbb's self-conscious lineage. he's playing with that form. and i know, i'm always suspicious of people saying things like "oh it's not meant to be xxxx" by way of excusing something for not being xxxx, BUT plainview is not exactly a character study. more like an archetype. so the lack of depth just didn't seem like an issue to me. he's a sort of monolithic game piece on a monumental board. the movie seems to me more about the force of his action than the nuances of his character. but that's a subjective thing; to me the movie was kind of like getting steamrolled or bulldozed, and that was exciting, i don't get bulldozed at movies very often. if you didn't feel bulldozed, or object to bulldozing on principle, it would be a different experience.
― tipsy mothra, Saturday, 19 January 2008 19:55 (eighteen years ago)
(and to take that a step further, pta's and ddl's bulldozing approach mirror plainview's; the movie's an example of what it's about)
― tipsy mothra, Saturday, 19 January 2008 19:57 (eighteen years ago)
"I don't read Morbs as taking issue with quality so much as quantity."
Yes, the fact that it's a semantic argument makes it a bunch better. . . wait no it doesn't and it doesn't change anything I said.
― Alex in SF, Saturday, 19 January 2008 20:17 (eighteen years ago)
Except you were talking about the 'qualities of a great film' and what they are for Morbs.
― milo z, Saturday, 19 January 2008 20:19 (eighteen years ago)
And apparently one of those qualities is rarity. I can see how that really changes things a lot.
― Alex in SF, Saturday, 19 January 2008 22:55 (eighteen years ago)
I mean what this really comes down to is Morbs feeling that overt enthusiasm is basically unseemly when talking about film and should be reserved only for the most magnificent of Spielberg's creations and not some crap churned out by David Fincher.
― Alex in SF, Saturday, 19 January 2008 22:58 (eighteen years ago)