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this is for you xyzzzz__. watched Tommy Boy last night with the kids.

http://highdefdiscnews.com/screenshots/tommy_boy_3.png

scott seward, Thursday, 15 November 2012 18:01 (thirteen years ago)

people very possessive of their Tommy Boy screen shots apparently. Tommy Boy very big in France, I believe.

http://todaymade.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/tommyboy-719742-560x344.jpg

scott seward, Thursday, 15 November 2012 18:02 (thirteen years ago)

So is Jerry Lewis I believe ;)

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 15 November 2012 18:21 (thirteen years ago)

If I watch Tommy Boy you will have to watch Out 1 for me. Its about 10 hours, plz check the Jacques Rivette thread.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 15 November 2012 18:26 (thirteen years ago)

Anderson Tapes, the (1971, Lumet) - surveillance fascination before watergate. bleep-bloop score by quincy jones and ancient recording tech have both aged very well. A
Boyz N the Hood (1991, Singleton) - has many weaknesses (dad supposed to be the perfect role model, but he doesn't seem that great to me; first appearance of racist cop comes out of nowhere; angela bassett's acting curiously terrible) but it pulls it together in the end. B+
You Only Live Twice (1967, Gilbert) - plot makes no sense; DVD featurette confirms that the Bond movies were by-the-numbers assembly line jobs at this point. D

abanana, Thursday, 15 November 2012 19:07 (thirteen years ago)

xyzzzz__: I have no doubt that his account of the story is correct but if you take most of the images just for what they are (general disorder, lack of food, unions protesting, student riots, ladies helping miners, etc) you can just as easily interpret it the way the right view the events, that unidad popular was breaking the country apart. there are these little parts here and there that are not explained and would make you question the veracity of the narration if you had the interest ... you could also go the other extreme and claim that allende almost betrayed his people by not giving them full control over factories, by refusing to close the parliament, you can see the disconnect between the bureaucracy and the workers at the final stages, it's the most tragic thing.

huge night and fog fan, will prob check being gypsy.

wolves lacan, Thursday, 15 November 2012 19:39 (thirteen years ago)

I saw Beasts Of the Southern Wild yesterday. Beautiful film, not sure how idealised (or the opposite/flip) that poverty was. Never been to the South of the States probably never will now.

Did wonder how that would look as a play having discovered at the credits taht it started off as one. Left me wanting to ask questions about some of the characters but they're too tied up in spoiler.

& I wonder if Hushpuppy (Quvenzhané Wallis) is going to go on to act in other things she was pretty good. I take it this was a debut for her? I also wondered if anybody in it had been in anything else, it does seem pretty naturalistic.

Stevolende, Thursday, 15 November 2012 21:45 (thirteen years ago)

wolves lacan: really appreciate your explanation.

My interpretation was not that Allende was breaking the country apart - just that its divisions and tensions came to the fore due to his victory. That really came across in the material he collected, such as that amazing debate between the student and the suit on TV.

As to whether Allende could have taken control of the factories is interesting because I think he gives his reasons - via one of his party in that debate (among a bunch of miners) basically talking about the risk of an embargo by other countries and the markets, or the need for coorperation with the international community. Read a good article on him a while back and what the international community feared the most was of a radical government such as Allende's that was actuall willing to work within a parliamentary system and stand for elections - and the ultimate fear that it would be returned again and again.

But again that isn't exactly explored in the doc, it doesn't try to make those analysis -- but it has those 'lessons learnt' in the 3rd part, which I remember in equal parts exhilarating and depressing.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 16 November 2012 00:45 (thirteen years ago)

The Magnificent Ambersons
Bicycle Thieves (this had the worst subtitling ever. only about 50% was subtitled, and often the subtitles would flash up for a milisecond. i lost concentration half way through)

contrarian, zing thyself (cajunsunday), Friday, 16 November 2012 12:15 (thirteen years ago)

Cocksucker Blues (1972, Robert Frank) 3/5
Holy Motors (2012, Leos Carax) 3/5
Genghis Blues (1999, Roko Belic) 4/5
The Live Wire (1925, Charles Hines) 3/5
Twilight's Last Gleaming (1977, Robert Aldrich) 4/5
The Innocents (1961, Jack Clayton) 5/5
Sans Soleil (1983, Chris Marker) 4/5
Abraham Lincoln (1930, D.W. Griffith) 3/5
Wake in Fright (1971, Ted Kotcheff) 4/5
The Limey (1999, Steven Soderbergh) 4/5
Room 237 (2012, Rodney Ascher) 3/5
Le Grand Amour (1969, Pierre Etaix) 4/5

saltwater incursion (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 17 November 2012 02:59 (thirteen years ago)

You're kind of an easy grader, aren't you?

Bobby Ken Doll (Eric H.), Saturday, 17 November 2012 03:13 (thirteen years ago)

Abraham Lincoln (1930, D.W. Griffith) 3/5

not heard of this, does he set out to make him out to be a tyrant/dictator? Associations with other things Griffith did would tend to suggest he might do.

Stevolende, Saturday, 17 November 2012 12:25 (thirteen years ago)

Examples, Eric? I do go out of my way to avoid things I suspect will be absolute shit.

That's a very 21st-century-lazy take on Griffith. The Lincoln movie treats him in a p standard heroic way, and no Hollywood film would've done otherwise in 1930.

saltwater incursion (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 17 November 2012 12:33 (thirteen years ago)

lol clemenza giving Knuckleball! the same rating as La Jetee and better than Hearts and Minds. (I saw it and it's a good sports doc, but come onnnn.)
― kizz my hairy irish azz (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Twilight's Last Gleaming (1977, Robert Aldrich) 4/5
Sans Soleil (1983, Chris Marker) 4/5
― saltwater incursion (Dr Morbius), Friday, November 16, 2012

Do I have a problem with your ratings? Not in the least--I struggled through Sans Soleil, and I haven't yet seen Twilight's Last Gleaming. But in terms of canon vs. idiosyncratic favourites, different rules for different people, right?

clemenza, Saturday, 17 November 2012 13:20 (thirteen years ago)

no, rate what ya like

saltwater incursion (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 17 November 2012 13:21 (thirteen years ago)

yeah, only give 'canon' movies 4 or 5, that's obv what I meant. :/

Let's drop Sans Soleil to 3/5, agreed.

saltwater incursion (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 17 November 2012 13:24 (thirteen years ago)

5/5

C:\GAMES\KEEN\KEEN4E.EXE (clouds), Saturday, 17 November 2012 13:26 (thirteen years ago)

Examples, Eric? I do go out of my way to avoid things I suspect will be absolute shit.

That's a very 21st-century-lazy take on Griffith. The Lincoln movie treats him in a p standard heroic way, and no Hollywood film would've done otherwise in 1930.

― saltwater incursion (Dr Morbius), Saturday, November 17, 2012 12:33 PM (58 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Just thinking in terms of things like the Birth of a Nation and thinking that wouldn't fit well with something showing Lincoln to be a hero would it? Expecting absolute consistency across an ouevre after all.

Stevolende, Saturday, 17 November 2012 13:35 (thirteen years ago)

last watched:

robocop
night of the hunter
singin' in the rain

probably some other things, can't remember. can't convince bf to watch ozu with me. maybe during the holidays.

C:\GAMES\KEEN\KEEN4E.EXE (clouds), Saturday, 17 November 2012 13:35 (thirteen years ago)

Lincoln's assassination is dramatized as a tragic event in The Birth of a Nation. Things are complicated.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wmmjPHlj3NA

saltwater incursion (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 17 November 2012 13:44 (thirteen years ago)

on a run of very good movies lately

Ararat (Egoyan, 2002) 3/5
Cairo Station (Chahine, 1958) 5/5
Date Night (Levy, 2010) 4/5
A Kind of Loving (Schlesinger, 1962) 4/5
Cache (Haneke, 2005) 5/5

Michael B Higgins (Michael B), Saturday, 17 November 2012 15:46 (thirteen years ago)

I'm still an easy grader today:

Argo (2012, Ben Affleck) 2/5

saltwater incursion (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 17 November 2012 21:44 (thirteen years ago)

Do The Right Thing (this was excellent. funny, beautiful and profound. a delight.)
Men in Black 3 (the baddies hand was sooo gross! eww lol)

contrarian, zing thyself (cajunsunday), Sunday, 18 November 2012 01:23 (thirteen years ago)

perks of being a wallflower (4/5)
the girl (hbo film) (2/5)

akm, Sunday, 18 November 2012 17:09 (thirteen years ago)

Du rififi chez les hommes (Jules Dassin, 1955) - excellent
The Conversation (I've seen it before, it's on netflix instant now)

seriously, THIS GUY (daria-g), Sunday, 18 November 2012 17:18 (thirteen years ago)

Haven't seen a film by Dassin yet but I've discovered a lot of French film (pre-New Wave/Left Bank/w/a few bits of Renoir on the side) this year. Will chase.

youtubing away:

From the Clouds to the Resistance (Straub-Huillet, 1979) - an adaptation of Pavese's The Moon and the Bonfires but nowhere near straight or off, its like nothing you've seen. Fagged out so can't go further at the mo.
Arabian Nights (Pasolini, 1974)
A Man Vanishes (Imamura, 1967)

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 18 November 2012 21:40 (thirteen years ago)

Looper (2012; 3.5/5)
Suicide Club (2002; 3/5)
Only Angels Have Wings (1939; 4.5/5)
Cabin Boy (1994; 3/5)
Life Without Principle (2011; 4/5)
Billy Liar (1963; 4/5)
Crossfire Hurricane (Stones doc; 2012; 2.5/5)
Holy Motors (2012; 3.5/5)

Chris L, Monday, 19 November 2012 00:26 (thirteen years ago)

The last week or so ...

Rise of the Guardians -- 2.5/5
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn, Part 2 -- 2/5
Life of Pi -- 3/5
On the Road -- 2.5/5
Hitchcock -- 2/5
Skyfall -- 3.5/5

Bobby Ken Doll (Eric H.), Monday, 19 November 2012 00:43 (thirteen years ago)

how would you rate Lincoln, Eric?

the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 19 November 2012 00:44 (thirteen years ago)

Conservatively, 3.5/5 but I expect another viewing to nudge it up to 4+ territory.

Bobby Ken Doll (Eric H.), Monday, 19 November 2012 00:45 (thirteen years ago)

I feel like Letterboxd makes me rate everything like the Rolling Stone album review section.

Bobby Ken Doll (Eric H.), Monday, 19 November 2012 00:46 (thirteen years ago)

I had the same reaction -- and a second viewing might bump it half a star. I'm just not as enamored with DDL as everyone else is.

the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 19 November 2012 00:50 (thirteen years ago)

Same. Lucky he's surrounded by the supporting cast of the year/ever.

Bobby Ken Doll (Eric H.), Monday, 19 November 2012 00:51 (thirteen years ago)

I never thought I'd write this sentence: Sally Field for Supporting Actress nom.

the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 19 November 2012 00:52 (thirteen years ago)

Hal Holbrook has gotten so Hal Holbrooky that I just want him to be my mommy.

Bobby Ken Doll (Eric H.), Monday, 19 November 2012 00:56 (thirteen years ago)

I've made a concerted effort to watch more films starting the last year or two -- got Hulu Plus for Criterion access. The last couple I've seen in the theatre were Looper (4/5) and Skyfall (2.5/5).

Online/DVD/TCM, the last x -- hmm.

Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore
Zéro de Conduit
Eyes Without a Face
Clean, Shaven
Summertime
The Vanishing
The Magician
Summer With Monika
The Lady Vanishes
Blue
Quadrophenia
The League of Gentlemen
Kwaidan
La Bête Humaine
The Conversation
Eating Raoul

I tried watching 8 1/2 again (1st tried 20 years ago) and still couldn't get through it -- I hate every character so much that the filmmaking can't draw me in. Watched The Shining again when it was on a couple of weeks ago but it was on a channel with commercials, muted dirty words and blurs over naughty bits, so I don't really want to count it.

WilliamC, Monday, 19 November 2012 01:51 (thirteen years ago)

I'm somewhere between the 3 and 4 ratings for Perks of Being a Wallflower above. Haven't read the book, and couldn't figure out when it was set--the mix tapes probably put the early 2000s as an end-date, but if there were any other clues that narrowed that down, I missed them. The music interested me. Tone-Loc, the Smiths, and all those mix tapes--I wonder what Rob Sheffield thinks of this. I missed "Teen Age Riot" altogether--must have been when I was glaring at bright-cellphone-woman in the next aisle--but liked hearing "Pretend We're Dead." Something that stretches credulity: high school students who know the Shaggs and Nick Drake but have never heard "Heroes." Something else: the lead guy is supposed to be in grade 9? Because he looks just as old as his wallflower friends, and doesn't act like a 14-year-old, you accept that, but if you start thinking about the plausibility of him getting involved with high school seniors, well, it was too big a leap for me. I've got other nitpicky complaints, but some of it worked fine. Taking the Smiths off the turntable at a party and putting on Tone-Loc reminded me of Quadrophenia. The gay character struck me as 1,000 times less of a caricature than the equivalent in Scott Pilgrim. Didn't foresee where everything was headed.

clemenza, Monday, 19 November 2012 02:29 (thirteen years ago)

i just refuse to write "nom," ever

saltwater incursion (Dr Morbius), Monday, 19 November 2012 06:18 (thirteen years ago)

but ""nom"" is fine.

pun lovin criminal (polyphonic), Monday, 19 November 2012 06:20 (thirteen years ago)

om

Everybody did shit, art happened! (forksclovetofu), Monday, 19 November 2012 06:28 (thirteen years ago)

Cape Fear (Thomson, 1962) A
Skyfall (Mendes, 2012) B+
Best Exotic Marigold Hotel (Madden, 2012) C-
The Raven (McTeigue, 2012) B-
Casa Di Me Padre (Piedmont, 2012) C+
This Must Be The Place (Sorrentino, 2012) B
Deep End (Skolimowski, 1970) A-
Night Train to Munich (Reed, 1940) B
Looper (Johnson,2012) B-

fun loving and xtremely tolrant (Billy Dods), Monday, 19 November 2012 08:48 (thirteen years ago)

Argo (Ben Affleck, 2012) - tense, entertaining, but hollow. 3/5
Rio Bravo (Hawks, 1959) - Overlong, but solid western. Dean Martin is great, Ricky Nelson awful. 3/5
Ruby Sparks (Valerie Faris, Jonathan Dayton, 2012) - Really good critique on the manic pixie dream girl trope. Zoe Kazan is superb 4.5/5
Privilege (Peter Watkins, 1967) - Brilliantly weird and blackly comic sending-up of the music biz, religion and politics. 4/5
Permissive (Lindsey Shonteff, 1972) - Grim cautionary tale about the downward spiral of a girl who becomes a groupie to a godawful '70s prog-folk band. 2.5/5
Beyond the Black Rainbow (Panos Cosmatos, 2012) - Great analog-synth score, set design, and early '80s vibe, but glacially paced and impenetrable. 2.5/5
Blithe Spirit (Lean, 1945) - Rex Harrison's life is one long session of dry martinis, brandy, cigarettes, cigars and coffee. And ghosts. 4/5
Scrooged (Richard Donner, 1988) - Murray's funny, but the film's a messy trifle of cruel humour and schmaltz. 2/5

DavidM, Monday, 19 November 2012 17:33 (thirteen years ago)

re Rio Bravo & Scrooged: your words strike at my very heart ;_;

set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Monday, 19 November 2012 19:09 (thirteen years ago)

I cherish every rational rating on a Howard Hawks film like the rare gifts they are.

Bobby Ken Doll (Eric H.), Monday, 19 November 2012 19:39 (thirteen years ago)

damn, and they call me a h8r.

saltwater incursion (Dr Morbius), Monday, 19 November 2012 19:39 (thirteen years ago)

It's probably because you are a h8r.

Bobby Ken Doll (Eric H.), Monday, 19 November 2012 19:42 (thirteen years ago)

not of Ricky Nelson's pillowy lips, I'm not

saltwater incursion (Dr Morbius), Monday, 19 November 2012 19:43 (thirteen years ago)

Beyond the Black Rainbow (Panos Cosmatos, 2012) - Great analog-synth score, set design, and early '80s vibe, but glacially paced and impenetrable. 2.5/5 4.20/5

, Monday, 19 November 2012 21:17 (thirteen years ago)

its been a classic-american-amoral-movies-from-the-early-to-mid-70s week for me.

Chinatown (Polanski, 1974) great performance by nicholson although it doesnt quite have the All Time Great status i gave on first viewing. forgot how evil the last 15 minutes are.
Badlands (Malick, 1973) the first malick ive seen that i really loved. sheen is a charming scamp of a psycho isnt he.

contrarian, zing thyself (cajunsunday), Friday, 23 November 2012 12:28 (thirteen years ago)

he shot a football because he considered it excess baggage

Ward Fowler, Friday, 23 November 2012 12:32 (thirteen years ago)


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