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batch of john ford films tonight:

the hurricane (1937): 3.5/5 - before Baltimora was Tarzan Boy, Jon Hall was in this one.
the long voyage home (1940): 3.5/5 - lol John Wayne's "Swedish" accent
they were expendable (1945): 3/5 - they were also interminable
3 godfathers (1948): 3.5/5 -- john ford's version of three men and a baby, w/ religious symbolism as an added bonus
rio grande (1950): 3.5/5 -- not as good as fort apache or she wore a yellow ribbon, but it gets the job done.

pancakes and sizzurp (Eisbaer), Tuesday, 2 April 2013 09:43 (thirteen years ago)

Die Hard. For the first time. And it's great, absolutely, but I was kinda watching because I've read all these people talking about plotholes in new movies, and they often bring up Die Hard as a well-plotted movie, and well, it's not. Everyone is really dumb, and the baddies' plan makes no sense. So Hans Gruber has researched Tagaki but doesn't know how he looks? Obviously he is just being menacing, but why on earth does Holly fall for it? And why does she draw attention to herself, when she knows that there is a picture of her and John in the room where Hans sits? And how on earth did the bad guys expect to get away? They didn't think anyone would notice an ambulance? And what did they think the authorities would think caused the explosion? And they didn't notice a limo with music playing really loud? Come on, it's as dumb as every other movie. But I'll watch again and stop thinking about it, and it will obviously be great.

Frederik B, Tuesday, 2 April 2013 13:56 (thirteen years ago)

hell yes you will watch it again and stop thinking about it. it's DIE HARD. c'mon. :)

set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 2 April 2013 16:06 (thirteen years ago)

You're wrong about all those things tbh. Listen to it next time imo.

mister borges (darraghmac), Tuesday, 2 April 2013 16:09 (thirteen years ago)

I find eisbaer's director binges puzzling...You couldn't watch all those Ford films in one night, could you? And how long did it take to watch all those Robert Wise films?

clemenza, Wednesday, 3 April 2013 03:58 (thirteen years ago)

I find eisbaer's director binges puzzling...You couldn't watch all those Ford films in one night, could you? And how long did it take to watch all those Robert Wise films?

several nights, for both Ford and Wise. i have some time on my hands these days, so why not watch some good movies?!?

pancakes and sizzurp (Eisbaer), Wednesday, 3 April 2013 11:00 (thirteen years ago)

and tonight's bunch (yes, all in one night) are joseph mankiewicz joints (long, stagy & talky as mankiewicz joints tend to be):

julius caesar (1953): 3.5/5
guys and dolls (1955): 3.5/5 -- lol Marlon Brando as a song-and-dance man
the honey pot (1967): 3/5 -- maybe i'm being too much the lawyer now & i've seen enough movies and tv shows (and their lol interpretations of law) to be a humorless martinet on these matters, but are we supposed to believe that Cliff Robertson is supposed to be such a criminal law maven and yet forgot that Colorado (the state whose law would've controlled the distribution of Rex Harrison's common-law wife's estate [testate or otherwise]) also probably has either a Slayer Statute (or common law to that effect)?!? methinks that someone didn't do their homework. also, a bit overlong and too stagy.

pancakes and sizzurp (Eisbaer), Wednesday, 3 April 2013 11:18 (thirteen years ago)

respect

I offer about as much diversity as a saltine cracker. (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 3 April 2013 20:40 (thirteen years ago)

Life And Nothing More (Kiarostami, 1992) 3.5/5
Bronson (Refn, 2008) 3.5/5
Blow Up (Antonioni, 1966) 4/5

you're going home in a crispy ambulance (cajunsunday), Saturday, 6 April 2013 15:43 (thirteen years ago)

oh a fucking lawyer pickin apart a plot.... "plausibles" don't come any worse.

Pope Rusty I (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 6 April 2013 15:47 (thirteen years ago)

Legend of Ni**er Charlie
not sure how good this is as a moovie, has really controversial title obviously but seems a bit soap-y possibly and not great production.
Think i saw it mentioned as an influence on Django Unchained in the Sight & Sound article. But I mainly grabbed it cos I rewatched the documentary American Grindhouse yesterday and it was mentioned in the Blaxplotation section.

American Grindhouse, history of exploitation cinema in the US , covers everything back yto silent movies. Interesting film.

Had that burned to disc with the 2010 THe Killer INside Me which is an ok film but I didn't find it fully riveting. Ws trying to work out if the end was the same as th ebook but can't remmeber since it's been a while since I read it. Could be its the truest film to a Jiom THompson book but I'm not sure. Certainly doesn't give it a happy ending like the 90s Getaway & even the Peckinpah version of that altered the story a bit I think, or was taht just a different represerntation of the end? Again been a while since I saw it but don't remember long periods of hiding in dung heaps only to wind up with their fate in the book.

Good Vibrations
Terry Hooley biopic. Thought it was pretty nice as a film seems a bit cosy possibly & domesticated. maybe it was just low budget. But it made me laugh, cry want to dance in my seat and had Suicide Dream Baby Dream on th esoundtrack which is pretty fine.

Stevolende, Saturday, 6 April 2013 20:40 (thirteen years ago)

so Hans Gruber has researched Tagaki but doesn't know how he looks?

his computer couldn't access Wikipedia iirc

the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 6 April 2013 20:52 (thirteen years ago)

Les mIserables
Had been meaning to see it for months to see what it was like.
Visually qyuite sumptuous in places but as a musical it is really questionable. Why do you get Hugh Jackman for one of the main singing parts? Not sure if he just can't sing or if his singing is just totally wrong for the musical style.

& as for memorable tunage, think it lacks it wholesale or is that ust the treatment in the film?
Can't really see a Coltrane equivalent being drawn to fully explore the melodies of this as JC was to songs from The Sound Of Music, Mary Poppins etc

so strange film, I take it if I'm getting to see it 2 months or morea fter it hit Galway it must be somewhat popular. Does make me intrigued about reading the book. Is that deserving the status of classic or just a long soap opera that everybody read so thought of as deeply cultural significant?

Stevolende, Monday, 8 April 2013 19:14 (thirteen years ago)

Upstream Color is really good
director spoke afterwards and i was shocked that he added walden as the pivotal book long after the script was done

I offer about as much diversity as a saltine cracker. (forksclovetofu), Monday, 8 April 2013 19:25 (thirteen years ago)

Just watched This Must Be The Place. Strange, sweet film. Couldn't find any discussion on ilx. Makes me want to watch a bunch more Sorrentino. Penn's character feels really unique in the pantheon of screen rockstars, and overall felt elements of Lynch's Straight Story and overtones of... I'm not even sure. The treatment of the holocaust was decidedly european. Not sure of the right traditions to place it in, in that regard.

Chuck E was a hero to most (s.clover), Tuesday, 9 April 2013 02:02 (thirteen years ago)

ah, three prior mentions on this thread. nobody else seemed very keen on it.

Chuck E was a hero to most (s.clover), Tuesday, 9 April 2013 02:03 (thirteen years ago)

I thought it was a bit of a mess tbh. Holocaust angle seemed tacked-on.

Old Boy In Network (Michael B), Tuesday, 9 April 2013 11:52 (thirteen years ago)

The Adventures of Tintin (Spielberg 2011)
Floating Weeds (Ozu 1959)
Holy Motors (Carax 2012)

The Complete Afterbirth of the Cool (WilliamC), Tuesday, 9 April 2013 16:36 (thirteen years ago)

Beyond The Hills opens this weekend; looking forward to catching it.

the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 11 April 2013 13:08 (thirteen years ago)

how's that tintin movie

rust in pieces (darraghmac), Thursday, 11 April 2013 13:12 (thirteen years ago)

on a good run recently - loved all these movies - Amour, The Master, Silver Linings Playbook, Argo and a documentary called Etre et Avoir about a rural French school.

Old Boy In Network (Michael B), Thursday, 11 April 2013 18:14 (thirteen years ago)

how's that tintin movie

― rust in pieces (darraghmac), Thursday, April 11, 2013 8:12 AM

Amazing to look at, Spielberg obviously had fun conceiving some of the swooping rollercoaster shots (incl. where the camera zooms in on and through an aquarium, stuff like that) but pure drudgery to experience with the sound on, trying to give a damn about the story.

The Complete Afterbirth of the Cool (WilliamC), Thursday, 11 April 2013 19:53 (thirteen years ago)

Why do you get Hugh Jackman for one of the main singing parts?

He began in musical theatre, became a star there first

Pope Rusty I (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 11 April 2013 19:57 (thirteen years ago)

i really liked the Tintin movie, good bit of adventuresome funlols, in the spirit of the books i felt

thought it's hard to adjust to 3 dimensional faces. the noses all look like sausages

set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 11 April 2013 20:09 (thirteen years ago)

Simon Killer is a little too exploitative for me to really recommend but if you're into "HOW SOCIOPATHS ARE MADE" and like your films slick and seedy, slightly self-congratulatory and fronting like they're deeper than they are, go for it. Really solid lead acting job. I have no interest in seeing martha marcy mae etc at this point tho.

gr8 tr∞lls i have known (forksclovetofu), Friday, 12 April 2013 04:21 (thirteen years ago)

hm, i liked it more than that. it does think it's sorta clever/deep but it worked for me, i dont really get exploitative from it. i really like the first movie campos made afterschool

johnny crunch, Friday, 12 April 2013 15:26 (thirteen years ago)

Watched the 70s Great Gatsby last night. Not at all underrated. A corpse of a movie.

Public Brooding Closet (cryptosicko), Friday, 12 April 2013 15:34 (thirteen years ago)

yeah I hate that movie a lot

set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Friday, 12 April 2013 15:39 (thirteen years ago)

Jc: i got bugged by the whole "let me take you on a journey in the mind of a budding psycho, oh how horrible the privilege, the privilege" and then it has loads of porno ready full body fucking and frontal nudity (but not for our anti hero). , Plus, he ends up being shown as sortof a maybe-not-so-bad position, like this is a life that has some rewards. The slickness and crudity got me tired od it eventually.

gr8 tr∞lls i have known (forksclovetofu), Friday, 12 April 2013 15:40 (thirteen years ago)

idk, i got a lot of tension out of it, like every intimate scene is p charged. i didnt love it but i dont think what it intends to do is bring u into the mind of a psycho, it more wants 2 make u squirm at his cloying neediness, his literal sniveling, but also his relatability imo, the everyday nature of events, etc def subverts a trad "suspense" movie or w/e; he most made me think of stephen glass/'shattered glass' (which is a miles better movie than this but still)

i found this interesting that campos said in an interview

but as far as my writing it came out of a lot of things but primarily out of the writings of Georges Simenon. I’d been interested in the noir world for quite some time, the books of Simenon and Jim Thompson and others, and I was interested in exploring those sorts of worlds in a contemporary way.

johnny crunch, Friday, 12 April 2013 19:24 (thirteen years ago)

yeah that relatability is what i found false; like the lead characters thoughts and approach and desire and were in some way justifiable. I love thompson, but his characters are interesting messes and not at all glamorous and i think there were moments where this guy's actions kind of are filmed as if they were? less full body graphic sex would've been a hint that the filmmaker's sympathies are less with the antihero; it just got tiresome after awhile.
not a bad film exactly but just about at my limit of what i can put up with for that kind of lurid stuff i guess

gr8 tr∞lls i have known (forksclovetofu), Friday, 12 April 2013 20:17 (thirteen years ago)

Jc: i got bugged by the whole "let me take you on a journey in the mind of a budding psycho, oh how horrible the privilege, the privilege" and then it has loads of porno ready full body fucking and frontal nudity (but not for our anti hero). , Plus, he ends up being shown as sortof a maybe-not-so-bad position, like this is a life that has some rewards. The slickness and crudity got me tired od it eventually.

Expert description of the seventies Gatsby film.

the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 12 April 2013 20:25 (thirteen years ago)

haha

set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Friday, 12 April 2013 20:27 (thirteen years ago)

THE WARRIORS

it was exactly what i'd hoped

privilege as 'me me me' (darraghmac), Friday, 12 April 2013 21:39 (thirteen years ago)

so yeah, since friday night

The Warriors
Hearts of Darkness
The Third Man
His Girl Friday

all first viewings except third man

privilege as 'me me me' (darraghmac), Sunday, 14 April 2013 14:31 (thirteen years ago)

i saw hyde park on the hudson two nights ago and it was terrible.

Pat Finn, Sunday, 14 April 2013 14:58 (thirteen years ago)

Amour (Haneke, 2012) 3.5/5 gruelling but touching too
Argo (Affleck, 2012) 2/5 pretty dumb on the whole
Certified Copy (Kiarostami, 2010) 4.5/5 this was genius.
A Taste of Cherry (Kiarostami, 1997) 3/5 still processing... love the basic conceit but it got painfully slow at points

you're going home in a crispy ambulance (cajunsunday), Sunday, 14 April 2013 20:15 (thirteen years ago)

Beyond The Hills. I've got qualms, most of which involve Mingiu's belting you out of the theatre.

The 49th Parallel. Amazing open air sequences. One sequence of unexpected violence that unfortunately did not result in the death of Leslie Howard.

the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 14 April 2013 20:27 (thirteen years ago)

49th parallel owns

turds (Hungry4Ass), Sunday, 14 April 2013 20:30 (thirteen years ago)

the devil wears prada on tv. think I've watched this like four or five times and it never gets old. best meryl streep.

i wouldn't mistake myself for anyone. (wolves lacan), Sunday, 14 April 2013 21:05 (thirteen years ago)

worst Anne Hathaway though?

the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 14 April 2013 21:15 (thirteen years ago)

Wow, we strongly disagree on beyond the hills. I love that last scene, it is the first moment that i saw the director drive the camera and force a perspective and the instant he does, it is cramped, urban and promptly muddied. Its a sorta indictment on the modern method of presumption of guilt; i was touched by how patient and inclusive he is with all the characters.

gr8 tr∞lls i have known (forksclovetofu), Monday, 15 April 2013 04:45 (thirteen years ago)

wish the nurse were in every scene

the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 15 April 2013 10:55 (thirteen years ago)

I think making the audience suffer is sometimes a good thing, as it was here.

Armond thought it was an anti-religion diatribe.

Pope Rusty I (Dr Morbius), Monday, 15 April 2013 13:29 (thirteen years ago)

I'm only imagining how Armond is going to try to tie Oblivion into the media silence on Kermit Gosnell.

cacao nibs (Eric H.), Monday, 15 April 2013 13:36 (thirteen years ago)

Jaws (Spielberg, 1975) - Blu-ray transfer is exceptional 5/5

Blade Runner: Final Cut (Ridley Scott, 1982) - I don't like the Matrix-y slight greenish tint they've added to this version. 5/5

Dracula (Terence Fisher, 1958) - Stoker's novel boiled down to its essential core, and then made sexy. The quintessential Hammer; wonderfully colourful with incredibly lavish set and costume design. 4/5

Ghostbusters II (Ivan Reitman, 1989) - I've somehow never seen this until now. Lacks the humour and energy of the first movie, leaving it to Bill Murray to provide the majority of the fun, only he's not firing on all cylinders here. Messy plot, and sloppy editing which keeps draining scenes of their liveliness, but still a fun watch. 2/5

The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel (John Madden, 2012) - Overlong and predictable holiday brochure movie packed with National Treasure thesps. The scene where Dame Judi lectures Indian call centre workers on how to be nicer to their British customers is the absolute worst. 1/5

Side Effects (Soderbergh, 2013) - A film about the risks of antidepressants that morphs into a pulpy twisty thriller is a bit of an odd note to bow out on. Soderbergh is more fascinated with Rooney Mara's face than anything else. 3/5

Oblivion (Joseph Kosinski, 2013) - Better than Tron: Legacy, but is similarly great to look at, but really unengaging. Cruise is crap. 2/5

To the Wonder (Malick, 2013) - It has a nice dreamlike sensuality, but it's a drag. Ben Affleck looks lost, and someone needs to have a word with Malick regarding his depiction of women. Where's the director of Badlands? I want him back. 2/5

DavidM, Monday, 15 April 2013 15:59 (thirteen years ago)

The Trouble with Money (1936, Ophuls) 7/10
Design for Living (1933, Lubitsch) 8/10
Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? (1957, Tashlin) 9/10
Spring Breakers (2012, Korine) 6/10
The Last Detail (1973, Ashby) 8/10
The Five-Year Engagement (2012, Stoller) 6/10
The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934, Hitchcock) 8/10
Beyond the Hills(2012, Mungiu) 8/10
Leviathan (2012, Castaing-Taylor and Paravel) 5/10
Bachelor Flat (1962, Tashlin) 7/10
Artists and Models (1955, Tashlin) 6/10
L'Atalante (1934, Vigo) 10/10
AKA Doc Pomus (2012, Miller and Hechter) 6/10

Pope Rusty I (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 16 April 2013 14:15 (thirteen years ago)

all the old movies are rewatches except for Ophuls and Bachelor Flat

Pope Rusty I (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 16 April 2013 23:32 (thirteen years ago)

anyone seen Ginger & Rosa?

the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 20 April 2013 12:15 (thirteen years ago)

"the nurse were in every scene" --> that's a misunderstanding of what Mungiu does. She takes the role of the abortionist in 4 months...

I never felt that it was that much of a torture at all. So much is screams and it was about 30 mins of a 2.5 hour movie. Its really more of a gradual thing...

Wasn't the brother incapable of making any decisions? Didn't seem like he could take care of anyone, and as for the hospital its quite clear that care is v erratic, depends on who is on that day.

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 20 April 2013 12:46 (thirteen years ago)


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