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Ratings proudly attached:

Concerning Violence (7/10)
Love and Terror on the Howling Plains of Nowhere (6.5/10)
Blue Collar (8/10)
Mugshot (7/10)
Guidelines (7/10)
Beyond Clueless (7/10)
A Very Special Favor (5/10)
The Killing (8.5/10)
The Client (6/10)
The Kids Are All Right (7/10)
Jesus’ Son (7.5/10)
Je t'aime je t'aime
Primal Fear (6.5/10)

I didn’t attach a rating to Je t'aime je t'aime. I want to see it again--whatever I give it would be too low, as I typically drifted a bit. But I did like it. So obviously a precursor to Groundhog Day, The Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, and I’m sure lots else.

Thought Laura Linney gave the best performance in Primal Fear, not Norton (kind of showy). I’ve never seen her so hard-bitten.

clemenza, Friday, 16 May 2014 22:00 (twelve years ago)

Utamaro and His Five Women (Mizoguchi, 1946)
Record of a Tenement Gentleman (Ozu, 1947)
L'Avventura (Antonioni, 1960)
Godzilla (Edwards, 2014)
Limelight (Chaplin, 1952)
Where Now Are the Dreams of Youth? (Ozu, 1932)
Much Ado About Nothing (Whedon, 2012)

Deep brain stimulation leads patient to become huge Johnny Cash fan (WilliamC), Thursday, 22 May 2014 17:58 (twelve years ago)

what'd you think of Much Ado

I want to see it but I've been kinda meh about making the effort

set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 22 May 2014 18:12 (twelve years ago)

It was pretty, and there were lols aplenty at the wordplay (I hadn't read the play, so it was all new to me) and Fillion and one of the Buffy goobers as cops. I had trouble getting my head around the anachronistic behavior of some of the characters in a modern-day setting, especially Hero swooning on being accused instead of busting out a load of "what is this paternalistic bullshit?!?!?!" And Claudio and Leonato being instantly willing to believe the worst. Beatrice and Benedick's sparring was fun.

Deep brain stimulation leads patient to become huge Johnny Cash fan (WilliamC), Thursday, 22 May 2014 18:28 (twelve years ago)

WmC, how did u see Utamaro?

images of war violence and historical smoking (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 22 May 2014 18:42 (twelve years ago)

Hulu+/Criterion

Deep brain stimulation leads patient to become huge Johnny Cash fan (WilliamC), Thursday, 22 May 2014 18:43 (twelve years ago)

An Autumn Afternoon (Ozu, 1962) - looking great and shiny in the restore.
One Day Pina Asked Me and The man with the suitcase (Chantal Akerman, 1982) - talked more about it on the thread dedicated to Akerman. These monthly screens are a highlight of the cinema going year.
A Chris Marker programme at the Whitechapel: Sunday in Peking (1956), If I had Four Camels (1966). The latter is a predecessor to Sans Soleil, the mind is alert to all and the words are there to match. He was such a great writer, truly curious. Would've made a great teacher in the way he is able to give matter in a way that allows a response for more conversation. He never dictates.

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 24 May 2014 12:18 (twelve years ago)

It was pretty, and there were lols aplenty at the wordplay (I hadn't read the play, so it was all new to me) and Fillion and one of the Buffy goobers as cops. I had trouble getting my head around the anachronistic behavior of some of the characters in a modern-day setting, especially Hero swooning on being accused instead of busting out a load of "what is this paternalistic bullshit?!?!?!" And Claudio and Leonato being instantly willing to believe the worst. Beatrice and Benedick's sparring was fun.

I had affection for it despite thinking that the woman cast as Beatrice wasn't very good.

guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 24 May 2014 12:20 (twelve years ago)

Also there was a terrible doc about Marker's first film, when he was given some more money by the French govt to cover the Helsinki Olympics. The bits of the doc itself were great but the filmmaker is a terrible writer -- she was too in thrall of Marker -- It didn't help that she didn't have resources unfortunately. In the best section, where she talks about the film itself she refers to what William Klein went on to do in the crowd scenes but she never had the footage from his films (or wasn't allowed to show any). I've seen the films so knew about the wide angle shots in Algiers but you couldn't do a direct comparison.

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 24 May 2014 12:36 (twelve years ago)

Resurrection (1980, Petrie) 6/10
Out of the Furnace (2013, Cooper) 5/10
*Othello (1952, Welles) 10/10
The Future (2011, July) 5/10
Providence (1977, Resnais) 6/10
Big Trouble (1986, Cassavetes) 4/10
In the Name of the Father (1971, Bellocchio) 7/10
Heavy Traffic (1973, Bakshi) 7/10
Drinking Buddies (2013, Swanberg) 6/10
Coonskin (1975, Bakshi)6/10
*Monsieur Verdoux (1947, Chaplin) 8/10
Home Town (1930, Mizoguchi) 6/10
White Threads of the Waterfall (1933, Mizoguchi) 7/10
Miyamoto Musashi (1944, Mizoguchi) 7/10
Outrageous! (1977, Benner) 6/10
Under the Skin (2013, Glazer) 7/10
The Human Comedy (1943, Brown) 6/10
*Dr. Strangelove, or:... (1964, Kubrick) 10/10
A Geisha (1953, Mizoguchi) 8/10

*rewatches

images of war violence and historical smoking (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 24 May 2014 12:59 (twelve years ago)

A Thousand Clowns (1965)
Fatso (1980)
Labor Day (2013)

*tera, Saturday, 24 May 2014 14:22 (twelve years ago)

Movies I've watched this month

Troll Hunter 6/10
Inside Llewyn Davis 8/10
Clear History 4/10
Things To Do In Denver When You're Dead 8/10
Ikiru 7/10
Withnail and I 10/10
Please Give 4/10

everyday sheeple (Michael B), Saturday, 24 May 2014 14:48 (twelve years ago)

Museum Hours 8/10
The Immigrant 5/10
Snowpiercer 6/10
The Specialists 3/10

Acid Hose (Capitaine Jay Vee), Saturday, 24 May 2014 20:44 (twelve years ago)

i was underwhelmed by 'the immigrant' also

Avalon (2011, axel petersen) - is like if claire denis interpreted 'sexy beast' 8/10
Palo Alto (2014, gia coppola) - ending is off but p much everything else works to a degree, emma roberts and nat wolff are both excellent 8/10
The Incredible Mr. Limpet (1964, arthur lubin) - fish don knotts! is surprisingly v cute & the animation & interplay w/ real life looks great;Taglines: will leave you limp with laughter! 7/10

johnny crunch, Sunday, 25 May 2014 01:55 (twelve years ago)

Ace in the Hole (Wilder, 1951) - 8/10
Frank (Lenny Abrahamson, 2014) - 7/10
Le Doulos (Melville, 1962) - 8/10
North By Northwest (Hitchcock, 1959) - 10/10*
Good Vibrations (Lisa Barros d'Sa, Glen Leyburn, 2012) - 6/10
Godzilla (Gareth Edwards, 2014) - 4/10
A Kid in King Arthur's Court (Michael Gottlieb, 1995) - 2/10
Alternative 3 (Christopher Miles, 1977) - 5/10
Made in USA (Goddard, 1966) - 7/10
Pierrot le Fou (Goddard, 1965) - 9/10*
The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner (Tony Richardson, 1962) - 8/10*

*re-watch

painfully alive in a drugged and dying culture (DavidM), Sunday, 25 May 2014 19:01 (twelve years ago)

The Tenant (Polanski)
Rabid w/commentary (Cronenberg)
Deep Red (Argento)
The Shout (Skolimowski)
A Walk Through H (Greenaway)
L'Important C'est D'aimer w/commentary (Zulawski)
Crank (Neveldine/Taylor)
Crank: High Voltage (Neveldine/Taylor)
The Hellstrom Chronicle (Green)

You guys are caterpillar (Telephone thing), Sunday, 25 May 2014 19:32 (twelve years ago)

The Grand Budapest Hotel (Anderson, 2014)
The Amazing Spider Man 2 (Webb, 2014)
Mud (Nichols, 2012)
The Bling Ring (Copolla, 2013)
Behind The Candelabra (Soderburgh, 2013)
Margaret (Lonergan, 2011)*
La Jetee (Marker, 1962)
Sans Soleil (Marker, 1983)
Le Samourai (Melville, 1967)

cajunsunday, Sunday, 25 May 2014 23:07 (twelve years ago)

Lone Survivor: This was hysterical. The number of bullets each guy took was Schwarzenegger-esque. Helpful tip from the film: if you ever break one of your leg bones just push it back into your leg and you should be able to walk with only a slight limp. And: I was impressed by how much RPG ammo the bad guys had even though they were on foot in the woods.

I loved the running bit about how everyone would have lived if only selfish liberals would let the military buy more Apaches.

The bad Taliban guy wore black accented clothing and had black rings around his eyes and the good Pashtunwali guy wore white accented clothing and had other softening touches in his wardrobe.

The kid they let go (despite his really asking to be murdered due to his obvious thought crimes) was hella good at parkour.

polyphonic, Tuesday, 27 May 2014 19:28 (twelve years ago)

The Great Beauty (2013) 3.5/5
Let the Fire Burn (2013) 4/5
Under the Skin (2013) 4/5
Muscle Shoals (2013) 2.5/5
Finding Vivian Meyer (2013) 3.5/5
The Raid: Redemption (2011) 3/5
Color Me Obsessed: A Film About the Replacements (2012) 3/5
Broadcast News (1987; rewatch) 4/5
Possession (1981; rewatch) 4.5/5

Chris L, Tuesday, 27 May 2014 20:55 (twelve years ago)

Wild Palms (8.0)
Life Upside Down (7.0)
The Crossing Guard (6.5)
The Pleasures of Being Out of Step (7.5)
Advise and Consent (8.5)
Flipped (5.5)
The Good Girl (7.0)
Art School Confidential (7.0)
Ides of March (7.0)
We Are the Best! (7.0)
Regarding Susan Sontag (7.5)

clemenza, Thursday, 29 May 2014 02:55 (twelve years ago)

wolf of wall street really is kinda boring in the final analysis huh

Look at this joke I've recognised, do you recognise it as well? (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 29 May 2014 02:57 (twelve years ago)

only the last 2-1/2 hours

images of war violence and historical smoking (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 29 May 2014 02:57 (twelve years ago)

polyphonic why do you hate Our Boys?

images of war violence and historical smoking (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 29 May 2014 02:58 (twelve years ago)

Fort Apache (Ford, 1948) 7/10
She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (Ford, 1949) 5/10
Rio Grande (Ford, 1950) 6/10
The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoise (Bunuel, 1972) 9/10
Death Wish 2 (Winner, 1982) 2/10
*Rear Window (Hitchcock, 1954) 9/10
Tiny Furniture (Dunham, 2010) 7/10

*rewatch

Funk autocorrect (cryptosicko), Saturday, 31 May 2014 02:56 (twelve years ago)

*Blue Velvet (Lynch) & deleted scenes
Gamer (Neveldine/Taylor)
*Possession (Zulawski)
Mean Girls (Waters)
*Blow-Up (Antonioni) (w/Peter Brunette commentary)
*Black Sunday/Mask of Satan (Bava)
Hell Comes to Frogtown (Kizer/Jackson)

You guys are caterpillar (Telephone thing), Saturday, 31 May 2014 18:12 (twelve years ago)

Bright Days Ahead (2014) 5 out of 10
Le Bonheur (1965) 8 out of 10
Young & Beautiful (2013) 7 out of 10
The Immigrant (2014) 8 out of 10

guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 31 May 2014 18:15 (twelve years ago)

Threepenny Opera (Pabst, 1931, German version)
Germany Year Zero (Rossellini, 1948)
Carlos (Assayas, 2010, long version)
Permanent Vacation (Jarmusch, 1980)
Wild Strawberries (Bergman, 1957)
The Man Who Left His Will on Film (Oshima, 1970)
Popeye (Altman, 1980)

WilliamC, Sunday, 1 June 2014 02:50 (twelve years ago)

LouLou (Pialat, 1980) 8/10
Ikarie XB1 (Polak, 1963) 7/10
Blue Ruin (Saulnier, 2013) 7/10
Death Line (Sherman, 1972) 8/10
Dexys - Nowhere is Home (Evans & Kelly, 2014)

sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Sunday, 1 June 2014 18:39 (twelve years ago)

Perverts Guide to Ideology - basically a two+ hr long zizek lecture about expressions of ideology in film. I really enjoyed it and it bolstered my sense that zizek really shines as a cultural philosopher like this (as opposed to other realms he might occasionally dip into)

building a desert (art), Sunday, 1 June 2014 19:26 (twelve years ago)

all at SIFF:

The Case Against 8
The Double
The Congress
Obvious Child
We Are The Best!
Whitey: United States of America vs. James J. Bulger
The Signal
Boyhood
Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter

axe douche for men (silby), Monday, 2 June 2014 05:11 (twelve years ago)

All Is Lost is kind of a morbid superhero daydream for rich people about how even when you do everything right, the world is going to be hard on you but don't worry because you'll be respected in the final analysis and saved by the hand of a just god.

Look at this joke I've recognised, do you recognise it as well? (forksclovetofu), Monday, 2 June 2014 05:20 (twelve years ago)

A touch of Sin (Jia Zhangke, 2013) - this was great. No real false notes (apart from people in the bus watching the action film, like I needed pointing out the violence here was going to be 'for real'). Love the slow cinema bits (the woman wonadering about after dropping her lover at the train station, hanging out, thinking about one suspects nothing much), and how the animals and nature that are worked into the story.

The Soft Skin (Truffaut, 1964) - glad I'm seeing these now. 400 Blows is almost like the only really amazing thing Truffaut made.

xyzzzz__, Monday, 2 June 2014 11:27 (twelve years ago)

*The Bird With the Crystal Plumage (Argento) (with Alan Jones & Kim Newman commentary)
His Girl Friday (Hawks) (Bringing Up Baby >>>>>>>> His Girl Friday, fwiw; the politics are really offputtingly shitty in HGF, too, but more importantly it's just not as funny and Cary Grant's character is a tremendous creep)
Windows (Greenaway)
Intervals (Greenaway)
The Perfume of the Lady in Black (Barilli) (THIS. IS. BEST. I am on a goddamn crusade to force everyone I meet to watch this movie. Formally it's a particularly beautiful example of mid-70's horror in the vein of Bava- not a giallo, but adjacent to it- but the content and tone are all Polanski's apartment trilogy. At this point I've started just picking up anything I can find cheap with Mimsy Farmer sight unseen.)
*La Femme Publique (Zulawski) (with Daniel Bird & Andrzej Zulawski commentary) (Z talks Dostoevsky, reflexivity, lenses & handheld camera work, hates Greenaway and loves Blade Runner)
*Black Sunday (Bava) (with Tim Lucas commentary)
Mickey One (Penn)

You guys are caterpillar (Telephone thing), Wednesday, 4 June 2014 02:21 (twelve years ago)

I think Shoot the Piano Player is right there with The 400 Blows.

clemenza, Wednesday, 4 June 2014 02:28 (twelve years ago)

^Yes.

You guys are caterpillar (Telephone thing), Wednesday, 4 June 2014 02:31 (twelve years ago)

what politics in His Girl Friday, exactly? It's based on a classic stage comedy where the 2 leads are men, u know. And it's hilarious. Yes, Walter Burns is a classic creep, comedies are often about them.

images of war violence and historical smoking (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 4 June 2014 20:21 (twelve years ago)

Margaret (2011, Lonergan, director's cut) 7/10 (*release ver was 8)
The Famous Sword Bijomaru (1945, Mizoguchi) 6/10
Portrait of Madame Yuki) (1950, Mizoguchi) 7/10
*Which Way to the Front? (1970, Lewis) 3/10
The 47 Ronin (1941, Mizoguchi) 7/10
Accident (1967, Losey) 7/10
Only Lovers Left Alive (2013, Jarmusch) 6/10
Maine-Océan (1986, Rozier) 7/10
Liquid Sky (1982, Tsukerman) 6/10
Tenderness of the Wolves (1973, Lommel) 6/10
The Love of the Actress Sumako (1947, Mizoguchi) 7/10
Miss Oyu (1951, Mizoguchi) 8/10
Victory of Women (1946, Mizoguchi) 6/10
My Love Has Been Burning (1949, Mizoguchi) 7/10
Gebo and the Shadow (2012, Oliveira) 8/10

*rewatch

images of war violence and historical smoking (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 4 June 2014 20:36 (twelve years ago)

I think Shoot the Piano Player is right there with The 400 Blows.

― clemenza, Wednesday, June 4, 2014 Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

^Yes.

― You guys are caterpillar (Telephone thing), Wednesday, June 4, 2014 Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Ok I've yet to see that one.

xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 4 June 2014 20:40 (twelve years ago)

HGF is much funnier than BUB (which is really more horrifying than funny).

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Wednesday, 4 June 2014 20:41 (twelve years ago)

HGF/The Front Page basically has no respect for anyone or anything except the forward momentum of yellow journalism.

images of war violence and historical smoking (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 4 June 2014 20:47 (twelve years ago)

Local film critics are gaga over Only Lovers Left Alive, but I'm a Jarmusch agnostic.

guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 4 June 2014 20:48 (twelve years ago)

it coasts on style for the first half at least, diminishing returns after. He lights Tom Hiddleston's pecs beautifully.

images of war violence and historical smoking (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 4 June 2014 20:50 (twelve years ago)

what politics in His Girl Friday, exactly? It's based on a classic stage comedy where the 2 leads are men, u know. And it's hilarious. Yes, Walter Burns is a classic creep, comedies are often about them.

Not gender politics. I'm maybe overreacting to this, but the early discussion that well of course the governor isn't going to commute Earl Williams' sentence because he killed a "colored" policeman seemed both over-the-top cynical and ugly and also kind of weird, historically speaking. Not to mention the use of the word "pickaninny" later on, which, yeah, I know, movie from 1940, but still. Goddamn. I guess I'm just weirded out by the casual use of gross racial attitudes in a fairly zippy comedy. I mean, as far as darkness goes, it's not exactly Ace in the Hole- it felt less like a conscious look at the attitudes of the time than an unthinking reflection of them? I don't know, really, I'm still trying to work out why that bothered me so much. It's still a damn good film, though. The fact that this (and Burns' skeeviness, though that doesn't really bother me now that I have some distance from first seeing it- the fact that he has little to no real interest in Hildy as a woman or even a human being keeps it on the right side of the funny/creepy divide) bothered me makes me want to revisit it in a week or so

You guys are caterpillar (Telephone thing), Wednesday, 4 June 2014 22:17 (twelve years ago)

And the only new movie I've watched since the last post:

Super Mario Bros. (i forget their names, they made Max Headroom I think?)
Some of the most compulsively watchable shit I've seen in a while. Bob Hoskins is a total pro, the Blade Runner-y production design is ugly and cheap and still jaw-dropping in its sheer misguided scale, Dennis Hopper...is, and the little incidental details (the Divinyls' cover of "Love Is the Drug," a minor character played by Mojo Nixon screaming THE KING IS EVERYWHERE)...who the fuck was this made for?

You guys are caterpillar (Telephone thing), Wednesday, 4 June 2014 22:20 (twelve years ago)

Telephone Thing, I like the way you list films you've watched w/ commentary tracks and I'm going to do the same from now on (i only tend to 'watch' commentary track discs for movies i've seen at least once)

think my next one will be Theatre of Blood w/ a League of Gentleman commentary track. Their previous Blood On Satan's Claw track is good fun, and I'm sure they'll enjoy themselves with TOB, too.

sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Thursday, 5 June 2014 20:34 (twelve years ago)

Thanks- I used to be an absolute maniac for commentaries as a teenager (because there's fucking nobody to talk to about weird movies in Mobile, AL) and kind of stopped doing it somewhere along the line. Starting a Letterboxd account and forcing myself to make a little note of every movie I watch has gotten me back into the habit, even if they don't always pay off (the Blow-Up commentary by a supposed Antonioni scholar is kind of superficial and contains quite a few stupid errors and outright speculations, for example). That said:

think my next one will be Theatre of Blood w/ a League of Gentleman commentary track. Their previous Blood On Satan's Claw track is good fun

HOLY SHIT I HAVE TO TRACK THESE DOWN. I'm not a big fan of his non-League TV writing but I could listen to Gatiss talk about horror for hours, and knowing that I can makes me positively giddy.

You guys are caterpillar (Telephone thing), Thursday, 5 June 2014 22:13 (twelve years ago)

Venus in Fur (Polanski, 2013) - Seigner and Amalric were excellent. The play within a novel, all encased in a film sorta ran out of gas about halfway through once it was done with Polanski's hang-ups of art as a thing vs art in the service of society omg-I-can't-finish-this-fkn-sentence-already!!! Thinking back you do sympathise with commie destroy aesthetics pov when "is this play about child abuse?" question comes up. I mean that's worth 10% of the ticket alone!

Biggest problem is S&M. You just lose all interest in this 'fascinating' bit of human behaviour. Schroeder's Maitresse made that point with its up in the air ending iirc. This one was content to follow on its logic.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 6 June 2014 16:46 (twelve years ago)

*Inferno (Argento)
Duffy (Parrish) - I kind of love this movie. Jameses Mason, Fox and Coburn all at the top of their game, gorgeous cinematography (by Peeping Tom's Otto Heller) of the Spanish coast and Tangier, and a vaguely David Axelrod-ish soundtrack. Just wonderful, stupid fun.
The Girl Who Knew Too Much (Bava)
The Night Stalker (Moxey)- I love the Kolchak TV series and finally got around to watching the TV movies. This is honestly less entertaining than the best episodes of the show, but still solid entertainment.
*Psycho (Hitchcock)- Midnight screening! Off a DCP instead of real film, but still! It's always interesting to watch this one with a group- literally no one doesn't know the twist, but people still jump at the shower scene and the climactic cellar reveal (Arbogast's death less so), and it's just so perfectly (and I would say intentionally) constructed to work as black comedy upon rewatching. Especially interesting (to me anyway) is the change in the nature of the audience's complicity in Norman's coverup of Marion's murder
*Phenomena (Argento)- I like Opera (and I'm hoping to be pleasantly surprised by The Stendahl Syndrome, which has its defenders) but for me this is Argento's last truly great film. And for all the Morricone and Goblin collaborations in his filmography (Simonetti solo and Daemonia not so much), this is the single best music cue in his entire body of work:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rJZ__uy7T_Y

You guys are caterpillar (Telephone thing), Saturday, 7 June 2014 20:16 (twelve years ago)

"Jimmys Hall" was enjoyable but a bit disappointing. An uneasy mix of broad humour and socialist debate. Dialogue is a bit stilted at times and a jazz band in 1930s rural Ireland? get tae fuck. Jim Norton is excellent as the parish priest and gets all the best lines. 6/10

everyday sheeple (Michael B), Saturday, 7 June 2014 22:47 (twelve years ago)

Zazie dans le métro (Malle, 1960)
Close-up (Kiarostami, 1990)
Sweetie (Campion, 1989)
A Boring Afternoon (Passer, 1964)
Cléo from 5 to 7 (Varda, 1962)
Sanjuro (Kurosawa, 1962)
Marat/Sade (Brook, 1967)
Tokyo Twilight (Ozu, 1957)

WilliamC, Sunday, 8 June 2014 02:26 (twelve years ago)


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