Last (x) movies you saw (II)

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Joe may mean the screening series, not the Phantasm series

(gf=LP?)

sans lep (sic), Tuesday, 22 January 2019 01:06 (seven years ago)

ahhh lol oh well

jolene club remix (BradNelson), Tuesday, 22 January 2019 01:10 (seven years ago)

I am only guessing!

pal I saw it with rented the blu of Phantasm II three days later and I have FOMO

sans lep (sic), Tuesday, 22 January 2019 01:26 (seven years ago)

Anyone else on Letterboxd? mine is https://letterboxd.com/souleraser/

flappy bird, Wednesday, 23 January 2019 01:59 (seven years ago)

gf=JZ @ the Katie Herzog Hot Take Dispenser. She wrote about the screening series, not Phantasm.

JoeStork, Wednesday, 23 January 2019 02:04 (seven years ago)

My Letterboxd = https://letterboxd.com/jer_fairall/

Timothée Charalambides (cryptosicko), Wednesday, 23 January 2019 03:26 (seven years ago)

Me on Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/PollyPrecoder/

Anne Hedonia (j.lu), Wednesday, 23 January 2019 04:10 (seven years ago)

also, me: https://letterboxd.com/jamesdevine/

devvvine, Wednesday, 23 January 2019 09:10 (seven years ago)

49-17 (Baldwin, 1917) 6/10
Skate Kitchen (Moselle, 2018) 6/10
*Husbands (Cassavetes, 1970) 8/10
The Letter (Wyler, 1940) 7/10
The Merry World of Leopold Z (Carle, 1965) 6/10
Private Life (Jenkins, 2018) 8/10
The Only Game in Town (Stevens, 1970) 4/10
The Public Enemy (Wellman, 1931) 7/10
*The Philadelphia Story (Cukor, 1940) 7/10
Rembrandt (Korda, 1936) 6/10

Timothée Charalambides (cryptosicko), Wednesday, 23 January 2019 15:56 (seven years ago)

https://letterboxd.com/carrotbourke/

. (Michael B), Wednesday, 23 January 2019 16:06 (seven years ago)

I just watched Coherence, which was fine, fairly impressive it's budget, I guess.

Then I watched Jarman's Wittgenstein, which I bought years ago and never got around to watching. It was much better than I expected, actually, but what an odd production. Co-written by Terry Eagleton, produced by Tariq Ali (I'm assuming it's the same Tariq Ali, anyway).

Leaghaidh am brón an t-anam bochd (dowd), Wednesday, 23 January 2019 17:49 (seven years ago)

you can find me on L'boxd if yer clever

a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 23 January 2019 18:11 (seven years ago)

Leave No Trace was excellent; the subtle recurrence of the seahorse - an animal where the male carries the young - was a lovely touch. Great, honest understated performances and script.
Feel like you can give it a feminist reading as "we have to learn to let go of our toxic, self-destructive men" if you'd care to. Or not. Either way, totally worth a watch.

Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Wednesday, 23 January 2019 18:38 (seven years ago)

Eagleton and Ali’s involvement in Wittgenstein might account for why it depicts him as much more pro soviet than I recall him being (though it’s been ages since I read Monk’s bio).

Leaghaidh am brón an t-anam bochd (dowd), Thursday, 24 January 2019 10:35 (seven years ago)

Wasn't expecting much from "The Hate U Give," but it was really intense and pretty righteous, not even just for a YA movie.

Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 26 January 2019 03:19 (seven years ago)

I really liked the novel and heard the movie made some convervative changes, so I’m worried, but I’ll still give it a watch as soon as I can.

Timothée Charalambides (cryptosicko), Saturday, 26 January 2019 04:49 (seven years ago)

From Ozon and down it's seen to prepare for the Berlin Film Festival, but then I found out I screwed up the application, so I¨m probably not going anyway, lol.

Small Town Killers (Bornedal)
Checkered Ninja (Matthesen)
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse (Persichetti, Ramsay & Rothman)
The Killing of a Sacred Deer (Lanthimos)*
Heli (Escalante)*
The Untamed (Escalante)*
Post Tenebras Lux (Reygadas)*
Belleville Baby (Engberg)
Tulpan (Dvortsevoy)
Frantz (Ozon)
Double Lover (Ozon)
Vic + Flo Saw a Bear (Côté)
Boris Without Béatrice (Côté)
Beyond the Hill (Alper)
Frenzy (Alper)
The Dreamed Path (Schanelec)
Faces Places (Varda & JR)
Tuya’s Marriage (Wang Quan’an)

Frederik B, Saturday, 26 January 2019 13:26 (seven years ago)

The Longest day
Heaven knows, Mr Allison
couple of Robert Mitchum films that were on Film 4 a couple of days ago when i was working on a shirt.

Stevolende, Saturday, 26 January 2019 13:42 (seven years ago)

I really liked the novel and heard the movie made some convervative changes, so I’m worried, but I’ll still give it a watch as soon as I can.

I didn't read the book, but my wife and older daughter did, and they said it was mostly pretty faithful. It gave my younger daughter (11) nightmares last night. Does not sidestep or downplay some pretty serious stuff.

Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 26 January 2019 13:53 (seven years ago)

Shiraz (1928, Osten) 8/10
*Unbreakable (2000, Shyamalan) 5/10
I Met Him in Paris (1937, Ruggles) 7/10
One Way Passage (1932, Garnett) 6/10
Enter Laughing (1967, Reiner) 5/10
The Good Bad Man (1916, Dwan) 6/10
Tomorrow’s Promise (1967, Owens) 6/10
Night Tide (1961, Harrington) 8/10
The Half-Breed (1916, Dwan) 7/10
Bronco Billy (1980, Eastwood) 7/10
Faust (1926, Murnau) 8/10

a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Monday, 28 January 2019 00:04 (seven years ago)

'49-'17 (Baldwin, 1917)
Day Dreams (Cline & Keaton, 1922)
Kiki (Taylor, 1931)
Mr. Robinson Crusoe (Sutherland, 1932)
So This Is Africa (Cline, 1933)
The World Moves On (Ford, 1934)
Husbands and Lovers (Stahl, 1924)
Girls About Town (Cukor, 1931)

Anne Hedonia (j.lu), Monday, 28 January 2019 00:08 (seven years ago)

wow, u r very kind to Wheeler & Woolsey.

a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Monday, 28 January 2019 00:10 (seven years ago)

I like them (definitely a minority opinion) and I liked the gender role reversal.

Anne Hedonia (j.lu), Monday, 28 January 2019 00:15 (seven years ago)

oh I like them too, but feel guilty about it.

a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Monday, 28 January 2019 00:18 (seven years ago)

Fantastic Beasts 2 : 4/10
Forest Of Bliss : 8/10
*Women Of The Night : 9/10
Aquamaing : 6/10
S'en Fout La Mort : 8/10
*There Was A Father : 10/10
The Image Book : 9/10
The Shop Around The Corner : 10/10

So, This Leaked (Capitaine Jay Vee), Monday, 28 January 2019 02:21 (seven years ago)

I tried to avoid superhero movies in 2018, so I played a bit of catch-up this month.

*rewatch of Ernest Saves Christmas (Cherry, 1988) 6/10
Coco (Disney, Unkrich and Molina, 2017) 6/10
Black Panther (Disney, Coogler, 2018) 7
Thor Ragnarok (Disney, Waititi, 2017) 7
Mary Poppins Returns (Disney, Marshall, 2018) 6
Avengers: Infinity War (Disney, Russos, 2018) 4
Bird Box (Netflix, Bier, 2018) 5
Pather Panchali (Ray, 1955) 6
Reel Bad Arabs (2006) 6; recommended by neil cicierega on ernest roulette
Roma (Netflix, Cuaron, 2018) 6

adam the (abanana), Monday, 28 January 2019 03:08 (seven years ago)

Black Panther Panchali

a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Monday, 28 January 2019 03:47 (seven years ago)

last 3 was a trio of Marvel flicks, I'm playing catch-up:

Captain America: Civil War
Doctor Strange
Guardians of the Galaxy 2

CA: CW was a perfectly decent flick, suffering from the issue a lot of films have and one which always bothers me, which is that a bunch of people decided to end some conversations a couple minutes too early or not say something they should have said, and it led to conflict and misunderstanding. But it's entertaining enough and decent overall, the cast is good as usual. It's just nowhere near Winter Soldier. 6/10

Doctor Strange was alright. A 6.5/10 movie, with a good cast and visuals and storytelling and so on.

GOTG2 was a surprise, since I'd heard the sequel wasn't as good, but I really enjoyed it: the color scheme, the cast, the humor, it was long but not too, too long (ok just maybe a bit too long). The Marvel machine taking on a straight science fiction story is more up my alley (which is maybe why the craft being applied to the fantasy genre is a the reason why I enjoy the first couple Thor movies more than other people seem to). Maybe this was an 8/10? Whatever.

omar little, Monday, 28 January 2019 04:07 (seven years ago)

I don't put much effort in it these days, but: https://letterboxd.com/ephender/

forrest drumpf (Eric H.), Monday, 28 January 2019 13:55 (seven years ago)

just saw Three Identical Strangers, what a bonkers story. couldn't stop thinking about the 3rd guy picking up the paper and seeing the "twins, separated at birth!" headline. the fact that they all had the same mannerisms and resting poses and everything else was really interesting to me

frogbs, Monday, 28 January 2019 21:21 (seven years ago)

Manhattan Baby (Fulci, 1982)- 2.5/5 - Didn't really feel this one. Unusually limp score from Fabio Frizzi, surprisingly setbound for something that starts with gorgeous location shoots and seemingly really did shoot exteriors in NYC. The stuffed bird attack that feels like it's finally going to finally ramp this movie up into proper batshit Fulci territory is basically the end of anything interesting
A Serious Man (Coens, 2009)- 4.5/5- FUCKING LOVED IT. The mostly unknown cast (Fred Melamed GOAT though), the cinematography (color grading especially), the fucking showstopper "Goy's Teeth" story...all of it
The Favourite (Lanthimos, 2018)- 4/5- Shockingly funny, the period detail scratches my ever present Draughtsman's Contract itch (I have seen none of the other nominees but if this doesn't win the Oscar for Best Costume Design...I will be unsurprised because the Oscars are more meaningless each year, but whatever), I want Olivia Colman to get more high profile roles outside of the UK bubble
*Phantasm (Coscarelli, 1979)- 3.5/5- Have loved this since I was a teenager and still holds up
Phantasm II (Coscarelli, 1988)- 3/5- Does not hold up as much; haven't watched any extras yet but obvious *massive* studio interference (I have major problems with 3 but even with that as evidence I don't think Coscarelli would have intentionally scrambled the timeline with a weird mess of epistolary voiceover, or a major character dying a gruesome, climactic, expensive sfx death weirdly early only to be immediately handwaved away as a hallucination)
The Lobster (Lanthimos, 2015)- 4/5- I had only seen Dogtooth before starting in on Lanthimos this month and I firmly intend to see everything else as soon as I possibly can
Phantasm III: Lord of the Dead (Coscarelli, 1994)- 2.5/5- A fucking mess; all the sidekicks introduced to disguise the fact that the returning/original Mike can't act suck (the kid is a serial killer, Rocky is a cringeworthy portrayal of a lesbian-coded character and Reggie constantly trying to get in her pants doesn't make him relatable, it makes him a fucking creep); Coscarelli's Sam Raimi envy (after the little shoutout in the previous movie) would be fine if he understood what made Sam Raimi's films work
*Goto, Isle of Love (Borowczyk, 1969)- 4/5- taking my time and really digging through Arrow's Borowczyk discs. I enjoyed this the first time I saw it but a rewatch convinced me it's absolutely brilliant. The color film inserts, the Handel piece, Borowczyk's perspective-free framing and shadowless lighting, etc
*Theatre of Mr and Mrs Kabal (Borowczyk, 1967)- 4/5- Still really fucking funny
Living to Die (Hauser, 1990)- 1.5/5- a selection for Philly's Psychotronic Film Society; things Wings Hauser, director, does not understand: film noir, the 180-degree rule, breasts, why mickey-mousing fell out of favor in film scores, what makes jazz music cool, the fact that it's not a great idea to actually name a character "Jazz"
Blanche (Borowczyk, 1971)- 4/5- Monty Python and the Holy Grail probably lessened the impact of its grimy, lived-in medieval setting but there's still the portrayal of medieval society as utterly psychologically alien that I found so compelling in (the half of) Hard to Be a God (that I managed to stay awake through) and that reminded me Marketa Lazarova has been on my to-watch list for ages. I also love the period music (naturally, since this is a Borowczyk joint, the first line of dialogue is a castrato joke)
Gunpoint (Graham, 1972)- 3.5/5- a documentary short on pheasant rearing and hunting, edited and partially shot in guerrilla style by Borowczyk for the translator & critic Peter Graham. There's a particularly striking shot of the hunting party marching through the shade cast by perfectly orderly rows of trees in a game hunting park that's going to stick with me for a while

You guys are caterpillar (Telephone thing), Tuesday, 29 January 2019 22:32 (seven years ago)

obvious *massive* studio interference

never got this vibe from ii, just seemed to be on its own wavelength, especially since coscarelli extended (and complicated) the vibe for iii

a weird mess of epistolary voiceover, or a major character dying a gruesome, climactic, expensive sfx death weirdly early only to be immediately handwaved away as a hallucination

unfortunately phantasm iv is like 100 percent epistolary voiceovers so i also don't think this was the studio's request. also i can't figure out what what gruesome expensive sfx death you're talking about. the liz doppelganger that reggie cooks with the flamethrower? it's a little clumsily handled yeah (and the tall man never makes evil doppelgangers again unless you count the mercurial jodysphere)

jolene club remix (BradNelson), Tuesday, 29 January 2019 22:43 (seven years ago)

have you seen iv before and if not are you planning to????

jolene club remix (BradNelson), Tuesday, 29 January 2019 22:46 (seven years ago)

Marketa Lazarova has been on my to-watch list for ages.

By all means do see it. And then if you can, watch The Devil's Trap (1962) and Valley of the Bees (1968).

Anne Hedonia (j.lu), Tuesday, 29 January 2019 23:17 (seven years ago)

Yeah, I was thinking of the Liz doppelganger. Maybe it's the mindset I was in watching the film, but it (and the question of when Liz's voiceover even *happens*) seemed massively overcomplicated, like it was papering over a last-minute edit. Speaking of grue, it's also super weird to me that the major studio-backed film in the series has possibly the nastiest death yet (the gold sphere burrowing through one of the mortuary attendant goons) while III has a weirdly bright and cheerful visual style and deaths that are played more for splatter comedy, though again, that could be the developing Raimi envy.

And yeah, I plan to run the series- I picked up Arrow's excellent (if cumbersome; I have to wrestle a replica sphere out of the case and tip the individual digipacks out) box set during a sale.

You guys are caterpillar (Telephone thing), Wednesday, 30 January 2019 00:34 (seven years ago)

Thank you so much for the additional Vlacil reccomendations! I'm trying to make more time for eastern European cinema this year (and read the Peter Hames book on the Czech new wave) and Vlacil's filmography is pretty intimidating

You guys are caterpillar (Telephone thing), Wednesday, 30 January 2019 00:35 (seven years ago)

iv is my favorite of the whole series. actually deepens the mystery of the original, deeply melancholy and dreamy, no budget whatsoever. i mean the first is a very special movie and a fourth sequel from 1994 can't quite sustain that atmosphere but it makes a lot of cool decisions and looks great

jolene club remix (BradNelson), Wednesday, 30 January 2019 00:47 (seven years ago)

I'm really looking forward to it! I know it sounds like I'm ragging on Coscarelli a lot here but I *love* the original Phantasm (I never saw the sequels because they were quite hard to get on disc for a while) and have a real soft spot for his later films like Bubba Ho-Tep and John Dies at the End.

You guys are caterpillar (Telephone thing), Wednesday, 30 January 2019 00:55 (seven years ago)

La Grande Illusion (Renoir, 1936) - 9/10
Kes (Loach, 1969) - 8/10
Ida (Pawlikowski, 2013) - 7/10
Le Dernier Combat (Besson, 1983) - 6/10
Bad Timing (Roeg, 1980) - 10/10
They All Laughed (Bogdanovich, 1981) - 10/10
Amarcord (Fellini, 1973) - 7/10
Star 80 (Fosse, 1983) - 4/10
Right Now, Wrong Then (Hong, 2015) - 9/10
All the King’s Men (Rossen, 1949) - 5/10
Hour of the Wolf (Bergman, 1968) - 10/10
Lions Love (… and Lies) (Varda, 1969) - 7/10
On the Beach at Night Alone (Hong, 2017) - 8/10
Chocolat (Denis, 1988) - 9/10
Images (Altman, 1972) - 2/10
Carol (Haynes, 2015) - 10/10
Yojimbo (Kurosawa, 1961) - 9/10
Lonesome (Fejos, 1928) - 10/10
Alphaville (Godard, 1965) - 9/10
Shame (Bergman, 1968) - 7/10
Shampoo (Ashby, 1975) - 9/10

flappy bird, Wednesday, 30 January 2019 04:32 (seven years ago)

*1937

flappy bird, Wednesday, 30 January 2019 04:33 (seven years ago)

Fuckin wowsers Phantasm IV is good

You guys are caterpillar (Telephone thing), Wednesday, 30 January 2019 22:01 (seven years ago)

Roma (6.0)
The Great Buster (6.0)
Turn Me On, Dammit! (7.5)
Napoleon Dynamite (5.0)
Boy Erased (7.0)
Hal (7.0)
The Bedroom Window (6.0)
The Whole Truth (4.5)
The Summer of All My Parents (6.5)
Shampoo (7.5)

clemenza, Thursday, 31 January 2019 02:31 (seven years ago)

Colette (Westmoreland, 2019)
Nina (Chajdas, 2019)
Nobody Daughter Haewon (Sang-Soo, 2013)
Right Now, Wrong Then (Sang-Soo, 2016)

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 31 January 2019 21:57 (seven years ago)

January:

Yesterday's Enemy (Guest, 1959) 8/10
The Favourite (Lanthimos, 2018) 8/10
Putney Swope (Downey, 1969) 8/10
Electra Glide in Blue (Guercio, 1973) 6/10
Longing (Grisebach, 2006) 6/10
She (Day, 1965) 5/10
Split (Shyamalan, 2016) 4/10
The Hired Hand (Fonda, 1971) 8/10
The Terror of the Tongs (Bushell, 1961) 6/10
That Sinking Feeling (Forsyth, 1979) 7/10
Enter the Dragon (Clouse, 1973) 8/10
Carriage to Vienna (Kachyňa, 1966) 8/10
Too Early/Too Late (Straub-Huillet, 1982) 9/10
Stan & Ollie (Baird, 2018) 5/10
Curse of the Crimson Altar (Sewell, 1968) 6/10
At Five in the Afternoon (S. Makhmalbaf, 2003) 8/10
The Murder of Mr. Devil (Krumbachová, 1970) 5/10
Murder on the Orient Express (Branagh, 2017) 4/10
Vampire Circus (Young, 1972) 7/10

Ward Fowler, Friday, 1 February 2019 11:38 (seven years ago)

Vice
quite interesting to see 2 of the leads play against body type. Wondered why they picked Christian Bale to play somebody so much bulkier than him but it's a good performance. Also Sam Rockwell seems a bit skinny or wiry for George W but againhe';s quit e good.
Some Post modernist touches etc and quite amusing film.
NOt sure how sympathetic the leads are. But they do seem to be pretty evil people don't they?

Stevolende, Friday, 1 February 2019 13:27 (seven years ago)

Vice is a loathsome film.

Your sweetie-pie-coo-coo I love ya (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 1 February 2019 13:38 (seven years ago)

haven't seen it yet, explain why?

Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Friday, 1 February 2019 13:51 (seven years ago)

Adam McKay's winks and nudges threw me out of the movie, and the straightforward chronology normalizes Cheney.

Your sweetie-pie-coo-coo I love ya (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 1 February 2019 13:53 (seven years ago)

i don't get stunt casting stars who look nothing like their real life counterparts then applying makeup until you can't tell who it is. last year it was the darkest hour. a few years ago it was depp in black mass.

adam the (abanana), Friday, 1 February 2019 13:54 (seven years ago)

interesting take alfred

Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Friday, 1 February 2019 13:58 (seven years ago)


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