Prior to weighting, ballots' top 25 got from 100 points down to 76 points (or 88 points if unranked), and the honorable mentions all received 20 points.
― Milm & Foovies (Eric H.), Friday, 29 October 2021 10:27 (four years ago)
(Full disclosure, I gave Morbs' ballot a tiny bit of extra weight because, frankly, he earned it.)
― Milm & Foovies (Eric H.), Friday, 29 October 2021 10:28 (four years ago)
Damn straight
― maybe these baps are legends (Noodle Vague), Friday, 29 October 2021 10:38 (four years ago)
https://cansesclasseled.files.wordpress.com/2021/10/060-sunrise.jpg
60. SUNRISE: A SONG OF TWO HUMANS (F.W. Murnau, 1927, USA) [752.6 points; 10 votes; 1 first-place vote]S&S: 6 | TSPDT: 8 | BOXD: 186
MORBS SEZ: "If you want your leading man's adultery with a Wicked City Woman to avoid alienating the audience, I guess clapping a wig like that one on Janet Gaynor is the way to go." (Slant review.)I think Sunrise is overrated. For real Murnau action, check out Nosferatu, Tabu, or the Last Gasp.― DV (dirtyvicar), Saturday, December 7, 2002 4:54 PMI think Sunrise has the raw power of, oh, plays by Sophocles, that sort of thing.― Michael Daddino (epicharmus), Sunday, April 27, 2003 2:17 PM its misogyny has always kept me from holding it close to my heart. I prefer the other Janet Gaynor film of 1927, Seventh Heaven. … I feel that Murnau's "Nosferatu" is one of the ten greatest films ever made, and suspect that the only reason people go on about "Sunrise" is that critical opinion does not like to accord just levels of acclaim to a film about a bloodsucking vampire― amateurist (amateurist), Sunday, April 27, 2003 3:58 PM it probably has more to do with the fact that Sunrise is still a moving film, but Nosferatu (great tho it is) really isn't scary anymore. horror doesn't age well, sadly.― J.D. (Justyn Dillingham), Sunday, February 1, 2004 6:14 PMOK, it's been a long time since I saw Sunrise, but I remember being bored by it. I dunno, maybe I should watch it again.― Casuistry (Chris P), Monday, November 3, 2003 4:02 AMGOD SUNRISE SUCKED THE ONLY COOL PART WAS THE HOTT FLAPPER CHICK THEY WERE KIND OF LIKE SCENESTER BABES OF THE 20S NO PS I SAW THIS ON FUCKING 16 MM BITCHES― Spinning Down Alone You Spin Alive (ex machina), Tuesday, November 9, 2004 3:03 PM
I think Sunrise is overrated. For real Murnau action, check out Nosferatu, Tabu, or the Last Gasp.― DV (dirtyvicar), Saturday, December 7, 2002 4:54 PM
I think Sunrise has the raw power of, oh, plays by Sophocles, that sort of thing.― Michael Daddino (epicharmus), Sunday, April 27, 2003 2:17 PM
its misogyny has always kept me from holding it close to my heart. I prefer the other Janet Gaynor film of 1927, Seventh Heaven. … I feel that Murnau's "Nosferatu" is one of the ten greatest films ever made, and suspect that the only reason people go on about "Sunrise" is that critical opinion does not like to accord just levels of acclaim to a film about a bloodsucking vampire― amateurist (amateurist), Sunday, April 27, 2003 3:58 PM
it probably has more to do with the fact that Sunrise is still a moving film, but Nosferatu (great tho it is) really isn't scary anymore. horror doesn't age well, sadly.― J.D. (Justyn Dillingham), Sunday, February 1, 2004 6:14 PM
OK, it's been a long time since I saw Sunrise, but I remember being bored by it. I dunno, maybe I should watch it again.― Casuistry (Chris P), Monday, November 3, 2003 4:02 AM
GOD SUNRISE SUCKED THE ONLY COOL PART WAS THE HOTT FLAPPER CHICK THEY WERE KIND OF LIKE SCENESTER BABES OF THE 20S NO PS I SAW THIS ON FUCKING 16 MM BITCHES― Spinning Down Alone You Spin Alive (ex machina), Tuesday, November 9, 2004 3:03 PM
― Milm & Foovies (Eric H.), Friday, 29 October 2021 11:52 (four years ago)
yay!
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 29 October 2021 11:54 (four years ago)
Low ranking aside, I still maintain that this is about as close to a consensus favorite as exists among people who treat film as popular art.
― Milm & Foovies (Eric H.), Friday, 29 October 2021 12:04 (four years ago)
When it's on, I wonder if it's the peak of cinema's possibilities.
Then came Brett Ratner.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 29 October 2021 12:05 (four years ago)
Good start. One of the handful of silents I've seen (the film canon I've explored the least)
― xyzzzz__, Friday, 29 October 2021 12:14 (four years ago)
Okay, now I definitely don't understand how you get over 700 points from 7 votes without any #1s?
― Andrew Farrell, Friday, 29 October 2021 12:31 (four years ago)
Not that it matters! More people like more = more good!
― Andrew Farrell, Friday, 29 October 2021 12:32 (four years ago)
That's where the weighting comes in.
― Milm & Foovies (Eric H.), Friday, 29 October 2021 12:34 (four years ago)
raw point totals + (average points per vote x 3) + (number of votes x 10)
― Milm & Foovies (Eric H.), Friday, 29 October 2021 12:36 (four years ago)
Oh cool!
― Andrew Farrell, Friday, 29 October 2021 12:44 (four years ago)
Sunrise was my #1 vote, it's one of the most beautiful films and I love how effortlessly it shifts from horror to drama to comedy to drama again.
― braised cod, Friday, 29 October 2021 13:11 (four years ago)
https://cansesclasseled.files.wordpress.com/2021/10/059-synecdoche-new-york.jpg
59. SYNECDOCHE, NEW YORK (Charlie Kaufman, 2008, USA) [768.67 points; 9 votes]S&S: 490 | TSPDT: 651 | BOXD: DNP
MORBS SEZ: "I thought the first 45 mins was the most unapologetic body-disgust cinema I've seen made by someone other than Cronenberg … I thought it was full of the worst of life! Which admittedly is not something most people want to see."Its sequel should be called Metonymy Falls, Wisconsin. And then comes Metalepsis, Minnesota: The Vengeance of Adele. those unfamiliar with Greek names for figures of speech and upper-midwestern geography should just trust me that all this is hilarious― nabisco, Saturday, May 24, 2008 12:29 PMI couldn't stand this until Dianne Wiest's moment, so I'm in the minority. Hoffman's sad sack act grated on me.― The Screaming Lobster of Challops (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, March 15, 2009 1:00 AM for realz, i'm ready for a moratorium on movies about misunderstood "genius" males who bang lots of women and alienate everyone. i would have loved to see a version of this where dianne wiest was the macarthur-winning PSH character and got to navel-gaze in the company of several doting young men.― elliot easton ellis (get bent), Sunday, May 24, 2009 1:58 AM I was just thinking about this movie this morning. I think it can be summed up by the phrase "crippling narcissism"― Jesus, the Czar of Czars (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, October 29, 2009 12:08 PMFor me, a film can pretty much say anything as long as I enjoy just looking and listening. Some of the weirder Godard shit, for example, just sweeps me along and I blink and nod and look at the pictures, regardless of how "difficult" the filmmaking is supposed to be. This, though, is the UGLIEST film I've ever seen, on a technical/aesthetic whatever level, I don't know what word to use. On the other hand, a film about something horrific like genocide can make me put aside (or at least qualify) aesthetics in the name of giving me something to think about. But there's nothing to think about here other than self-indulgence. David Lynch, whose films I enjoy but am ultimately indifferent to, kind of walks a line between this nightmare/abjection philosophical shit and just cool visual poetry. Like I say, I'm not a fan, but maybe it works for him, I dunno. But this... The piece-of-shit filmmaking. The cowardice of the little gags (which is all you get really.. people point out that they found the movie "funny," but these are sad little jokes that refer only to the movie itself. That's manipulative, sadistic filmmaking, it's a very high price of admission for a few shitty little jokes and PSH's fucking mug). This actually WAS torture. I can only conclude that was the intent. That this film was an actual weapon. I was revolted by it.― the fantasy-life of nations has consequences in the real worl (fields of salmon), Thursday, June 11, 2009 1:04 AMit's my favorite movie, nothing else comes close at all. has been since the night I saw it for the first time. it was on the weekend, and I was so bowled over by it I went by myself again at one of the last showings on a school night that Wednesday or Thursday. I couldn't believe it, it just nailed me to the wall. I think the circumstances at the time - beyond seeing it in a theater and knowing nothing going in - compounded my emotional response significantly. But long after all that, the film still yields so much for me, it is the work of art that we watch Caden struggle and fail to create. And even though my viewing a few weeks ago felt a little tepid or removed, the movie's in the front of my head again. I saw a movie with Dianne Wiest in it today and I was on the verge of tears every time she was on screen. I kept thinking about her reverie toward the end of SNY, "Where is my little girl?...Where is my little girl?..." The only time we see "Eric," Ellen Bascomb's husband and (according to Olive) Caden's lover. It's beguiling but there are no loose ends or unfinished thoughts. But if you watch it again, you should be in a position to be absorbed and overwhelmed, otherwise I imagine the pitch and the speed can be ridiculous. I mean, for how powerful the movie is, it's also really fucking funny. Consistently.― flappy bird, Sunday, December 30, 2018 3:21 PM
Its sequel should be called Metonymy Falls, Wisconsin. And then comes Metalepsis, Minnesota: The Vengeance of Adele. those unfamiliar with Greek names for figures of speech and upper-midwestern geography should just trust me that all this is hilarious― nabisco, Saturday, May 24, 2008 12:29 PM
I couldn't stand this until Dianne Wiest's moment, so I'm in the minority. Hoffman's sad sack act grated on me.― The Screaming Lobster of Challops (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, March 15, 2009 1:00 AM
for realz, i'm ready for a moratorium on movies about misunderstood "genius" males who bang lots of women and alienate everyone. i would have loved to see a version of this where dianne wiest was the macarthur-winning PSH character and got to navel-gaze in the company of several doting young men.― elliot easton ellis (get bent), Sunday, May 24, 2009 1:58 AM
I was just thinking about this movie this morning. I think it can be summed up by the phrase "crippling narcissism"― Jesus, the Czar of Czars (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, October 29, 2009 12:08 PM
For me, a film can pretty much say anything as long as I enjoy just looking and listening. Some of the weirder Godard shit, for example, just sweeps me along and I blink and nod and look at the pictures, regardless of how "difficult" the filmmaking is supposed to be. This, though, is the UGLIEST film I've ever seen, on a technical/aesthetic whatever level, I don't know what word to use. On the other hand, a film about something horrific like genocide can make me put aside (or at least qualify) aesthetics in the name of giving me something to think about. But there's nothing to think about here other than self-indulgence. David Lynch, whose films I enjoy but am ultimately indifferent to, kind of walks a line between this nightmare/abjection philosophical shit and just cool visual poetry. Like I say, I'm not a fan, but maybe it works for him, I dunno. But this... The piece-of-shit filmmaking. The cowardice of the little gags (which is all you get really.. people point out that they found the movie "funny," but these are sad little jokes that refer only to the movie itself. That's manipulative, sadistic filmmaking, it's a very high price of admission for a few shitty little jokes and PSH's fucking mug). This actually WAS torture. I can only conclude that was the intent. That this film was an actual weapon. I was revolted by it.― the fantasy-life of nations has consequences in the real worl (fields of salmon), Thursday, June 11, 2009 1:04 AM
it's my favorite movie, nothing else comes close at all. has been since the night I saw it for the first time. it was on the weekend, and I was so bowled over by it I went by myself again at one of the last showings on a school night that Wednesday or Thursday. I couldn't believe it, it just nailed me to the wall. I think the circumstances at the time - beyond seeing it in a theater and knowing nothing going in - compounded my emotional response significantly. But long after all that, the film still yields so much for me, it is the work of art that we watch Caden struggle and fail to create. And even though my viewing a few weeks ago felt a little tepid or removed, the movie's in the front of my head again. I saw a movie with Dianne Wiest in it today and I was on the verge of tears every time she was on screen. I kept thinking about her reverie toward the end of SNY, "Where is my little girl?...Where is my little girl?..." The only time we see "Eric," Ellen Bascomb's husband and (according to Olive) Caden's lover. It's beguiling but there are no loose ends or unfinished thoughts. But if you watch it again, you should be in a position to be absorbed and overwhelmed, otherwise I imagine the pitch and the speed can be ridiculous. I mean, for how powerful the movie is, it's also really fucking funny. Consistently.― flappy bird, Sunday, December 30, 2018 3:21 PM
― Milm & Foovies (Eric H.), Friday, 29 October 2021 13:26 (four years ago)
The silence says it all on this one.
― Milm & Foovies (Eric H.), Friday, 29 October 2021 13:56 (four years ago)
Lol at thirty minutes passing and no comment. Another of the 'awesome when you're 17' films. Fuck everyone, amen, amirite!!!
― imago, Friday, 29 October 2021 13:57 (four years ago)
I'm still shocked this placed above Sunrise.
― braised cod, Friday, 29 October 2021 13:58 (four years ago)
Maybe we have a lot of 17 year old lurkers
― imago, Friday, 29 October 2021 14:00 (four years ago)
I mean I can't talk, I placed Mandy in my 25. (But that's diiiifferent)
― imago, Friday, 29 October 2021 14:01 (four years ago)
Oldboy gonna place next innit
― imago, Friday, 29 October 2021 14:02 (four years ago)
Morbs liked it because, so far as I can tell, it's one of the movies that coddled his misanthropic worldview. So I can understand the lack of commenting enthusiasm.
― Milm & Foovies (Eric H.), Friday, 29 October 2021 14:03 (four years ago)
Synecdoche has some interesting filmmaking but yeah, I mostly remember being pretty irritated by it. I think Kaufman works best in another director's hands. His partnerships with Jonze and Gondry were good balances.
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Friday, 29 October 2021 14:11 (four years ago)
i'll try to keep it positive and say that when this ran during my years managing an arthouse, it was very delightful hearing ticket buyers try & fail to pronounce synecdoche
― nobody like my rap (One Eye Open), Friday, 29 October 2021 14:12 (four years ago)
Here's my first vote to place! I'm surprised it ranked above Being John Malkovich, which I didn't vote for and thought was more beloved.I don't know what being 17 has to do with liking this. I saw it at 36, a few weeks after my dad died, and it captured the feeling when the pace of time passing starts picking up, the body starts decaying and preoccupation with death sets in. (One of the mordant jokes in this is that Caden Codard starts being consumed with his mortality in early middle age, and winds up living well into his 90s.) I agree that it is remarkably ugly for a great film.
― Halfway there but for you, Friday, 29 October 2021 14:18 (four years ago)
one of the least interesting, most irritating movies i've sat through
― karl...arlk...rlka...lkar..., Friday, 29 October 2021 14:21 (four years ago)
This movie is great. 17 year olds would hate it. I have had to swear off Charlie Kaufman for my own well-being however.
― Chris L, Friday, 29 October 2021 14:21 (four years ago)
I'm very much unqualified to comment (I didn't submit a ballot for this very reason!)... I like the central conceit in this (it's absolutely twinned in my head with Remainder by Tom McCarthy) and given that it's a reflection/rendering of Hoffman's inner world, I wonder if the ugliness is, to some extent, deliberate? This had quite an impact on me when I saw it (I wasn't 17) but I found it gruelling and I've no desire to ever see it again.
― Vanishing Point (Chinaski), Friday, 29 October 2021 14:29 (four years ago)
I remember looking up when Remainder was published as soon as I read it and discovering to my relief that it was before this came out
― imago, Friday, 29 October 2021 14:31 (four years ago)
(okay I was 21, not 17, when I saw this, but it absolutely pandered to juvenile obsessions with metatextuality, angst and so forth)
― imago, Friday, 29 October 2021 14:33 (four years ago)
https://cansesclasseled.files.wordpress.com/2021/10/058-groundhog-day.jpg
58. GROUNDHOG DAY (Harold Ramis, 1993, USA) [772.46 points; 13 votes]S&S: 265 | TSPDT: 232 | BOXD: DNP
MORBS SEZ: "Groundhog Day is the last comedy star vehicle that succeeded on every level … it's a real achievement that the film's themes have usurped the day's original meaning."We should just put Groundhog Day in at number one, and then do a poll to find the other top 99 films of the 90s.― ailsa (ailsa), Tuesday, November 30, 2004 2:19 PM have seen Groundhog's Day at least 437 times. I have a rather insane obsession with that movie. For a while, every single joke between me and an old friend of mine would start with a reference to Groundhog's Day.― Allyzay, Monday, December 22, 2003 9:34 AMGroundhog Day - is this secretly everyone's favourite film?― pete s, Friday, December 19, 2003 3:49 PMI never saw Groundhog Day (mostly because it has Andie MacDowell in it).― The Ghost of Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Thursday, February 3, 2005 8:27 AMGroundhog Day: so good that it makes up for the fact that Horsey MacDowell is in it.― Sanjay McDougal (jaymc), Tuesday, November 30, 2004 2:21 PM Groundhog's Day is distractingly ugly. Not moody ugly or consciously ugly, just boring '80s TV drama ugly. The scene with Murray and MacDowell at the bar is the worst. Other than that, close to perfect.― milozauckerman (miloaukerman), Tuesday, February 22, 2005 2:29 PMMORBS SEZ: "Groundhog Day is the last comedy star vehicle that succeeded on every level … it's a real achievement that the film's themes have usurped the day's original meaning."We should just put Groundhog Day in at number one, and then do a poll to find the other top 99 films of the 90s.― ailsa (ailsa), Tuesday, November 30, 2004 2:19 PM have seen Groundhog's Day at least 437 times. I have a rather insane obsession with that movie. For a while, every single joke between me and an old friend of mine would start with a reference to Groundhog's Day.― Allyzay, Monday, December 22, 2003 9:34 AMGroundhog Day - is this secretly everyone's favourite film?― pete s, Friday, December 19, 2003 3:49 PMI never saw Groundhog Day (mostly because it has Andie MacDowell in it).― The Ghost of Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Thursday, February 3, 2005 8:27 AMGroundhog Day: so good that it makes up for the fact that Horsey MacDowell is in it.― Sanjay McDougal (jaymc), Tuesday, November 30, 2004 2:21 PM Groundhog's Day is distractingly ugly. Not moody ugly or consciously ugly, just boring '80s TV drama ugly. The scene with Murray and MacDowell at the bar is the worst. Other than that, close to perfect.― milozauckerman (miloaukerman), Tuesday, February 22, 2005 2:29 PM
We should just put Groundhog Day in at number one, and then do a poll to find the other top 99 films of the 90s.― ailsa (ailsa), Tuesday, November 30, 2004 2:19 PM
have seen Groundhog's Day at least 437 times. I have a rather insane obsession with that movie. For a while, every single joke between me and an old friend of mine would start with a reference to Groundhog's Day.― Allyzay, Monday, December 22, 2003 9:34 AM
Groundhog Day - is this secretly everyone's favourite film?― pete s, Friday, December 19, 2003 3:49 PM
I never saw Groundhog Day (mostly because it has Andie MacDowell in it).― The Ghost of Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Thursday, February 3, 2005 8:27 AM
Groundhog Day: so good that it makes up for the fact that Horsey MacDowell is in it.― Sanjay McDougal (jaymc), Tuesday, November 30, 2004 2:21 PM
Groundhog's Day is distractingly ugly. Not moody ugly or consciously ugly, just boring '80s TV drama ugly. The scene with Murray and MacDowell at the bar is the worst. Other than that, close to perfect.― milozauckerman (miloaukerman), Tuesday, February 22, 2005 2:29 PM
MORBS SEZ: "Groundhog Day is the last comedy star vehicle that succeeded on every level … it's a real achievement that the film's themes have usurped the day's original meaning."
― Milm & Foovies (Eric H.), Friday, 29 October 2021 14:34 (four years ago)
Another non-Morbs medal movie that he was oft to praise on ILX.
― Milm & Foovies (Eric H.), Friday, 29 October 2021 14:35 (four years ago)
And yet, I'm sure he'd be the first to say it's more of a top 1,000 movie than a top 100 one.
my parents took me to this, the first live-action movie i saw in a theater, as a kid. i was too young to get the concept and found it totally inexplicable that i was not only watching boring adults doing things but watching them do the same things over and over. haven't seen it again to reassess, 1 and 1/2 stars
― karl...arlk...rlka...lkar..., Friday, 29 October 2021 14:40 (four years ago)
I love Groundhog Day, but it's nothing compared to Sunrise.
― braised cod, Friday, 29 October 2021 14:43 (four years ago)
Bill Murray should've been in Sunrise.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 29 October 2021 14:46 (four years ago)
Young, strapping George O'Brien should've been the groundhog.
― Milm & Foovies (Eric H.), Friday, 29 October 2021 14:51 (four years ago)
and you the otter?
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 29 October 2021 14:52 (four years ago)
― edited to reflect developments which occurred (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Friday, 29 October 2021 14:54 (four years ago)
― imago, Friday, 29 October 2021 bookmarkflaglink
Shame this isn't stopping you.
― xyzzzz__, Friday, 29 October 2021 14:55 (four years ago)
― Milm & Foovies (Eric H.), Friday, 29 October 2021 bookmarkflaglink
It's an ok film. Not a top 100 but yeah Morbs otm from the one watch I gave it.
― xyzzzz__, Friday, 29 October 2021 14:57 (four years ago)
too low
― grove street (party) direction (voodoo chili), Friday, 29 October 2021 15:04 (four years ago)
I found Crumb so dislikeable as a person that I couldn't get into the movie at all. List is missing more pure comedies and unabashedly political films so far imo.
― gospodin simmel, Friday, 29 October 2021 15:07 (four years ago)
Maybe some Adam McKay movies will turn up; two birds with one stone.
― Chris L, Friday, 29 October 2021 15:09 (four years ago)
Maybe, but I find both McKay's humour and politics boring.
― gospodin simmel, Friday, 29 October 2021 15:14 (four years ago)
just wait until costa gavras-reitman's opus groundhog'Z day shows up
― grove street (party) direction (voodoo chili), Friday, 29 October 2021 15:16 (four years ago)
There's also a chance Groundhog Day might be the closest this list gets to romance.
― Chris L, Friday, 29 October 2021 15:18 (four years ago)
Depends what you think of Charles Foster Kane's self-love.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 29 October 2021 15:22 (four years ago)
https://cansesclasseled.files.wordpress.com/2021/10/057-imitation-of-life-1.jpg
57. IMITATION OF LIFE (Douglas Sirk, 1959, USA) [774 points; 6 votes]S&S: 112 | TSPDT: 182 | BOXD: DNP
MORBS SEZ: "Sirk is really disturbing... his best films like fever dreams of soap operas. Just because post-contemporary theorists made his arty rep doesn't mean they don't properly explain what made them successful … wow, that moment when Susan Kohner sassily talks all Butterfly McQueen to Lana Turner in Imitation really rules. But God, any scenes w/ John Gavin or Sandra Dee..."i'm trolling a bit, sirk's ok, you know. but there's a good reason to troll: literally more than any other filmmaker, sirk's present-day rep obtains almost exclusively among people steeped in critical theory, and his 'discovery' in the early '70s came out of the milieu in which french theory, brecht, etc coalesced into what's now mainstream hackademic film culture. i kind of wonder what people get out of his films.― Theorry Henry (Enrique), Friday, January 6, 2006 6:02 AM Just wanted to pop back into this thread to mention that I went to a screening of "Imitation of Life" a few nights ago, which, somewhat amazingly (I didn't know this was coming), was followed up by a Q&A with Juanita Moore (who played Annie) and Susan Kohner (the teenage Sarah Jane), along with a few other actresses who had very minor roles. Moore (who's in her eighties now) was really funny and sharp in a "fiesty old lady telling it like it is" mode. Too bad it was moderated by this bearded film professor/Sirk expert who kept asking loaded questions that the actresses weren't much interested in, and interjecting his own (bland) opinions and readings of the movie. (At one point, after an awkward silence when neither of them could answer his question about who else had been tested for their roles, the prof moved along with the comment, "Well, I happen to know the answer, anyway.")― morris pavilion (samjeff), Friday, April 9, 2004 2:56 PM favorite moment in "imitation of life": "look, a falling star!", which i find to be totally inexplicably moving *and* funny, one of those moments where i tend to smile widely and/or make strange little noises in appreciation.― amateur!st (amateurist), Saturday, April 10, 2004 2:45 PM last time i watched imitation of life i had like three glasses of whiskey and could barely see the screen at the end through the TEARZ :(― impudent harlot, Saturday, April 14, 2007 12:59 AM As perfect a capitalist product as has ever been created in the USA, delivering contradictory pleasures sometimes within a single shot. Classical Hollywood never topped it. … ironic appropriation may be so 1990s, but the "ironic appropriation" of Sirk happened well before that. Also, I think "appropriation" is the wrong word here because Sirk was an ironist. If later audiences are appropriating his films ironically, then they were appropriating them the way Sirk himself conceived them. So while I agree that they're "emotional melodramas that remain detached from the assumptions of the society they depict," that detachment stems from an ironic stance Sirk takes in relation to his characters. In fact, he felt he didn't step back far enough with Imitation of Life. And thank gawd, sez I. One of the very many things which makes it the greatest classical Hollywood film of all-time is that constant oscillation between ironic detachment and intense emotional involvement until they no longer seem like such polar opposites. If Sirk had his way, it might have come off like something by, I don't know, Fassbinder (who I'm definitely NOT dissing here). So the laughter may be signifying not that the audience is "above Sirk's little tricks" but rather perfectly in step with them. ― Kevin John Bozelka, Wednesday, August 20, 2008 4:19 PMI like the original better.― the vineyards where the grapes of corporate rock are stored (cryptosicko), Wednesday, September 25, 2013 7:20 PMFigured somebody would say that― I Am the Cosimo Code (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, September 25, 2013 7:22 PM
i'm trolling a bit, sirk's ok, you know. but there's a good reason to troll: literally more than any other filmmaker, sirk's present-day rep obtains almost exclusively among people steeped in critical theory, and his 'discovery' in the early '70s came out of the milieu in which french theory, brecht, etc coalesced into what's now mainstream hackademic film culture. i kind of wonder what people get out of his films.― Theorry Henry (Enrique), Friday, January 6, 2006 6:02 AM
Just wanted to pop back into this thread to mention that I went to a screening of "Imitation of Life" a few nights ago, which, somewhat amazingly (I didn't know this was coming), was followed up by a Q&A with Juanita Moore (who played Annie) and Susan Kohner (the teenage Sarah Jane), along with a few other actresses who had very minor roles. Moore (who's in her eighties now) was really funny and sharp in a "fiesty old lady telling it like it is" mode. Too bad it was moderated by this bearded film professor/Sirk expert who kept asking loaded questions that the actresses weren't much interested in, and interjecting his own (bland) opinions and readings of the movie. (At one point, after an awkward silence when neither of them could answer his question about who else had been tested for their roles, the prof moved along with the comment, "Well, I happen to know the answer, anyway.")― morris pavilion (samjeff), Friday, April 9, 2004 2:56 PM
favorite moment in "imitation of life": "look, a falling star!", which i find to be totally inexplicably moving *and* funny, one of those moments where i tend to smile widely and/or make strange little noises in appreciation.― amateur!st (amateurist), Saturday, April 10, 2004 2:45 PM
last time i watched imitation of life i had like three glasses of whiskey and could barely see the screen at the end through the TEARZ :(― impudent harlot, Saturday, April 14, 2007 12:59 AM
As perfect a capitalist product as has ever been created in the USA, delivering contradictory pleasures sometimes within a single shot. Classical Hollywood never topped it. … ironic appropriation may be so 1990s, but the "ironic appropriation" of Sirk happened well before that. Also, I think "appropriation" is the wrong word here because Sirk was an ironist. If later audiences are appropriating his films ironically, then they were appropriating them the way Sirk himself conceived them. So while I agree that they're "emotional melodramas that remain detached from the assumptions of the society they depict," that detachment stems from an ironic stance Sirk takes in relation to his characters. In fact, he felt he didn't step back far enough with Imitation of Life. And thank gawd, sez I. One of the very many things which makes it the greatest classical Hollywood film of all-time is that constant oscillation between ironic detachment and intense emotional involvement until they no longer seem like such polar opposites. If Sirk had his way, it might have come off like something by, I don't know, Fassbinder (who I'm definitely NOT dissing here). So the laughter may be signifying not that the audience is "above Sirk's little tricks" but rather perfectly in step with them. ― Kevin John Bozelka, Wednesday, August 20, 2008 4:19 PM
I like the original better.― the vineyards where the grapes of corporate rock are stored (cryptosicko), Wednesday, September 25, 2013 7:20 PM
Figured somebody would say that― I Am the Cosimo Code (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, September 25, 2013 7:22 PM
― Milm & Foovies (Eric H.), Friday, 29 October 2021 15:24 (four years ago)
― willem, Friday, 29 October 2021 15:30 (four years ago)