also
Serious Man (i enjoyed it but i don't think i got it)Charly (not great, a bit too much groovy 1960s stuff, cliff robertson good tho)
― caek, Sunday, 14 February 2010 19:50 (sixteen years ago)
Coming Apart - vintage late 60s/early 70s interpersonal psychosis with interesting ending music - Milton Parker have you seen this movie? If not, you should!
― sarahel, Sunday, 14 February 2010 20:09 (sixteen years ago)
tender mercies - liked it a lot, duvall was fantasticshotgun stories - pretty goodthe fury - couldnt even get thru ittempest - strange pacing, i dont like cassavetes as an actor, too long
― johnny crunch, Sunday, 14 February 2010 23:18 (sixteen years ago)
http://i8.photobucket.com/albums/a6/Sprad/IM000053a.jpg
― Milton Parker, Monday, 15 February 2010 00:25 (sixteen years ago)
The Wolfman - lols for real. could've actually worked with dif director (e.g. guy ritchie, robert rodriguez), alas... super gory tho
morbs, am about to watch Far From Heaven, which i somehow never saw
― mind crystals over matter (rrrobyn), Monday, 15 February 2010 01:38 (sixteen years ago)
xp - Milton - is that staged or did you just happen to have that dvd out and the Marissa cd?
― sarahel, Monday, 15 February 2010 01:45 (sixteen years ago)
nice pipe, milton ;) and monoshock! i was listning to liquorball yesterday.
― Joint Custody (ian), Monday, 15 February 2010 03:18 (sixteen years ago)
oh i had seen far from heaven! but hardly remembered it, don't know whyit's great!!
― mind crystals over matter (rrrobyn), Monday, 15 February 2010 04:42 (sixteen years ago)
also, dennis haysbert WS (also the reason why i held on past S3 of The Unit tbh dude is awes)
― mind crystals over matter (rrrobyn), Monday, 15 February 2010 04:46 (sixteen years ago)
xpost picture is several years old now, dates from old threads back when mari55a was still posting, only thing still on the desk is the pipe
recent DVDs:Emergency Broadcast Network: WARNING Authorized Bootleg Auto-Entertainment Device (video work 1991-1998)Keeping Score: Ives / Holidays SymphonyMellodrama (pretty amazing documentary on the history / development of the Mellotron -- the footage of people playing the Chamberlin with the lid off & directly manipulating the gear wheel & tape heads is flat out amazing)The Boxer's Omen
― Milton Parker, Monday, 15 February 2010 05:54 (sixteen years ago)
did I say 'amazing'? god I wish I could edit posts
― Milton Parker, Monday, 15 February 2010 05:57 (sixteen years ago)
it's not amazing?
― sarahel, Monday, 15 February 2010 05:57 (sixteen years ago)
it's amazing twice
― dmr, Monday, 15 February 2010 06:35 (sixteen years ago)
I watched W and Gomorra back to back
fyi for peoples
3 CD box of Peer Raben's Fassbinder scores. Not as complete as I want and omits a lot of the electronic Schnitzler / Cluster type moments, but the Chinese Roulette suite ends disc 1.http://www.eggcityradio.com/?p=425
― Milton Parker, Monday, 15 February 2010 07:43 (sixteen years ago)
i'm gonna go and watch takeshis' this week
― anita bonghit (rionat), Monday, 15 February 2010 11:55 (sixteen years ago)
Putney Swope - I'd always heard about this without hearing what it was about, black radicals taking over an ad agency in 1969 to make unairable commercials, total fun
watched this tonight. thought it was mostly pretty dated and unfunny but it did have a good De La sample ("got to have soul!")
― dmr, Tuesday, 16 February 2010 05:57 (sixteen years ago)
Takeshi's is good fun.
― Daniel_Rf, Tuesday, 16 February 2010 16:35 (sixteen years ago)
moonbad santaliberty heightsmy best fiend
― am0n, Tuesday, 16 February 2010 16:37 (sixteen years ago)
excalibur - great/mentalcemetery junction - EMBARGOEDlook back in anger - awful play but gd claire bloom was hota prophet - s'okblow up - on the big screen: amazing a funny thing happened on the way to the forum - godawful, quit after 20min. nice coloursa kind of loving - very good
― 67 (history mayne), Wednesday, 17 February 2010 21:28 (sixteen years ago)
o yeah i should have added royal tenenbaums - quit after 10 minutes what is this
/grandma
― this is awful I want Togo home (harbl), Wednesday, 17 February 2010 23:03 (sixteen years ago)
scott walker: 30 century man (dope)
― ('_') (omar little), Wednesday, 17 February 2010 23:18 (sixteen years ago)
and really surprising considering his rep. he seems like such a nice, decent dude and one who is very forthright about his career.
― ('_') (omar little), Wednesday, 17 February 2010 23:19 (sixteen years ago)
whoa milton thx 4 fassbinder
― plaxico (I know, right?), Wednesday, 17 February 2010 23:42 (sixteen years ago)
Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll - Andy Serkis is an ugly bugger. Some good performances (I liked the flashback scenes with Ray Winstone as Ian Dury's Dad, and the girl playing Dury's mistress was cute), but this film didn't work. Not a Telstar like disaster, but scrappy as hell.
Adventureland - Oh good another awkward indie dweeb meets more sexually confident, cool but kooky girl flick. Oddly unsympathetic lead character. A few lols. Not hateful like Nick & Norah's Infinite Playlist.
Wolfman - Not quite as bad as I'd feared, not as good as I'd secretly hoped. Watchable. Hopkins phones it in and is the best thing in it. Sounded like they autotuned the Awooos as well. Inert.
Daybreakers - Can't remember. A bit shit.
Avatar - Like a kid's Saturday morning cartoon made with bleeding-edge technology and a titanic load of money. Every bit as good/bad as that sounds.
Up In the Air - Don't get the hate, but thought this was, ultimately, just a bit ho-hum. Though she had a more unsympathetic role, I liked Anna Kendrick more than Vera Farmiga. Clooney was Clooney.
The New Barbarians - A cautionary tale: A drunken evening adding titles to my Lovefilm high priority list results in them sending me this. Which I last watched back in the early days of VHS rental - golden years. As with me, time has not been kind to the Italian-made b-movie, set in a post-Mad Max apocalypse in the far flung year 2019 ("the Earth has died - it raped itself"). Thrilling 30mph chases in rickerty future-cars! So bad it's actually... just bad. Saying that, it's not often you get a sci-fi film where the bad guy actually sodomises the good guy. It may have happened in Attack of the Clones though, can't remember.
― DavidM, Thursday, 18 February 2010 00:20 (sixteen years ago)
Gamer (ouchy contradictions sink the kitsch fun, falls all over itself to be very *now* about the net and gaming)Pontypool (pretentious but I really loved it, end cops out but *amazing* weirdness inside, Trojan horse of a fake zombie movie) Silk Stockings (kinda Oedipal and eww to see a 57 year old Fred Astaire making out with Cyd Charisse here, tbh)I Know Where I'm Going! (Powell Pressburger comedy, weird that a body double was used for every outdoor shot for the male lead- good fun)Sunset Boulevard (watched on British Airways flight, hadn't seen it in forever, duh great)
― twice boiled cabbage is death, Thursday, 18 February 2010 00:44 (sixteen years ago)
My Son, My Son, What Have Ye Done - (much weirder than 'Bad Lieutenant poc:no', if a lot more self-conscious / pretentious. much more Herzog-per-second, but it's also a weird Lynch-Herzog mashup, especially with Grace Zabriskie walking around and being incredible every second she's on the screen. second half is a little auto-pilot but if you like Herzog you won't mind much. in hindsight his Bad Lieutenant actually comes off as the stranger film, because the occasional gator-cam and spontaneous shaving moments pop out at you more)
― Milton Parker, Friday, 19 February 2010 19:14 (sixteen years ago)
man i just watched the special-features from the frost/nixon film, with the actors, directors and production crew heaping praise on frank langella as nixon. i know langella got equal praise for his stage portrayal of nixon in the frost/nixon play.
i don't get it. i understand that he wasn't going for a mere impersonation of nixon, and i'm glad he didn't. but langella played nixon like a doddering, kindly grandfather, a portrayal that's worlds-away from the ruthless, calculating, openly-hardman political operator that nixon was. and that isn't just an overall assessment; you can see it in the actual frost/nixon interviews.
i mean, it's fine to locate the humanity in a villain-like historical character, but i think langella missed the mark in accurately drawing-out nixon's humanity (what there was of it) in the context of the real historical figure.
― Daniel, Esq., Saturday, 20 February 2010 05:48 (sixteen years ago)
The Loves Of Sumako The Actress (Not my fave ever Mizoguchi though still excellent. Kinuyo Tanaka is the GOAT)Le Voleur (Beautiful but a little overlong Malle period piece with Belmondo as an 1890s Parisian burglar/thief. Great cast.)Kapurush ( Satyajit Ray. Not sure about this one - may be my least fave by Ray so far but need to watch again.)The Voice Of the Moon (Fellini's last film. Kinda restrained yet lovely. Didn't mind Benigni in this.)
― François de Roobabe (Capitaine Jay Vee), Saturday, 20 February 2010 17:04 (sixteen years ago)
berlinale special:
Howl: was dreading a hollywood biopic of a writer/poem i don't really like/get, but it was actually very enjoyable. franco was really, really great, wonderfully charismatic. animation that forms a big part of the poetry reading looked kind of cheap at first but turns out to pretty effective. recommended.
Killer Inside Me: awful, childish and morally idiotic film that presents sexual violence as welcome and humorous. taleban recruitment advert. the world is a worse place with this film in it. unlike coen stuff, which it's initially reminiscent of and not just because of the setting, it actually deserves the nihilist tag, but it is also very very stupid. many walk outs. several boos. casey affleck fantastic as a psychopath, for what it's worth, although the character is totally empty.
Making The Boys: solid doc about the play/film The Boys in The Room. Didn't know much about that or the debate surrounding it beforehand, so much of it perhaps lost on me.
― caek, Sunday, 21 February 2010 23:18 (sixteen years ago)
i've been hating on winterbottom for years and although he's done a few decent films, he really is a tool. just really thick.
― sharter the unstoppable ilx machine (history mayne), Sunday, 21 February 2010 23:21 (sixteen years ago)
the worst thing is this film is going to get an awful lot of attention because in addition to being "problematic" in a media-friendly and no doubt intentional way, it's got an accessible plot (not conceptual, totally mainstream-audience-friendly in that sense) and a star lead cast (and solid ensemble) who turn in good to great performances. but it's a fucking retarded, thoughtless film that makes the world a dumber place : (
― caek, Sunday, 21 February 2010 23:29 (sixteen years ago)
but it's a fucking retarded, thoughtless film that makes the world a dumber place
we have a lot of these ;_;
― a passing heavy daftie (cozen), Sunday, 21 February 2010 23:32 (sixteen years ago)
ay. like 'the white ribbon'.
― sharter the unstoppable ilx machine (history mayne), Sunday, 21 February 2010 23:37 (sixteen years ago)
very long rough cut trailer for festivals/distributors here btw: http://www.ropeofsilicon.com/article/promo-trailer-for-winterbottoms-the-killer-inside-me
i only watched the first couple of minutes up to the first sex scene because i got the impression spoilers we coming, so beware if that sort of thing bothers you.
― caek, Sunday, 21 February 2010 23:43 (sixteen years ago)
stoked for the thread though.
― caek, Sunday, 21 February 2010 23:45 (sixteen years ago)
fragments (aka winged creatures) - bullshit. seems to be a 'crash' ripoff, but never having seen all of 'crash' i can't attest to that. it's about what happens to various folks who survive a shooting in a diner. features another bizarre forest whitaker performance. avoid like the plague.
― ('_') (omar little), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 00:10 (sixteen years ago)
into great silence - dope documentary about monks at a monastery in the french alps
that's a beautiful movie
― autotuna fish (Tape Store), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 00:29 (sixteen years ago)
taking of pelham 123 (2009) - saw it two hours ago, forgot already. but not that bad.
― sharter the unstoppable ilx machine (history mayne), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 00:32 (sixteen years ago)
City Of Pirates - Raul Ruiz is a god among men.Three Lives And Only One Death - dittoInglourious Bastards - Even better the second time around.
― François de Roobabe (Capitaine Jay Vee), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 16:11 (sixteen years ago)
caek, do you like Jim Thompson books, or is the problem Winterbottom?
― Fusty Moralizer (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 17:42 (sixteen years ago)
I was gonna ask the same thing. I remember Killer Inside Me as being a pretty good read ... don't recall much sex stuff in it specifically, although I can imagine if some of Thompson's 1950s sensibilities were put onscreen verbatim it could be trouble. (There's one pretty fucked up sex scene in "The Alcoholics" that essentially would be "presenting sexual violence as welcome and humorous" if you filmed it)
― dmr, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 19:57 (sixteen years ago)
going to see Alice in Wonderland tomorrow morning!
― mind crystals over matter (rrrobyn), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 20:35 (sixteen years ago)
caek, do you like Jim Thompson books, or is the problem Winterbottom?― Fusty Moralizer (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, February 24, 2010 5:42 PM (3 hours ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
― Fusty Moralizer (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, February 24, 2010 5:42 PM (3 hours ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
I haven't read any Jim Thompson, so I couldn't say whose fault the film is. I did see the Winterbottom quote saying he just shot the line "her face looked like hamburger meat" as written.
― caek, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 20:46 (sixteen years ago)
i'm paraphrasing him innacurately there. here's where i read that: http://blogs.indiewire.com/thompsononhollywood/2010/02/23/berlinale_60_day_nine_en_familie_the_killer_inside_me_rock_hudson_-_dark_an/.
Affleck’s lack of affect (rhyme intentional) works fine for me, but the tone of the movie doesn’t. And I question my response to the beating scenes. I’m generally a fan of violence in movies – where it belongs, as opposed to real life – but I never got around to seeing Antichrist last year, having never missed a Lars von Trier movie before, even after years of disappointment. Maybe I’m getting soft. Even though I know that the scenes are completely justified by what’s in the book (Winterbottom said, defensively, at a q’n’a in Sundance that one of the women was described by Thompson as having a “face like hamburger meat”), it’s a question of degree. When you read, of course, you make up your own images, and don’t pause to savor a woman’s beating for minutes. Or anyway I don’t. (At the end of the day, when I run across this in my bedtime reading of The Talented Miss Highsmith in reference to Mickey Spillane – “I always say never hit a woman when you can kick her” – it brings the uneasy question up all over again.)
― caek, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 20:50 (sixteen years ago)
"don't recall much sex stuff in it specifically"
You've forgotten then. There is plenty.
Preview looks like the book scene for scene, word for word, which could be a good or bad thing depending.
"casey affleck fantastic as a psychopath, for what it's worth, although the character is totally empty."
Sort of missing the point, I think.
― Fig On A Plate Cart (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 20:56 (sixteen years ago)
i didn't say it was a bad thing that the character was empty
― caek, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 21:00 (sixteen years ago)
It is a very nihilistic book btw and the violence in it is quite often grisly and occassionally played for "laughs" so I am not surprised that people would object to a faithful and graphic adaptation of it just for that.
I've never seen the Keach/Tyrell version btw, but Coup De Torchon (based on the very similarly constructed Pop 1280) is quite good and pretty faithful (minus the setting obv)--albeit less graphically violent IIRC.
― Fig On A Plate Cart (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 21:11 (sixteen years ago)
i would like to see a film of thompson's 'south of heaven', mostly because it's kind of unusual and more like 'the wages of fear' crossed with noir and set on an oil pipeline.
― ('_') (omar little), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 21:17 (sixteen years ago)