that is an excellent clip, huh?
― remy bean, Wednesday, 27 February 2008 03:24 (eighteen years ago)
That nazi musical clip has done my fucking head in. I think it's the contrast between the number taken on its own merits - it's charming and likeable, the tune is good, and the woman is a graceful dancer - and knowledge of the times & circumstances under which it was made. The little documentary that's an extra on the DVD of "Gold Diggers of 1933" does a pretty good job of explaining how that film was escapist entertainment from a really bad time that we today would find hard to imagine living through. I guess the clip of aryan maiden hoofing it is like that but much, much moreso never mind the fact that in that case, the people responsible for making the film were employed by the very people who were directly responsible for the mess that the film's audience would have been in in 1944. Faustian, eh.
I know shit about nazi-era cinema, apart from the usual stuff everyone knows about propaganda, leni riefenstahl etc. I think the Fritz Lang Mabuse talkie was made for nazi-controlled ufa just before he came to the states, and I know Pola Negri made a run of films, one of which, "mazurka", is supposed to be very good, before she bailed and returned to america. I did a quick trawl on imdb and wikipedia, and read about a high-budget napoleonic-era war film, "kolberg", which came out in 1945, it sounds like some pretty heavy shit, all round. I noticed that in the cast was Gustav Diessl, who played jack the ripper in "Pandora's Box"! WTF. It's all kind of very grimly fascinating, but I don't know if I want to know any more about it or not.
― Pashmina, Wednesday, 27 February 2008 11:15 (eighteen years ago)
Pash, you know all those songs in SitR are from the '20s or '30s (except one, maybe), right? It was a nostalgic piece in its time. Its Greatest Musical Ever partisans are totally daft, but a lot of the songs are funny and the numbers exuberant, especially when O'Connor is involved.
― Dr Morbius, Wednesday, 27 February 2008 14:32 (eighteen years ago)
Nazi control of studios didn't necessarily mean that the moviemakers were Nazis; by 1944, NSDAP fuckers had a lot more on their mind than micromanaging films that appeared to have no political content. There were plenty of classic German films made during WWII that are not even close to propaganda and still get shown on Saturday morning tv. Heinz Rühmann, for example, (really old guy who drove the Mercedes in "Wings of Desire") was personally anti-Nazi, but Goebbels and Hitler loved his acting, so he got to keep making movies.
― Three Word Username, Wednesday, 27 February 2008 14:45 (eighteen years ago)
Yeah, I see that (for example) G.W.Pabst kept making films in Germany, and it's hard to imagine him having any sympathy with the regime, in fact I think one of his films was banned? Also, I get the impression with Negri that she basically went where the work was, and where she'd get some kind of star billing/treatment after her hollywood career bombed and she lost her fortune in the stock market crash. You read/hear a lot about the talented creative individuals who bailed in the '30's - Walter Gropius, George Grosz, Fritz Lang, Marta Eggerth off the top of my head - but very little about the ones who stayed, and I guess the ones who stayed outnumbered the ones who left, and many of them must have stayed for perfectly valid reasons, a stable regular job w/income no doubt having more meaning to someone from the '30's than it would to you and me in 2008. I did a little bit of looking around online about the films from this era, the only ones that were vaguely familiar were the "Munchausen" spectacular, and the Titanic film, the latter of which does appear to have a deal of propaganda in it. Nothing else was remotely familiar to me. The pages I looked at on Wikipedia were surprisingly informative and well-written, as an aside. One striking thing I read was the director of "Titanic" getting pulled off the picture by Goebbels, executed, and replaced with someone else! Holy fuck...
I'm kind of tempted to try and get a copy of that film the musical routine is from, the synopsis I read sounds just as off the wall as a Hollywood '40's musical.
― Pashmina, Wednesday, 27 February 2008 15:57 (eighteen years ago)
Pash, you know all those songs in SitR are from the '20s or '30s (except one, maybe), right?
No, I didn't know that. I did notice that they had the kind of correct-period feel about them, like the little sequence where the 2 guys are doing the vaudeville number with the violins sounds just like the vaudeville shorts I have on one of the busby berkeley DVDs, I guess I figured they were clever pastiche, just like the disastrous talkie film they're making with Lina Lamont. I suppose when the film came out plenty of people back then will have remembered seeing or hearing about "du barry, woman of passion", and got the reference straightaway, also Jack Gilbert and his "I love you" x 3 thing that they take off as well. It is really cleverly done. I'll watch it again on my own in a month or two.
― Pashmina, Wednesday, 27 February 2008 16:06 (eighteen years ago)
gone baby gone was good
gone baby gone (casey affleck and amy ryan both awesome, good film overall)
-- omar little, Tuesday, February 26, 2008 4:45 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Link
omar little was in it! I didn't know that dude's scar is real o_0
― dmr, Wednesday, 27 February 2008 16:33 (eighteen years ago)
MKW got it in a fight!
― omar little, Thursday, 28 February 2008 00:54 (eighteen years ago)
we own the night - preposturous. well-directed i guess, well-acted yeah, but some really shitty dialogue and lousy plotting and pacing.
― omar little, Thursday, 28 February 2008 00:57 (eighteen years ago)
saw that last night. i really appreciated the understated direction.
― wanko ergo sum, Thursday, 28 February 2008 01:00 (eighteen years ago)
quintet parts: the clonus horror life and death of colonel blimp (at first there were moments where this seemed almost too sentimental, then I realized it was shot & released before the war had even ended, raising the stakes)
― Milton Parker, Thursday, 28 February 2008 21:56 (eighteen years ago)
Play Misty for Me <-- eastwood put a lot of jazz footage in this!
― Catsupppppppppppppp dude 茄蕃, Friday, 29 February 2008 20:55 (eighteen years ago)
plus "gay neighbors"
― sexyDancer, Friday, 29 February 2008 21:08 (eighteen years ago)
There's only one gay character in this right -- the blonde's boss? I was wondering if this was an early example of the "gay" speech pattern; don't know any others this early.
"EW SEAFOOD"
― Catsupppppppppppppp dude 茄蕃, Friday, 29 February 2008 21:37 (eighteen years ago)
hmm, dunno Bogey does a "gay" accent in the bookstore scene in The Big Sleep
― sexyDancer, Friday, 29 February 2008 21:52 (eighteen years ago)
King of Kong
very entertaining.
― latebloomer, Saturday, 1 March 2008 13:45 (eighteen years ago)
Wicker Man remake ... to what degree was this "on purpose?"
― sexyDancer, Saturday, 1 March 2008 14:49 (eighteen years ago)
Yo, sD did you get the "extended" version
― Catsupppppppppppppp dude 茄蕃, Saturday, 1 March 2008 14:52 (eighteen years ago)
APPARENTLY THERE'S LIKE 2 MINUTES MORE TORTURE
― Catsupppppppppppppp dude 茄蕃, Saturday, 1 March 2008 14:53 (eighteen years ago)
in the extended version they show the bees stinging his face. in the theatrical version it's overheard as they fade to him caged in the wicker man.
― latebloomer, Saturday, 1 March 2008 14:57 (eighteen years ago)
or being taken to the wicker man
KILLING ME WON'T BRING BACK YOUR PRECIOUS HONEY
FOR JOHNNY RAMONE
― latebloomer, Saturday, 1 March 2008 14:58 (eighteen years ago)
I guess I saw the extended. LOL
― Catsupppppppppppppp dude 茄蕃, Saturday, 1 March 2008 15:14 (eighteen years ago)
Still haven't seen "Wicker Man" remake. I keep meaning to, but can't bring myself to pay money for it, even when I saw it at 3.99.
― Pashmina, Saturday, 1 March 2008 15:14 (eighteen years ago)
naw, I saw it on cable ... they fade away while breaking his legs.
like many films, this would have been better with Bruce Campbell in the lead.
― sexyDancer, Saturday, 1 March 2008 15:18 (eighteen years ago)
don't know any others this early.
V brief movie portrayal of "swish" gay man, 1931, @ 1.12:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SXBb80VAXm0
Oldest example I've seen, there's probably older, though.
― Pashmina, Saturday, 1 March 2008 15:39 (eighteen years ago)
DVD (local library borrow): 'Eastern Promises'. Really enjoyed the holes in the plot, the tiny mysteries scattered throughout, when it could've been annoying...the ILE thread is making want to re-watch, but there isn't the time. The fight in the sauna ws fantastic, wish I had caught this at the cinema at the time. Really liked that Naomi Watts was in this, whatever the merits of her performance -- which now heightens my anticipation for 'Funny Games'.
Cinema: 'Signs of Life'. Herzog's first film -- its all in place, execution not quite there, but oh boy didn't we get some of that later..
VHS: picked up a cheap copy of Rivette's 'Secret Defense' and Haneke's 'Time of the Wolf'. Looking fwd to seeing a cpl more of his this week at the Lumiere.
― xyzzzz__, Saturday, 1 March 2008 22:19 (eighteen years ago)
3:10 to yuma - it was "okay"
― omar little, Saturday, 1 March 2008 23:01 (eighteen years ago)
the end was wack
― sleep, Saturday, 1 March 2008 23:12 (eighteen years ago)
3:10 to yuma is a great character in search of a better movie. some kind of adventures of ben wade thing would have been way more fun than bogging it down with christian bale proving his manhood.
tonight i watched the phantom of liberty, which was good and weird and funny.
― tipsy mothra, Sunday, 2 March 2008 08:51 (eighteen years ago)
"3:10 To Yuma" was awesome - except for scenery chewing evil-sidekick guy. Damn good western even though it's a remake.
― Capitaine Jay Vee, Sunday, 2 March 2008 11:31 (eighteen years ago)
gone baby gone -- no make sense (and I even read the book)
― m coleman, Sunday, 2 March 2008 12:39 (eighteen years ago)
original ending of "I am legend"
^ possibly worse
― Catsupppppppppppppp dude 茄蕃, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 23:31 (eighteen years ago)
what is the original ending of "I am legend"?
― jhøshea, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 23:32 (eighteen years ago)
yeah, Quintet is pretty much a non-movie in a non-good way. The Prestige was intriguing, though
― sexyDancer, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 23:34 (eighteen years ago)
http://buzzfeed.com/buzz/I_Am_Legend_Alternate_Ending
― Catsupppppppppppppp dude 茄蕃, Thursday, 6 March 2008 00:13 (eighteen years ago)
california split
noizest movie ever
― s1ocki, Thursday, 6 March 2008 18:39 (eighteen years ago)
lol i am legend zombie luv alternate ending really makes u think
― jhøshea, Thursday, 6 March 2008 18:50 (eighteen years ago)
O T M
― dmr, Thursday, 6 March 2008 19:02 (eighteen years ago)
seven dwarfs scene so classic
― dmr, Thursday, 6 March 2008 19:05 (eighteen years ago)
"seven coming at you like a GATLING GUN."
― s1ocki, Thursday, 6 March 2008 19:21 (eighteen years ago)
hahaha
I saw it for the first time right after Sideways and lolled @ payne's apparent shameless swiping of the nose bandage. altho I guess it's in Chinatown too.
http://www.road-dog-productions.com/weblog/altman-californiasplit.jpg http://img2.timeinc.net/ew/dynamic/imgs/041118/122812__sideways_l.jpg
― dmr, Thursday, 6 March 2008 19:26 (eighteen years ago)
http://www.canoe.com/divertissement/cinema/dossiers/2007/02/17/chinatown.jpg
― dmr, Thursday, 6 March 2008 19:28 (eighteen years ago)
busted noses: a picture thread
you can't "swipe" a bandaged nose. ppl get their noses bandaged.
3:10 to yuma is a great character in search of a better movie.
Like the 1957 one?
― Dr Morbius, Friday, 7 March 2008 15:37 (eighteen years ago)
i liked 3:10. it was just a good oater.
― s1ocki, Friday, 7 March 2008 15:42 (eighteen years ago)
delirious
steve buscemi playing usual quasi-sympathetic loser character, michael pitt looking more like cobain than he did in that gus van sant movie. wan stabs at satire.
― latebloomer, Friday, 7 March 2008 17:56 (eighteen years ago)
trouble in paradise king of kong knowing me knowing you (complete series; sort of like a movie)
― lauren, Friday, 7 March 2008 18:10 (eighteen years ago)
just watched BRIDGE, the documentary about golden gate bridge suicides. basically dude filmed the bridge every day for a year from diff't angles and caught 23 suicides on camera. then he went back and interviewed the families and friends of the suicides, told their story, allowed people to meditate a bit on the process of grief and loss and living with people who have depression and bipolar disorder and scizophrenia
really recommend it to everyone, it was really amazing
― moonship journey to baja, Sunday, 9 March 2008 21:53 (eighteen years ago)