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skimpole

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Posts posted by skimpole

  1. I saw four movies last week.  Independence Day, along with Armageddon, is the most cynical of Hollywood blockbusters.  It lacks craft, genuine wit, or genuine invention.  Every gesture is made with the lowest common denomination response in mind.  But the idea of our world, or our world in 1996, suddenly interrupted by an malevolent, impenetrable alien force, did have a visceral effect that seemed to make up for it.  I can tell when this effect wears off.  It's near the end of the first third, where after the aliens have destroyed the world's cities and uncounted millions of lives, the stripper with the heart of gold is not only saved along with her child, but also their bloody dog makes it as well.  Independence Day: Resurgence is not able to repeat that visceral effect, since their 2016 is nothing like our 2016.  And despite more destruction, more danger, more special effects, more aerial battles, more plot holes (Judd Hirsch manages to get from the Atlantic Coast to Nevada in a day?) everything is very low energy.  Will Smith's performance in the original was nothing special, but one misses its energy here.  Jeff Goldblum has never been less interesting.

    Mandy, in retrospect, is what would happen if you took all the elements of Ghost Rider, put them in a blender, and then hired an independent director to create a movie out of them.  The results are...genuinely eccentric.  Crazy Nicolas Cage has a good reason to be crazy.  I haven't actually been watching the movies since Adaptation that destroyed his reputation, but he's surprisingly tolerable here.  Certainly a strange movie, maybe even a good one.  Sweet Bird of Youth is Richard Brooks' second shot at directing Tennessee Williams.  Cat on a Hot Tin Roof was not a good movie, but at least there was an understandable relationship between repressed homosexual Paul Newman and his oversexed wife Elizabeth Taylor.  By contrast, the relationship between Newman and Shirley Knight seems to be based on some studio head's desire for a happy ending to go along with the bowdlerized story.  The 17th Parallel is clearly the movie of the week.  Clearly it's a partisan documentary, and should be viewed with caution.  On the other hand this portrait of a North Vietnamese village resisting American bombing does offer a genuine picture of people showing considerable initiative under remarkable strain, as well as a side American media made little effort to show.

    I also rewatched the Peter Brook King Lear the Saturday before, and My Man Godfrey.  It's awesome, and I'm startled I didn't realize it before.

    • Like 1
  2. 5 hours ago, LawrenceA said:

    Has anyone seen Mysteries of Lisbon (2010)? It's a Portuguese movie that's on one of my to-see lists, and I'm trying to finish up seeing all of said lists this go-round of my movie watching. However, I've just learned that it's 4 and a half hours long, and I don't know if I want to invest that much time into a single movie that I know very little about. So, has anyone seen it or have an opinion on it?

    fid11401.jpg

    I have seen it, it's my favorite movie of 2010, and you should definitely see it.  (It also has my favorite for Best Supporting Actor of 2010).

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  3. In the Peter Brook King Lear, Irene Worth plays Goneril, while being five years older than Paul Scofield, who plays Lear.  On the one hand, actors are rarely Lear's age (he says in the play that he is eighty).  On the other hand, it is odd that Lear wishes Goneril be either sterile or cursed with ungrateful children when Worth was in her mid-fifties.

  4. theyshootpictures.com top 1000 movies for 1971

    A Touch of Zen  King Hu, China (Hong Kong) #341

    Out 1, noli me tangere  Jacques Rivette, France #406

    La Region Centrale  Michael Snow, Canada #483

    W.R.:  Mysteries of the Organism  Dusan Makavejev, Yugoslavia  #684

    Two English Girls  Francois Truffaut, France  #842

    Jonathan Rosenbaum top 1000 movies

    The Death of Maria Malibrun  Werner Schroeter, West Germany
    Deux fois  Jackie Raynal, France
    Four Nights of a Dreamer  Robert Bresson, France
    How Tasty Was My Little Frenchman  Nelson Pereira Dos Santos, Brazil
    *Out 1  Jacques Rivette, France
    Petit a petit  Jean Rouch, France
    Red Psalm  Miklos Jancso, Hungary
    *La region centrale  Michael Snow, Canada
    Trafic  Jacques Tati, France
    W.R.: Mysteries of the Organism (Makavejev)

    Films marked with an asterisk (*) are on Rosenbaum's top 100 list.  Note that dates are not exact. 

    • Thanks 2
  5. You would think there's been a thread on characters being clearly the wrong age, for example Jesse Royce Landis and Cary Grant in North by Northwest and Angela Lansbury and Laurence Harvey in The Manchurian Candidate being mother and son, despite being only born a couple of years apart.  Can anyone remember where that thread went?

  6. Last week I saw four movies.  The Sea Around Us starts the beginning of Irwin Allen's career.  It includes some portentous quotations for Genesis, a frankly mercenary attitude towards exploiting the sea and some interesting deep sea footage.  I suspect the reference to global warming was just a typical melodramatic Allen touch, but it does make the movie look much more perceptive now.  For All Mankind is more dignified, and having elaborate footage from the NASA missions is impressive.  Having astronauts putter around the moon doing frivolous things does somewhat hamper the supposed gravity of the event.

    If you were to wonder what a screwball comedy starring Irene Dunne and Melvyn Douglas would be like, you'd probably guess it wouldn't be at the same level of Cary Grant and Katherine Hepburn.  Or William Powell or Myrna Loy.  The fact that I don't particularly prefer Jean Arthur to Irene Dunne, does say something impressive about the comedies Frank Capra and Mitchell Leisen had her star in.  As such Theodora Goes Wild is OK.  Dunne does show some energy, and Douglas becomes more acceptable as the movie goes on (he starts rather pushy and obnoxious).  Hermia & Helena is about a young Argentine woman who is trying to adapt A Midsummer's Night Dream into Spanish.  She muddles around, meets some associates, wonders about some past relationships in a very undramatic and unerotic way, has civilized conversations with an important relative.  So basically she just putters around for 86 minutes.  Not to everyone's taste, or mine for that matter.

    • Thanks 1
  7. 17 hours ago, Bogie56 said:

    My top FF films of 1971 of the 21 that I have seen are ….

     

     

    5.  Death In Venice (1971) Luchino Visconti, Italy [I can’t recall how much of this was in English]

     

    Solaris (1971) Andrei Tarkovsky, Russia

    Death in Venice would certainly be my favorite foreign language film of 1971 if it were eligible.  However, since Dirk Bograde does most of the talking, and he's the key to the film, I consider it an English language film, despite whatever Italian language versions there may exist.  Why isn't Solaris considered a 1972 film?

    • Thanks 1
  8. 1. Two English Girls  Francois Truffaut, France

    2. Murmur of the Heart  Louis Malle, France

    3. Land of Silence and Darkness Werner Herzog, West Germany

    4. Out 1:  Noli Me Tangere  Jacques Rivette, France

    5. The Ceremony  Nagisa Oshima, Japan

    6. Fata Morgana  Werner Herzog, West Germany

    7. Four Nights of a Dreamer  Robert Bresson, France

    • Like 3
  9. Now it's 1979.  Here is Best Adapted Screenplay:

    Francis Ford Coppola, John Milius, Apocalypse Now, based on the novel Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad
    Monty Python (Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Eric Idle, Terry Jones, Michael Palin and Terry Gilliam),  Monty Python's Life of Brian, based on the Gospels.
    Arkadiy Strugatsky, Boris Strugatsky, Stalker, based on their novel Roadside Picnic
    Jack Burns, Jerry Juhl, The Muppet Movie, based on characters created by Jim Henson
    Jerzy Kosinski, Being There, based on his novel of the same name
     

    And here is Best Original Screenplay:

    Lyudmila Petrushevskaya, Yuri Notstein, Tale of Tales

    Woody Allen, Marshall Brickman, Manhattan

    Jose Bartolome, Pedro Chaskel, Federico Elton, Julio Gracia Espinosa, Patricio Guzman, The Battle of Chile
    Steve Tesich, Breaking Away
    Robert Alan Aurthur, Bob Fosse, All That Jazz
     

  10. Now it's 1978.  Here's Best Original Screenplay:


    Ermanno Olmi, The Tree of Wooden Clogs
    Terrence Malick, Days of Heaven
    Ingmar Bergman, Autumn Sonata
    Michael Cimino, Derec Washburn, Louis Garfinkle, Quinn Redeker, The Deer Hunter

    Mark Rappaport, The Scenic Route

    And here is Best Adapted Screenplay

    Martin Rosen, Watership Down based on the novel of the same name by Richard Adams
    Peter S. Beagle, Chris Conkling, The Lord of the Rings, based on the novels The Fellowship of the Ring and The Two Towers by J.R.R. Tolkein
    Anthony Shaffer, Death on the Nile based on the novel of the same name by Agatha Christie
    Eric Rohmer, Perceval le Gallois, based on the romance Perceval, the Story of the Grail by Chretien de Troyes
    Jerzy Skolimowski, Michael Austin, The Shout, based on the story of the same name by Rupert Graves

    I have not seen Coming Home (original), Bloodbrothers, Same Time, Next Year (adapted)

  11. Now it's 1977.  Here is Best Original Screenplay:

    Woody Allen, Marshall Brickman, Annie Hall
    David Mercer, Providence
    Charles Burnett, Killer of Sheep
    George Lucas, Star Wars
    Hans-Jurgen Syberberg, Hitler:  A Film from Germany

    And here is Best Adapted Screenplay:

    Yuri Klepikov, Larisa Shepitko, The Ascent, based on the novel The Ordeal by Vasil Bykau
    Alvin Sargent, Julia, based on the novel Pentimento by Lillian Hellman
    Luis Bunuel, Jean-Claude Carriere, That Obscure Object of Desire, based on the novel The Woman and the Puppet by Pierre Louys
    Wim Wenders, The American Friend, based on the novel Ripley's Game by Patricia Highsmith
    Larry Clemons, Vance Gerry, Ken Anderson, Frank Thomas, Burny Mattinson, Fred Lucky, Dick Sebast, David Michener, Ted Berman, The Rescuers, based on the novel The Rescuers and Miss Bianca by Margery Sharp

    I have not seen The Turning Point (original) or I Never Promised you a Rose Garden, Oh God! (adapted)

  12. theyshootpictures.com top 1000

    The Conformist  Bernardo Bertolucci, Italy #84

    Tristana  Luis Bunuel, Spain #371

    The Red Circle  Jean-Pierre Melville, France #589

    The Wild Child  Francois Truffaut, France #664

    Claire's Knee  Eric Rohmer, France #678

    Dodes'ka-den  Akira Kurosawa, Japan #731

    El Topo  Alejando Jodorwosky, Mexico #921

    Jonathan Rosenbaum top 1000 movies

    Le cochon  Jean Eustache / Jean-Michel Barjol, France
    Days and Nights in the Forest  Satyajit Ray, India
    L'enfant sauvage  Francois Truffaut, France
    Fata Morgana  Werner Herzog, West Germany
    Le petit theatre de Jean Renoir  Jean Renoir, France
    The Spider's Strategem  Bernardo Bertolucci, Italy
    Tristana  Luis Bunuel, Spain
    Vampir  Pere Portabella Spain

    Note that dates may not be exact.

     

    • Thanks 3
  13. Last week I saw six movies for once.  Tunes of Glory is one of those sixties English movies where the performances are the best things about them, with Alec Guinness as a commanding office with a drinking problem and John Mills as his new superior with his own problems.  Guinness and Mills are good, though one might think they could have exchanged their roles.  Avengers:  Infinity War may seem incomprehensible to people who haven't seen the dozen or so earlier movies.  One might add that it did not really develop the characters as those movies did.  On the plus side, this may be the greatest triumph of intercutting since Intolerance. 

    The Belle of New York has a nice Fred Astaire performance. two first rate dance sequences, and charming set decoration.  It also has, in Vera Ellen, the dullest partner I've seen in an Astaire movie.  Seriously, she is as just and dull as one might expect in a Salvation Army scold and attempts to make her complex are not successful.  The Penalty is best known for Lon Chaney's masochistic efforts to appear that his legs had been amputated.  This attracts more attention than his performance.  The movie is both reactionary (one of Chaney's plans as a criminal mastermind involves using immigrants to cause riots) and ill thought out (supposedly Chaney isn't responsible for his actions because of a physical problem which he's eventually cured of.  Yet he is still held responsible for them and is killed at the end, the penalty of the title.)

    World War Z is essentially five action set pieces.  In the first four hundreds, possibly thousands, of people die but Brad Pitt lives, along with someone else to get him to the next set piece.  The genuine competence of these sequences does not overcome the general callousness of the movie, where apparently the vast majority of humanity has no hope and must be slaughtered for our amusement.  Eighth Grade was a bit disappointing to me. It captures the insecurity and solipsism in that time in a girl's life.  But it does not really explain her apparent inability to have friends, or her lack of interest in anything other than being popular.  Some things appear off as well (you'd think an eighth grade musical band, at the end of the year would know how to play the American national anthem).

    • Like 1
  14. 1. The Confession  Constantin Costa-Gavras, France

    2. The Conformist  Bernardo Bertolucci, Italy

    3. Le Petit Theatre de Jean Renoir  Jean Renoir, France

    4. The Red Circle  Jean-Pierre Melville, France

    5. The Wild Child  Francois Truffaut, France

    6. Tristana  Luis Bunuel, Spain

    7. Days and Nights in the Forest  Satyajit Ray, India

    • Like 3
    1. Andrei Rublev (1966)  Andrei Tarkovsky, Soviet Union

    2. The Sorrow and the Pity (1969)  Max Ophuls, France

    3. The Leopard (1963)  Luchino Visconti, Italy

    4. Persona (1966)  Ingmar Bergman, Sweden

    5. Last Year in Marienbad (1961)  Alain Resnais, France

    6. Breathless (1960)  Jean-Luc Godard, France

    7. The Gospel According to Saint Matthew (1964)  Pier Paolo Pasolini, Italy

    8. Au Hasard Balthazar (1966) Robert Bresson, France

    9. Charulata (1964)  Satyajit Ray, India

    10. Pierrot le Fou (1965)  Jean-Luc Godard, France

    11. Jules et Jim (1962)  Francois Truffaut, France

    12. Winter Light (1963)  Ingmar Bergman, Sweden

    13. The Battle of Algiers (1966)  Giles Pontecorvo, Italy

    14. Gertrud (1964) Carl Theodor Dreyer, Denmark

    15. Weekend (1967)  Jean-Luc Godard, France

    16. The Organizer (1963)  Mario Monicelli, Italy

    17. Contempt (1963)  Jean-Luc Godard, France

    18. Playtime (1967)  Jacques Tati, France

    19. Shoot the Piano Player (1960)  Francois Truffaut, France

    20. The Young Girls of Rochefort (1967)  Jacques Demy, France

    21. Le Samourai (1967)  Jean-Pierre Melville, France

    22. Band of Outsiders (1964)  Jean-Luc Godard, France

    23. Marketa Lazarova (1967)  Frantisek Vlacil, Czechoslovakia

    24. Shadows of our Forgotten Ancestors (1964)  Sergei Parajanov, Soviet Union

    25. Z (1969)  Constantin Costa-Gavras, France/Algeria

    26. Masculin Feminin (1966)  Jean-Luc Godard, France

    27. Vidas Secas (1963)  Nelson Pereira dos Santos, Brazil

    28. The Chronicle of Anna Magdalena Bach (1968)  Jean-Marie Straub, West Germany

    29. The Colour of Pomegranates (1969)  Sergei Parajanov, Soviet Union

    30. Le Trou (1960)  Jacques Becker, France

    31. Le Bonheur (1965)  Agnes Varda, France

    32. High and Low (1963)  Akira Kurosawa, Japan

    33. Army of Shadows (1969)  Jean-Pierre Melville, France

    34. Daisies (1966)  Vera Chytilova, Czechoslovakia

    35. The Red and the White (1967)  Miklos Jancso, Hungary

    36. Lola (1961)  Jacques Demy, France

    37. La Collectionuese (1967)  Eric Rohmer, France

    38. Mouchette (1967)  Robert Bresson, France

    39. Valley of the Bees (1968)  Frantisek Vlacil, Czechoslovakia

    40. Tokyo Olympiad (1965)  Kon Ichikawa, Japan

    41. Alphaville (1965)  Jean-Luc Godard, France

    42. Zazie in the Metro (1960)  Louis Malle, France

    43. The Virgin Spring (1960)  Ingmar Bergman, Sweden

    44. Harikari (1962)  Masaki Koboyashi, Japan

    45. Death by Hanging (1968)  Nagisa Oshima, Japan

    46. The Adventures of Goopy and Bagha (1968)  Satyajit Ray, India

    47. 2 or 3 Things I Know About Her (1967)  Jean-Luc Godard, France

    48. The Milky Way (1969)  Luis Bunuel, France

    • Like 3
  15. Now it's 1976.  First, here is Best Adapted Screenplay:

    William Goldman, All the President's Men, based on the book of the same name by Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward
    Frank Waldman, Blake Edwards, The Pink Panther Strikes Again, sequel to the movie The Pink Panther
    Gerard Branch, Roman Polanski, The Tenant, based on the novel of the same name by Roland Topor
    Federico Fellini, Bernardo Zapponi, Fellini's Casanova, based on the autobiography Historie de ma Vie by Giacomo Casanova
    Suso Cecchi D'Amico, Enrico Medioli, Luchino Visconti, The Innocent, based on the novel The Intruder by Gabriele D'Annunzio

    And here is Best Original Screenplay:


    Paddy Chayefsky, Network
    Paul Schrader, Taxi Driver
    Carlos Saura, Cria Cuervos
    Elaine May, Mikey and Nicky
    John Cassavetes, The Killing of a Chinese Bookie

    I have not seen Cousin, Cousine, Seven Beauties (original), Voyage of the Damned (adapted)

  16. Now it's 1975.  Here is Best Adapted Screenplay:

    Stanley Kubrick, Barry Lyndon, based on The Memoirs of Barry Lyndon, Esq. by William Makepeace Thackeray
    Monty Python (Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Eric Idle, Terry Jones, Michael Palin and Terry Gilliam), Monty Python and the Holy Grail, based on Arthurian legend
    Woody Allen, Love and Death inspired by War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy and other 19th century Russian novels
    John Huston, Gladys Hill, The Man Who Would be King based on the short story of the same name by Rudyard Kipling
    Peter Benchley, Carl Gottlieb, Jaws, based on the novel of the same name by Benchley

    And here is Best Original Screenplay:


    Aleksandr Misharin, Andrei Tarkovsky, The Mirror
    Theo Angelopoulos, The Travelling Players
    Joan Tewkesbury, Nashville
    Chantal Akerman, Jeanne Dielman, 23 Quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles
    Mark Peploe, Michelangelo Antonioni, Peter Wollen, The Passenger

    I have not seen And now my Love, Lies my Father Told me (original) or Scent of a Woman (adapted).  It's  odd that Lies got an original nomination, since it's clearly based on a story and got an adapted screenplay nomination at the Canadian film awards.
     

  17. On 9/18/2018 at 5:35 PM, TomJH said:

    Kirk Douglas in Lust for Life.

    kd1.png?w=616&h=462

    I personally prefer the 1991 film Van Gogh and prefer Jacques Dutronc in the role.

    I think oscar winners can be easily replaced.  It would be interesting to replace James Stewart with Spencer Tracy (who performed the role on Broadway) in The Philadelphia Story, Broderick Crawford with John Wayne in All the King's Men, Judy Holliday with Marilyn Monroe in Born Yesterday and Olivia De Havailland with an equally good but distinctly less beautiful actress in The Heiress.  I wonder if instead of choosing Tony Perkins, Hitchcock had chosen one of the other Golden Globe winners for New Star of the Year, like John Kerr or James Garner.

  18. theyshootpictures.com top 1000 movies

    The Colour of Pomegranates  Sergei Parajanov, Soviet Union #231

    My Night at Maud's  Eric Rohmer, France #264

    Army of Shadows  Jean-Pierre Melville, France #389

    The Sorrow and the Pity  Marcel Ophuls, France #451

    The Damned  Luchino Visconti, Italy #524

    Fellini Satyricon  Federico Fellini, Italy #580

    Antonio das Mortes  Rocha Glauber, Brazil #635

    Constantin Costa-Gavras, France #772

    Jonathan Rosenbaum top 1000 movies

    *L'amour fou  Jacques Rivette, France
    La femme infidele  Claude Chabrol, France
    Katzelmacher  Rainer Werner Fassbinder, West Germany
    Ma nuit chez Maud  Eric Rohmer, France

    An asterisk (*) means that the movie is one of Rosenbaum's 100 favorite movies.  Note that dates are not exact.

     

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  19. 5 minutes ago, LawrenceA said:

    This is very premature, seeing as how we're just entering October, but I was wondering if anyone has any 2018 movies that they've seen so far this year that they'd recommend, or are likely to appear on their year-end list?

    Skate Kitchen

    Isle of Dogs

    Sorry to Bother You

    • Like 1
  20. Yet again, three movies this week.  Kiki's Delivery Service is a charming, inventive delightful Miyazaki film dealing, as his movies often do, with the struggles of a young girl as she strives towards maturity.  The only complication being that she's a witch who goes places on her broom.  The apparently European city she lives in stunningly beautiful.  The only slight problem is that it pales slightly in comparison to other Miyazaki movies.  *Corpus Callosum is a strange experimental, non narrative film by avant-garde filmmaker Michael Snow.  It's hard to describe.  It mostly occurs in two places:  in an office and apparently the living room of one of the characters.  While life elapses weird things happen, some are Melies like manipulations of the movie, other more advanced manipulations of film.  I thought it was interesting, but it's not surprising that others wouldn't.  Ismael's Ghosts is a movie about a movie director whose relationship is interrupted when his wife suddenly appears out of the blue after completely vanishing 21 years ago.  This is a complex, rich film with Marion Cotillard giving an excellent performance as the wife and Charlotte Gainsborough also good as the girlfriend.  I suppose it would have been better if the movie had been more about them and not about the crisis that nearly wrecks the movie the director Mathieu Amalric is making.  But it's still fairly interesting.

  21. 7 hours ago, LawrenceA said:

    IMDb has this as a 1971 film, which is what I'm going with, as that was when it was completed and when it premiered.

    A Touch of Zen has a number of versions:  "The film took two years to make and its 1969 Taiwanese release was divided into two parts. After its box office failure, the International Film Company tried recutting the film into a single two-hour feature, which was released in 1971, also to poor reception. The reconstruction of the whole work began in 1973 and premiered at the 1975 Cannes Film Festival, where it became the first non-Mainland Chinese film to win an award at the annual showcase, garnering a technical prize for the restoration."   https://mubi.com/notebook/posts/a-touch-of-zen-king-hu-s-masterful-concoction-of-cinematic-flavors

  22. 1. The Sorrow and the Pity  Marcel Ophuls, France

    2. Constantin Costa-Gavras, Algeria/France

    3. The Colour of Pomegranates  Sergei Parajanov, Soviet Union

    4. Army of Shadows  Jean-Pierre Melville, France

    5. The Milky Way  Luis Bunuel, France/West Germany

    6. A Touch of Zen  King Hu, China (Hong Kong)

    7. The Damned  Luchino Visconti, Italy/West Germany

    8. Boy  Nagisa Oshima, Japan

    • Like 3
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