Buffista Movies 3: Panned and Scanned
A place to talk about movies--Old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
Except for all the lurkers who suport me in email.
Also the fact it's nowhere near the AFI top 100 -- if the vast majority of its viewers adored it viscerally, it would be a lot more in the cultural consciousness, don't you think? Whereas, I don't know many people outside of film devotees who have seen it, and of those, I don't know many who have loved it, except those who have spoken up here.
Yeah, but it plays at revival houses all the time, which implies that there is some kind of audience for it.
I've never seen Casablanca, as I've been holding out for a big-screen showing to have my first experience of the movie.
I'm not sure how the big screen improves Casablanca (though I haven't seen it in several years, so I may be missing something) -- but if you have the opportunity soon, don't let me stand in your way!
BTW, TCM is doing A Star A Day film festivals all through August. So if you're a fan of one of the 31 lucky stars, get the VCR or TiVo ready! (Plug: Jean Harlow is the star for August 11 -- and since she and Clark Gable were a popular team, he also stars in several movies that day!)
I've never seen Casablanca, as I've been holding out for a big-screen showing to have my first experience of the movie. Actually, the Orpheum is holding one August 20th, so since I'm going to be tapped as a chauffer to my cousin's graduation the next day, I may see if I can line up a date for a nostalgic night at the theatre.
If you can ever time a trip to Boston (Cambridge, technically) at the right time, the Brattle theater runs it at least once or twice a year. That's where the cult started, at least from everything I've read. I've never made it to a showing myself, but some day I will.
Also the fact it's nowhere near the AFI top 100 -- if the vast majority of its viewers adored it viscerally, it would be a lot more in the cultural consciousness, don't you think? Whereas, I don't know many people outside of film devotees who have seen it,
It would be pretty difficult for a vast audience to adore it viscerally if only film devotees see it.
Don't forget, it was significantly re-edited and re-released only a few years ago.
Like, 5 or 6 years ago now, right? 1998 or 9.
It would be pretty difficult for a vast audience to adore it viscerally if only film devotees see it.
What makes a regular not-film-lover person go see a movie? Buzz, someone dragging her, a liking for one of the actors, something else? (Actually, I don't really know -- I suspect there's some magical confluence of "what I'm in the mood for" and "what I've heard about this movie" and "whether I'm willing to risk my 2 hours and $10".)
I think, at this point, the film has a particular film-devotee-smell to it, that may be a bit forbidding. (I for one haven't seen a lot of Da Classix because they feel like homework, and I'd rather watch them because I want to rather than because I have to.)
I saw the movie because I was working on a thesis about film noir, and I liked
The Lady From Shanghai
a lot.
Spidey 2 wrecked me in a very, very good way.
Huh. Well, that's promising.
t makes note
Maybe this weekend. It won't make me carsick, right?
See, I loved the opening shot in The Player, which is not only one of those long, long tracking shots that set up the whole movie, but actually references Touch of Evil's long, long tracking shot that sets up the whole movie. It's just brutally meta.
What's great about it is that not only does The Player make fun of long tracking shots, it also makes fun of the people like us who discuss them.
The only good thing about Forrest Gump is that it set up the deeply funny (to me) joke that one can make during The Two Towers when the Ents march on Isengard: "Run, forest, run!!!"
Ahem.
I love Citizen Kane on such a immediate visual level that it's hard for me to expound on it past how freakin' gorgeous it is to me. It almost looks like a painting, it's so damn beautiful. I don't mean in a Moulin Rouge visual crack way, I mean the interplay of the shadow and the film and the... Oh. So pretty.
Once, in college, we watched it with no audio, just to *look* at it. It *is* so freaking gorgeous.
I thought it was a neat little examination of existentialism, in the trappings of a gory horror movie. I also appreciated the inventiveness of using the same set over and over again, without it becoming boring. (I wonder how the actors felt about it, though).
Exactly, Jeff. IMDb trivia says they planned on shooting it in order, but then they realized how long it took to change the lighting, so instead they did all the same-colored rooms together, and amusingly enough, the crew became very agitated and aggressive on Red Room Days.
I love Citizen Kane on such a immediate visual level that it's hard for me to expound on it past how freakin' gorgeous it is to me. It almost looks like a painting, it's so damn beautiful. I don't mean in a Moulin Rouge visual crack way, I mean the interplay of the shadow and the film and the... Oh. So pretty.
It's been a long time, but I still remember that shot where the camera's panning up and the shot goes from being a model to a set, but there's a moment of darkness in between them where the edit becomes seamless. And then there were those times where he put the camera underneath the floor to make everyone look bigger. (And does anyone remember the
Tiny Toons
version? It was great.)
hayden, again, all very good points. That's just not getting me going, but I should give it a try later on with a DVD that doesn't skip, and when I can be more attentive. If
The Crow
doesn't come in the mail today, I may watch it again tonight. Cause clearly I'm missing something.
The only good thing about Forrest Gump is that it set up the deeply funny (to me) joke that one can make during The Two Towers when the Ents march on Isengard: "Run, forest, run!!!"
The other good joke there is "The Ents go marching two by two, hurrah, hurrah."