I'm really glad I waited til I could see Casablanca for the first time on the big screen. It was so nice seeing it as it was meant to be seen, in a classic old theater.
Mal ,'Ariel'
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.
The Marx Brothers' comedic routines were honed in front of a live audience, so watching their movies alone makes the pacing seem slow, where if you watch them in a theater full of people they are timed perfectly so lines happen right at the end of laughs and you don't miss anything.
I have ginormous adoration for the Marx Brothers. My sense of humor trends towards the absurd.
The Marx Brothers' comedic routines were honed in front of a live audience, so watching their movies alone makes the pacing seem slow, where if you watch them in a theater full of people they are timed perfectly so lines happen right at the end of laughs and you don't miss anything.
I get that. Some comedies are much better in theater.
Lawrence Of Arabia is my One True You Have To See It On A Big Screen movie. Scale is so important to that movie.
I would tend to agree; however, I first saw the movie, in letterbox format, on TNT. So it was even tinier than if it had been pan and scan on TV -- and even so I dug it.
I mean, I dug it even more, seeing it on a big screen (key for me was realizing the Brattle would play the whole overture before turning on the visual part of the movie at all), but it was not impossible to see its importance on a tiny screen in a bedroom in Wallingford, CT.
There's a new Marx Brothers DVD set out, btw. (All of their MGM movies, IIRC.)
I think that if you are the kind of person who rants against pan-n-scan, you'll be able to appreciate Lawrence of Arabia on a television. If you're the kind of person who doesn't like those annoying black bars on the screen, then you'll need to see it in a theatre. t /unrepentent widescreen snob
She'd be better with the dialog. And seriously, I'd love to see Queen L. and Hugh in a movie together.
Huh. *THAT* would be interesting. At least, to my comic-ignorant senses. Could she pull it off?
On the other hand, I rewatched This Is Spinal Tap over the weekend because it was a Komedy Klassic. It still doesn't make me laugh.
oh, thank God, I thought I was alone...