I saw an ad for
The Island
for the first time this morning, and had to god I thought it was a remake of
Logan's Run
until the title card came along. (I believe there is a remake of
Logan's Run
in the works, anyway, so the hot-iggerant-babes-dystopia genre seems to be having quite the revival.)
This morning I watched
Strangers on a Train.
How did I not know that the classic shot of "everybody in the audience look that way, except for the one creepy person in the middle who keeps looking at you" comes from this movie? How did I not know that the denouement involved a carousel gone berserk? If I had known, the movie would have been higher on the Netflix queue.
I'll say this for Hitchcock: his psychology may often have been overwrought cockamamie, but he knew how to come up with an interesting new visual.
I love
Strangers on a Train.
Tit for tat.
Hee. From Salon's review of "Unleashed":
But director Louis Leterrier trusts Li to carry the moment, and he does, inventing a wholly new type of character: He's the first Dickensian orphan action star.
"Please, sir, may I kill some more?"
How did I not know that the classic shot of "everybody in the audience look that way, except for the one creepy person in the middle who keeps looking at you" comes from this movie?
I think of that as a Felllini thing.
I saw an ad for The Island for the first time this morning, and had to god I thought it was a remake of Logan's Run until the title card came along.
I'm still not convinced it isn't.
I'll say this for Hitchcock: his psychology may often have been overwrought cockamamie, but he knew how to come up with an interesting new visual.
I think the key to understanding Hitchcock is that the psychology was there only to get to the next interesting visual. Hitchcock came up with the set pieces - it was the writer's job to join the dots. Sometimes it worked out better than others, but oh those dots.
My one film class was on Hitchcock. I definitely remember the images and feelings much more than the McGuffins for most of the films.
So, I saw Episode III yesterday. I enjoyed it. Best of the prequels, still not as good as the originals, IMO.
However, the big letdown for me was
Darth Vader lurching around screaming "NOOOOOOOO!"
which seemed incredibly cheesy and ruined what should have been a dramatic highpoint.
I sqw III yesterday, too. Like you, I liked it more than the other two prequels, but I still thought the dialogiue was cliched and wooden, and Hayden Christenson SUCKED.
Loved the
four arms with four light sabers of General Grevious. Very cool.
I saw it again over the weekend, and still think it's better than Jedi. The total lack of Ewoks is a BIG plus. (And Ewan's performance, odd as it is, has really grown on me. Poor repressed Obi-wan.)
However, the big letdown for me was
That was a very misguided moment. I think he was trying to
call back to Luke's "Nooooooooooooo!!!!" when he finds out Vader is his father, but somebody really should have mentioned that Vader in the suit needs to NOT LOOK THAT STUPID. Ever.