I do not think I am a Malick person, as The Thin Red Line is one of the few movies after which I honestly wanted my time back. (The only other one that comes to mind is Troy, though that may have been only my money, at the very least.)
Buffista Movies 5: Development Hell
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.
I do not think I am a Malick person, as The Thin Red Line is one of the few movies after which I honestly wanted my time back.
You and me both, baby. (I think we've talked about that before, haven't we?)
At least 1 full hour could have been trimmed from the movie if those Long Brooding Shots of Jesus Caviezel were cut out.
I don't think I even had the presence of mind to fall asleep.
And when it finally ends, there's this lovely shot zooming out over the water, and it would be a great place to end the movie, but no. Random shot of an alligator, random shot of another alligator, random shot of a tree.
It's like the pretentious cinematography version of "Llama llama duck."
I'd say pretentious yes, pointless no.
I do not think I am a Malick person, as The Thin Red Line is one of the few movies after which I honestly wanted my time back.
You and me both, baby. (I think we've talked about that before, haven't we?)
You, PC AND my DH are as one.
I know this is late, but I just saw Brokeback Mountain for the first time. I am sharing rentals with my best friend, but I think I may recommend she NOT see this one, as I sobbed out loud for about the last 1/4 of the movie. I am not sure I can make it through the extras.
Also, the sheep are cute!
At the risk of sounding sycophantic: David Ehrenstein (who we [mostly] all know and [occasionally] love) now has two DVD commentaries to his name. Both are part of the "Masters of Cinema" series by Eureka Video.
The first was the Nicholas Ray movie, The Savage Innocents, [ [link] ]
The second is an 80th Anniversary special edition of F. W. Murnau's Faust. [ [link] ]
Sophia, many of the sheep (in the wide shots) are digital. CGI Sheep! I find that entertaining
Finally saw The Aristocrats. Interesting on a whole lotta levels, not least being that the filmmakers, for all that they've been in showbiz, had clearly never made a movie before, not even in college.
One of the few DVDs I've bothered to watch again with the commentary track on.