silent Lon Chaney movie
The Unknown! I love that movie! So twisted and it features young, HOTT Joan Crawford.
I think GF and I are going to see 300 in IMAX this weekend. I've never done the IMAX thing...
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.
silent Lon Chaney movie
The Unknown! I love that movie! So twisted and it features young, HOTT Joan Crawford.
I think GF and I are going to see 300 in IMAX this weekend. I've never done the IMAX thing...
You know who's cool? Jean Gabin.
Kind of like the French Bogart.
And you're thinking, "No! That would be Yves Montand. Or even Belmondo."
But I'm saying Jean Gabin.
Go watch Algiers.
Sometimes, David, you are incomprehensible.
I would say 25% of the time.
That is totally comprehensible!
Jean Gabin! Dude, IMDB is but a fingertap away.
It's not my fault you're a French film ignoramous.
David O. Russell is not an easy person to work for: [link]
Friday quiz from Prof. Irwin Corey:
1) What movie did you have to see multiple times before deciding whether you liked or disliked it?
2) Inaugural entry into the Academy of the Overrated
3) Favorite sly or not-so-sly reference to another film or bit of pop culture within another film.
4) Favorite Michael Powell/Emeric Pressburger movie
5) Your favorite Oscar moment
6) Hugo Weaving or Guy Pearce?
7) Movie that you feel gave you the greatest insight into a world/culture/person/place/event that you had no understanding of before seeing it
8) Favorite Samuel Fuller movie
9) Monica Bellucci or Maria Grazia Cucinotta?
10) What movie can take a nothing day and suddenly make it all seem worthwhile?
11) Conversely, what movie can destroy a day’s worth of good humor just by catching a glimpse of it while channel surfing?
12) Favorite John Boorman movie
13) Warren Oates or Bruce Dern?
14) Your favorite aspect ratio
15) Before he died in 1984, Francois Truffaut once said: “The film of tomorrow will resemble the person who made it.” Is there any evidence that Truffaut was right? Is it Truffaut’s tomorrow yet?
16) Favorite Werner Herzog movie
17) Favorite movie featuring a rampaging, oversized or otherwise mutated beast, or beasts
18) Sandra Bernhard or Sarah Silverman?
19) Your favorite, or most despised, movie cliché
20) Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom-- yes or no?
21) Favorite Nicholas Ray movie
22) Inaugural entry into the Academy of the Underrated
23) Your favorite movie dealing with the subject of television
24) Bruno Ganz or Patrick Bauchau?
25) Your favorite documentary, or non-fiction, film
26) According to Orson Welles, the director’s job is to “preside over accidents.” Name a favorite moment from a movie that seems like an accident, or a unintended, privileged moment. How did it enhance or distract from the total experience of the movie?
27) Favorite Wim Wenders movie
28) Elizabeth Pena or Penelope Cruz?
29) Your favorite movie tag line (Thanks, Jim!)
30) As a reader, filmgoer, or film critic, what do you want from a film critic, or from film criticism? And where do you see film criticism in general headed?
EXTRA CREDIT: Do movies still matter?
Wow... Thought about this a bit, haven't you? Oh, I'm afraid my answers will come off stupidly...while I'm quite a fim fan, I'm not really a cineaste like y'all. Movie that I watched multiple times to decide whether I liked it: L.A. Confidential. On first viewing was still a college feminist and in really wrong headspace for whore-slapping violence. Which I still don't love. But I have come to appreciate the noir sensibility over time, so now I would say I like it. 7. Alison Anders' Mi Vida Loca: I felt like I really got to see a little of what gang-chick life is like, once I let go of my "After-School Special" type programming that waited to see Sad Girl(?) go legit and meet a nice fella or something.ETA2:Least favoirite movie cliche: quite obviously when an impaired person is so simple and genuine that he is instructive to everyone around him, but at the same time, I love the "Barefoot in The Park" cliche where Stuffed Shirt Guy loves Zany Chick, so I guess I'm not completely corn-immune. Movie that brightens my day: It's not great art, but "Clueless" does. Or if I'm in a different mood, "Fargo" movie that kills my good humor: Pretty Woman...Hate the concept, hate the message, hate JR and RG too. Haven't even seen it in fifteen years; that's how much it irks me.
Wow, that's a lot of questions. Let me see...
1) The Searchers. (On the first viewing, I couldn't get over my dislike of Ethan; on subsequent viewings, it's grown into one of the handful of westerns I love)
2) Braveheart
3) The reference to "Seventh Seal" in Woody Allen's "Love and Death"
4) A Matter of Life and Death (which is yet to come out on region 1 DVD. WHHHYYYYY??)
6) Guy Pearce
10) Groundhog Day. (What? It's like comfort food to me.)
12) Excalibur
13) Bruce Dern, mostly because I can't remember who Warren Oates is.
14) *eyeroll*
15) It's Friday 5 PM and I do not have enough brain cells left over to answer this question.
16) Aguirre: The Wrath of God.
17) Aliens
20) YES! Gratuitous heart removal! Monkey brain! What's not to love?
21) Who?
22) CHILDREN OF MEN. (Yes, I'm still bitter it didn't win any Oscar.)
24) Bruno Ganz
25) Touching the Void
26) ....
27) Wings of Desire
28) Elizabeth Pena
1) What movie did you have to see multiple times before deciding whether you liked or disliked it?
Tombstone
2) Inaugural entry into the Academy of the Overrated
Spiderman
6) Hugo Weaving or Guy Pearce?
Guy Pearce.
7) Movie that you feel gave you the greatest insight into a world/culture/person/place/event that you had no understanding of before seeing it
Jeez. The Right Stuff. Princess Mononoke. Amadeus.
9) Monica Bellucci or Maria Grazia Cucinotta?
Bellucci. Or her costumes.
15) Before he died in 1984, Francois Truffaut once said: “The film of tomorrow will resemble the person who made it.” Is there any evidence that Truffaut was right? Is it Truffaut’s tomorrow yet?
I think that FF Coppola's movies resemble him as do Terry Gilliam's.
However, I think the better answer to this is more along the "Garage Kubrick" or YouTube lines, because when only one person is making a movie (including making the actors, making the sets, everything) you get a lot closer to the id.
17) Favorite movie featuring a rampaging, oversized or otherwise mutated beast, or beasts
18) Sandra Bernhard or Sarah Silverman? Neither, but Bernhard if I have to.
19) Your favorite, or most despised, movie cliché Running away from the car down the middle of the road, while looking back.
20) Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom-- yes or no? No.
22) Inaugural entry into the Academy of the Underrated
Grosse Pointe Blank
23) Your favorite movie dealing with the subject of television
Videodrome
25) Your favorite documentary, or non-fiction, film
Fast, Cheap, and Out of Control
28) Elizabeth Pena or Penelope Cruz? Pena
EXTRA CREDIT: Do movies still matter?
Did they ever? I think they matter a lot more now than at any point before the 70s.
I can't even think of responding to the quiz right now, I just wanted to ask David if he meant Pépé le Moko instead of Algiers. Isn't Algiers the remake with Charles Boyer? Or do they call them both Algiers? In which case, that's confusing. Either way, Jean Gabin=cool (and yet at the same time, also hawt).