Thieves Like Us (now on DVD!)
ooh I've never seen that one!
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.
Thieves Like Us (now on DVD!)
ooh I've never seen that one!
It's up there with McCabe & Mrs. Miller in my not-at-all-humble opinion. I mean, Bonnie & Clyde wasn't a bad movie, right? But Thieves Like Us makes it seem like a crappy movie in retrospect. It's not just as sweet and light as Altman ever was, but it's also a realistic movie about desperate bank-robbing fugitives in Depression-era Mississippi. How could that possibly work? I've seen it 4-5 times and still don't know, but it somehow works overtime.
I would put M*A*S*H among Altman's greats. Just wipe the TV Series (which I liked a lot, buts it's a whole different vibe) out of your mind. The film is a really good dark political comedy with a great array of characters and performances.
Ratatouille has really stuck with me. I'm seriously in love with this movie. I think right now one of my favorite parts was the villain who becomes a hero aspect of it. It's bringing me great joy. I even got a little weepy at the Anton Ego flashes back to being a little boy at the doorway with skinned knees segment.
This movie, in ways that I'm still working out, absolutely captures that special, intimate relationship we all have with food. I have to see it again soon.
I don't like M*A*S*H as much as Robin, but I can see why some people do. And I really hope I didn't make anyone feel bad about not loving Kurosawa, because people for damn sure have wildly varying experiences of cinema (or any other aesthetics) depending on what brought them to that moment and what happens during their experience. The fact that my opinions are clearly and objectively the best and most infallable opinions ever shouldn't detract from anyone's ability to tell me I'm full of horseshit.
Sean, Emmett and I just got back form Ratatouille.
Really enjoyed it, though I'm not sure about the villain-to-hero thing you allude to. Is that the father? Or Anton? I too was moved by Anton's flashback, as well as the interesting speech he gets about the function of criticism at the end. Okay, now I'm sure you mean Anton as the villain-redeemed.
I also liked the realism of the staff quitting. No way they're working in Rat Kitchen. And Linguini *almost* becomes worthy of Collette's affection by his mensch-like defense of his Little Chef.
I also liked that Remy and Linguini can't talk to each other.
Too bad I won't ever get a Happy Meals toy with rats on it, though.
I watched Kurosawa on a 21" screen.
I wonder if Ratatouille will lead to an increase in pet rat ownership? It's certainly led to an increase in my desire to cook ratatouille.
It's certainly led to an increase in my desire to cook ratatouille.
I just saw a thing on the news about how ratatouille orders are up at French restaurants since the movie came out.
I just saw a thing on the news about how ratatouille orders are up at French restaurants since the movie came out.
Wasn't the ratatouille in the movie a tarted up variation on some arabic dish? Still ratatouille but way fancier.
Though I am curious to see how it's being reviewed in France...