I also loved The Descent and one of my hobbies is finding people who know nothing about it and getting them to watch it before they find about about the "chud". I think it would have been ten times scarier if I'd have gotten to watch it unspoiled.
Buffista Movies 6: lies and videotape
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 went to see Nightwatching, the new Peter Greenaway film last night. It starred Martin Freeman as Rembrandt, and told the story of the mysteries (and alleged consiracy) portrayed the painting the Nightwatch. It was incredibly text heavy for a Greenaway film and I found it a little hard to follow. (While Shakespeare was quoted several times, Greenaway hasn't caught the knack of calling a character by name when first addressed, and I was often wondering who was who.) It was quite sumptuous, but not as much as some of his other. It dragged for a while in the middle, but the ending was quite brilliant. One shocker was that someone I went to theatre school with was in the freaking film! I guess it was a Canadian/Dutch/English/Polish co-production and thusly had a representative cast.
Greenaway was present and spoke before and after the film. He does love to talk, and I wouldn't be at all surprised to learn that he lectures somewhere. He spoke at length about Rembrandt (who he doesn't actually care for), about how film is incredibly dependent on text for a visual medium (he called LOTR and Harry Potter films illustrated books) and how he'd like to see that change, and he admonished Canada for not having any digitatal projection in cinemas.
I guess he gave quite a provocative talk at the art College on Friday night, which I was sad to have missed. My seatmates told me only two things about it (I was surrounded by art school teachers.) That he said he couldn't stand Mike Leigh's films and that he believed no one should be shooting on film anymore.
Oh, and in Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince News, Jim Broadbent has been cast as Horace Slughorn. Which is kind of perfect. I think they might be running out of great British actors to cast in these films.
Darn, I was holding out hope for Bob Hoskins. But Broadbent would be good, too, if a bit tall for the role.
I think it would have been ten times scarier if I'd have gotten to watch it unspoiled.
I was actually unspoiled for that aspect of it.
I knew I'd read good comments about it here, so I know I'm going against the grain, but, no, this movie didn't redeem the director for Dog Soldiers one bit. Cruising around the series of interconnected tubes to recall why I wanted to see it, I discovered a theory that Sara kills them all. The "It's all in her head" theory. While this would give meaning to the movie, it's implausible (because in the theory it's the discovery of Juno and whazzisface's relationship that sends Sara over the edge), but it does indicate an audience desire for meaning.
Reading your LJ, though, P-C, reconciled me to one aspect of it: I thought the message was that if you commit adultery you should be incapacitated and left to Death By CHUD. But the interpretation that Sara did a Bad Thing and thus had to be punished is better.
that movie has ruined the word "citrus" for me.
New Coen Brothers movie trailer: [link]
The Descent is one of the best horror movies in recent years. I just posted about it earlier today, as it happens, on Whedonesque. [link]
This looks neat--Pixar Short Film Collection, Vol. 1.
New Coen Brothers movie trailer: [link]
I am intrigued.
::adds to list with Eastern Promises::