Buffista Movies 7: Brides for 7 Samurai
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.
Ahhh, I love Janet McTeer. Thanks to Kathy finding
Precious Bane
on YouTube (it's been infamously unavailable on DVD), I've reacquainted myself with Janet McTeer's awesomeness.
Here I present for all the girls who like film of girls kissing girls scenes from
Scenes From a Marriage
featuring Janet as Vita Sackville-West making the quite amorous, delectable kissing with her lover Violet Trefusis. Romantic girl kissing here.
Here's a section from the middle of Precious Bane if you're curious where you can see Janet as Prue Sarn (who suffers from a hare-lip). You get to see her play off the young Clive Owen (who plays her cruel brother) and off the man she loves, Kester. Rural romance here. It is a very affecting performance in one of the most romantic stories ever.
John Bowe is so frickin' hot as Kestor Woodseaves!! Love that scene of him and Prue watching the dragonflies.
"You and me, Prue, we mun go towards one another, not away." Sigh--so romantic!
re: EFNY and metaphor and all that.
I know people who object to anything remotely SF/Fantasy et al. just on the ground of "unrealistic." Some are simply offended at stories that can't be based purely in the known world, even the projections of a possible future. But I can make an argument that EFNY can be reflected in how New Orleans was dealt with post-Katrina--block it off, don't allow anyone in or out, leave it to welter in its own juices. And there were people who objected to that "Batman" comic series where Gotham had the humongous earthquake and was then cut off as unsaveable as being unrealistic.
Paging Jilli!
Gothic & Lolita Psycho.
It's a horror movie!
"A bloody adventure of an avenging Gothic Lolita girl! ¶ With an umbrella she makes pools of blood, avenging her mother! ¶ Blood sprays and flesh flies! In violence and outrageous gags! ¶ Finally an event movie that will leave the world delirious! ¶¶ I pronounce thee all innocent... so help me God. ¶¶ TOKYO, the Year 20XX A.D. ¶ Yuki (played by Rina Akiyama) lives peacefully with her father Jiro (played by Yurei Yanagi) and mother Kayako (played by Fumie Nakajima). ¶ It all ends suddenly when a 5-member assassin group slaughters Kayako and cripples Jiro. ¶ Why did they kill her mother? What did the assassins want of them? ¶ Yuki turns into a merciless, remorseless angel of vengeance, clad in Goth/Lolita fashion, seeking to uncover the mystery. ¶ One by one she kills the assassins... until she meets an imagination-defying destiny. ¶¶ Go Ohara, the man whose expertise as an action stunt choreographer was used in Chanbara Beauty and Death Trance, has pushed the boundaries of genre with his latest movie! ¶ Yoshihiro Nishimura and his team of special effects artisans were employed for the gore and special makeup effects. Here they outdo their previous international hits, Machine Girl, Tokyo Gore Police and Vampire Girl vs. Frankenstein Girl - the international film festival favorite that excited audiences in over 30 countries. Also engaged was Tsuyoshi Kazuno, a visual effects wizard who worked on genre movies such as RoboGeisha and Dogoo, the Prehistoric Girl. Gothic Lolita Psycho is non-stop with Ohara-style gut-wrenching action stunts in Japanese blood-spattering gore tradition."
Check out the killer parasol.
Hmm. The movie doesn't sound that interesting to me, but I *do* covet that parasol.
Is that from the same people who brought us that movie with the bleeding buildings? Was that RoboGeisha?
I rewatched
Inception,
and am now more confused. I was paying attention to the costuming, especially Arthur's, and when they go to
Paris to recruit Ariadne,
there's a shot of him walking in to the
warehouse and pulling up a lawn chair, and he's wearing what he wore in the plane,
but then when we find out that
Dom and Ariadne have been dreaming and they wake up, he's in a three piece suit in the warehouse, they're on lawn chairs like the one he pulled up.
I don't get what happened there.
Other than that, I love it and want to pet it lots. It felt shorter this time through, even.
During my second viewing, I had a little bit of the
Batman Begins
experience where I became more aware that the first half of the movie is a little slow and exposition-heavy, but it's not as boring. There's already so much in play after the first fifteen minutes; I love how the
spectre of Mal
hangs over every frame, even when
she's not there.
ita, I just figured that Arthur, being the point man,
scouted and set up the warehouse.
The shot where Cobb and Ariadne
wake up in the warehouse is just later on
. Or am I missing what confused you?
Smonster, I thought that Ariadne and Cobb had already started speaking before we saw Arthur go
into the warehouse,
hence my confusion.