Buffista Movies 7: Brides for 7 Samurai
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I'm tivoing Brewster McCloud, which I've never seen. But I'm still up, for some reason, too.
My three movies as guest programmer for TCM would be: F For Fake, Los Angeles Plays Itself, and The World Of Apu (the last because it is sadly unavailable on DVD in this country).
It's odd, I'm looking through reviews of
Brewster McCloud
(and there are a bunch of newish ones since it just debuted on DVD via Warner Archives) and they all emphasize how strange and weird it is.
Which, it's not particularly, if you know anything about theater (like, I don't "Rhinocerous" or "Tooth of Crime" or "Travesties.") or any three episode run of
Arrested Development.
And certainly by the standards of early seventies film it's not so astonishingly outre.
It's just a bit whacky, and a bit easy with the metaphor. It parodies
Bullit
for chrissake, how hard can it be to follow?
Sure Sally Kellerman has scars where her wings used to be, but c'mon
Wings of Desire,
and
Kevin Smith already covered that. Not to mention
Constantine.
(the last because it is sadly unavailable on DVD in this country).
Huh. Seems like Criterion would be all over that shit.
What three movies would you pick if you were guest programmer on Turner Classic Movies?
"Der Letzte Mann / The Last Laugh" - classic F.W. Murnau from 1924, at a time when the German film industry was a serious rival to Hollywood, and the biggest film studio in the world was in Berlin. Pure cinema: manages to tell its story with virtually no intertitles, and famous for its use of subjective and "entfesselt" - literally, "unchained" - camera, 50 years before the invetion of the Steadicam. Towering performance by Emil Jannings. Murnau also manages to make the best of the silly happy ending forced on him by the studio (some things never change) by exposing it for what it is.
For a bit of levity in between:
"Gold Diggers of 1933" - Busby Berkley does the Great Depression; a blast of joy, ridiculousness and sadness all rolled into one. I've been having a hell of a time trying to get my hands on a Region 2 DVD to show this to my class, but finally managed to locate a copy with Spanish subtitles. Better than nothing. Marvel at the gorgeousness of Ginger Roger's face in extreme close-up singing, "We're in the Money" (also a good corrective to anyone who claims that Americans don't understand irony).
"Ace in the Hole" - also still absurdly hard to get hold of, one of the best Billy Wilder movies and Kirk Douglas performances there is. I've only ever seen it once (on TV years ago) but remember being amazed by the depth of its cynicism and the prescience of its message.
Thanks, David, that was fun!
Thanks, David, that was fun!
So was your list! It's like you were just waiting for the opportunity to program on cable.
I'm boggled that
Ace in the Hole
and
Golddiggers
are hard to find. They seem to be on TV over here frequently.
I love Jan Sterling in
Ace in the Hole.
Reporter: "Do you want to pray?"
Jan: "Kneeling bags my nylons."
It's like you were just waiting for the opportunity to program on cable.
The only problem being I don't actually
get
TCM over here....
But yes, it's incredible to me in this day and age how some movies can still be so hard to get a hold of.
Corwood, the Apu Trilogy is easily available over here, maybe I can swap you for "Ace in the Hole"...?
But yes, it's incredible to me in this day and age how some movies can still be so hard to get a hold of.
Heh, this is why I've been hitting the Grey Market this year.
I just scored a cool, very late sixties mod French movie titled
Erotissimo
from ModCinema.com.
Also, you can find a lot of stuff on All Clues No Solutions and similar sites.
I'm boggled that Ace in the Hole and Golddiggers are hard to find. They seem to be on TV over here frequently.
Not here, or at least - not on non-subscription channels.
Edit: my problem is Region 2. I know there are ways round this, but I need DVDs I can show in class (using ancient DVD players) and possibly lend to students. Also poverty (can't really afford to spend $$$$s on one single DVD).
What three movies would you pick if you were guest programmer on Turner Classic Movies?
Lavender Hill Mob,
George Cukor's
A Double Life,
and
Faisons un rĂªve
(because it's truly a crime that Sacha Guitry is not better known--his creativity and delivery was genius).
Le Voyage Dans La Lune, Testament of Dr. Mabuse, Alexander Nevsky.