I don't think classics and perfect are the same--I think Princess Bride is a classic, and it's hardly perfect.
Willow ,'Potential'
Buffista Movies 7: Brides for 7 Samurai
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Excalibur is frequently ludicrous, but it's got a visionary craziness that stamps it 100% the work of John Boorman (for similar cases, see also Zardoz and Exorcist II - visually lavish but WTF and "you've GOT to be kidding me" on so much more). Whereas, for example, great as it is, I think Deliverance could have been made by someone else (doing the book was pretty much going to produce the results you saw on the screen). Boorman certainly brought a lot to the party (so to speak), but that movie is also very much James Dickey.
I should also say, I'd rather see the work of a nutball visionary than a competent journeyman any day, much as I appreciate the skill that a journeyman director brings to the job.
Deadwood fans: We just watched the last two episodes last night. Did they know the show hadn't been renewed when they were shooting? Was that ever mentioned? I'm feeling like that wasn't what I expected for a series finale, and yet it works anyway, given the sort of iconic last shots of most of the characters.
Deadwood fans: We just watched the last two episodes last night. Did they know the show hadn't been renewed when they were shooting? Was that ever mentioned? I'm feeling like that wasn't what I expected for a series finale, and yet it works anyway, given the sort of iconic last shots of most of the characters.
Originally there was going to be a fourth season, which was reduced down to a TV movie (or movies), which HBO ultimately never came through on, so they were given hope they'd do more, but I suspect they also knew it might never come to pass.
Damn that stupid John from Cincinnati. Want more Deadwood!
Oh, exactly, Glam. I haven't fallen that hard for a show in a long, long time. Every characterization and portrayal was so dead on, and there were just so many characters I wanted to see more of. Not to mention the sheer poetry of the dialogue.
::crawls away to grieve::
I lurved Excalibur when I was 15. Two friends and I watched it so often I still know the spell to bring the dragon's breath. When I saw it on sale for $11 recently I snapped it up and ran home to watch it. What a rude awakening that was. See also: The Prince of Pennsylvania.
I don't think classics and perfect are the same
Sorry, that was horribly unclear of me. I probably should have put the last sentence first. I didn't mean classic = perfect, because then almost nothing would qualify.
From googling around today, apparently a lot of people do think it's great, so maybe I'm wrong about that.
Laga, I'm with you, I can't remember if I saw Excalibur first in junior high or high school, but I really loved it. Now, not so much. I don't think it needs to be redone though.
Question: is there a movie you'd really LIKE to see remade. What would it be?
I would really like the Star Wars prequels completely redone. That is probably my fondest hope.
I saw District 9 this afternoon.
Wow.
Marvelous CGI that was not jaw-dropping only because I didn't remember it was CGI until after the movie was over.
Several twists I didn't see coming.
And a grim, cynical, and sadly realistic portrayal of how awful humans can be.