wrod. Jackie Brown was good too, but since then? we've grown estranged.
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.
I really hate the facile nihilism of Trainspotting or, for that matter, Fight Club, especially when that sort of adolescent anti-philosophy is glorified as if it were actually about something.
That is the complete opposite of how I see those movies. For me, they expose the non-utility of nihilism while accepting that the superficial appeal is actually appealing.
That is the complete opposite of how I see those movies. For me, they expose the non-utility of nihilism while accepting that the superficial appeal is actually appealing.
Very well put. That's exactly how I feel about those two movies. I think that can come across to people as trying to have it both ways, but I didn't ultimately feel that way in either of those cases.
Dear Disney -
Return to Oz.
All I'm sayin.
Wait - I'm also saying shut your piehole.
Luv - The Empress.
I loved Return to Oz.
I realized recently that the last four movies I saw in a theater were Dark Knight, Terminator: Salvation, Surrogates, and Inglourious Basterds. So I'm into... explosions.
ME TOO!
I love Fight Club.
I am mixed on Kubrick, I think. I love Dr. Strangelove and A Clockwork Orange, but I'm with Amy on The Shining, I didn't "get" 2001, and I have no idea what I was supposed to get out of Eyes Wide Shut.
I have no idea what I was supposed to get out of Eyes Wide Shut.
Well, possibly a hilarious critique of Tom Cruise's closeted life, but I'm not sure how official that was in Kubrick's agenda.
I have no idea what I was supposed to get out of Eyes Wide Shut.I think the "Here's something humans do. Isn't that interesting/funny/terrible?" thing applies.
All this had me poking around on the Kubrick site for a while tonight, and this seemed relevant to the misanthropy discussion:
[A]s Kubrick himself remarked to Gene Siskel, "You don't have to make Frank Capra movies to like people."
I would have liked to see Kubrick's A.I.
I liked Spielberg's version okay, but I would have liked it more if it had ended with David at the bottom of the ocean wishing for the Blue Fairy to make him a real boy.
The Beast was way better than the movie anyway.