I really enjoyed The Old Guard, even though I found a lot of the tropes pretty predictable
Same. I am enough of a "Charlize Theron saves the world even though she is so. fucking. tired." genre fan to be pretty forgiving of tropeyness.
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I really enjoyed The Old Guard, even though I found a lot of the tropes pretty predictable
Same. I am enough of a "Charlize Theron saves the world even though she is so. fucking. tired." genre fan to be pretty forgiving of tropeyness.
She even drives through the desert!! Sorry, thought that might be a spoiler...
I loved the Eurovision movie in that it was exactly what I wanted to watch at the time I watched it. And I've been listening to the songs on repeat.
Palm Springs is up to the hype. And I am no Samberg fan, he's more subtle than a lot I have seen him in and the female lead (the mother from HIMYM) is lovely.
Yeah, I really enjoyed it. I love a film where the male and female leads fall in love by spending time together and actually doing stuff, rather than locking eyes across the room.
Instead of watching stuff on Criterion Channel (I guess I'll catch up on Godard or Aguirre, The Wrath of God at some other time, haha), I have been watching ALL the Studio Ghibli flicks on HBO Max for the last few weeks, subs first obviously but also some selected dubs for fun comparison. Miyazaki is good for calming the brain worms in these uncertain times, I find.
Favourite Miyazaki unknown to me previously: Porco Rosso
Most joyous marriage of the music and the visual: Ponyo riding the waves to Joe Hisaich's take on the Ride of the Valkyrie
The one 14-year-old Vonnie would have liked the best had she seen it at that impressionable age: Castle in the Sky
Coolest morally ambiguous antagonist: Lady Eboshi from Princess Mononoke
Best all-around cast of dub performances: Howl's Moving Castle, mostly for Billy Crystal's Calcifer, but with a particular shout-out to Jean fucking Simmons, the screen icon of my heart, for being such rad Old Sophie
I haven't yet gotten around to seeing the 2 recent films that have been highly praised: The Wind Rises and The Tale of Princess Kaguya -- hope to catch them soon. And I'm saving the rewatch of my fave, Spirited Away, until I'm done with the rest of the collection.
Honestly, I'd probably keep paying monthly HBO subscription fee if even Ghibli films were the only ones I watch (and rewatch) on the service. What a treat.
Instead of watching stuff on Criterion Channel (I guess I'll catch up on Godard or Aguirre, The Wrath of God at some other time, haha)
My thoughts exactly. I started to watch Vivre sa vie and decided life was too short and watched The Big Country (speaking of Jean fucking Simmons) instead. What a glorious movie. Definitely going to be pretty high up on my eventual western rankings.
Probably will catch a few of the expiring Frances Marions later today.
Favourite Miyazaki unknown to me previously: Porco Rosso
Oh yeah, that's one of our favorites and most rewatched.
The one 14-year-old Vonnie would have liked the best had she seen it at that impressionable age: Castle in the Sky
Both of my kids really glommed onto this one on first exposure in their pre-teens.
I'll note that of the Miyazaki films I've gone back and gotten on Blu-Ray, Castle In the Sky is the most revelatory new print.
I started to watch Vivre sa vie and decided life was too short and watched The Big Country (speaking of Jean fucking Simmons) instead. What a glorious movie. Definitely going to be pretty high up on my eventual western rankings.
The Big Country is just splendid. All that amazing scenery and the unforgettable music, plus Gregory Peck being a self-possessed, principled dreamboat. *sigh* And one of the few genuinely great vehicles for Simmons -- I feel like Hollywood didn't know what to do with her outside period epics.
Probably will catch a few of the expiring Frances Marions later today.
I really liked Secrets if you haven't seen that yet -- it's got some period-specific gender issues that made me cringe, but the central performances by Mary Pickford and Leslie Howard are very fine.
Oh yeah, that's one of our favorites and most rewatched
I haven't even heard of Porco Rosso until this month and was gobsmacked by how much I loved it. I mean, it's about a flying pig pilot for cryin' out loud. It's such an interesting mix of old Hollywood swashbuckling type charm, some anime-specific wacky shenanigans, plus this melancholic streak a mile wide, which somehow all work together. That flashback to the line of dead pilots in their planes ascending to the sky -- gosh, that hit me hard. Kinda reminded me of the arrival-at-heaven's gate scene from A Matter of Life and Death, which I might have mentioned once or twice is like my favourite movie of all time.
Both of my kids really glommed onto this one on first exposure in their pre-teens.
I mean, that movie has *everything*. Magical amulets! Floating lost cities! Sad giant robots programmed for destruction but secretly want to just look after local flora and fauna! SKY PIRATES! What's not to love?
I was dubious about Porco Ross before I watched it, but yeah, won me over.
I am not rushing right out to subscribe to HBO Max so I can watch Ghibli and I would like a gold star for that. Although I seem to recall seeing a free three months offer somewhere that I may check out...