Does anybody else miss the Mayor? 'I just want to be a big snake.'

Xander ,'End of Days'


Buffista Movies Across the 8th Dimension!

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.


megan walker - Feb 09, 2022 9:12:13 pm PST #3086 of 3455
"What kind of magical sunshine and lollipop world do you live in? Because you need to be medicated."-SFist

A lot of the Indie Spirits just recently became accessible or aren't yet. This is a helpful compilation of where you can see various Oscars noms: [link]


sj - Feb 10, 2022 7:56:47 am PST #3087 of 3455
"There are few hours in life more agreeable than the hour dedicated to the ceremony known as afternoon tea."

I've only seen The Lost Daughter and Black Widow from that list. Several others are on my to watch list.


megan walker - Feb 10, 2022 11:27:19 pm PST #3088 of 3455
"What kind of magical sunshine and lollipop world do you live in? Because you need to be medicated."-SFist

I've only seen The Lost Daughter and Black Widow from that list. Several others are on my to watch list.

I liked it, but I found The Lost Daughter profoundly uncomfortable to watch. Black Widow just made me mad we didn't get a BW film years ago, though I suppose then we wouldn't have gotten Florence Pugh, who was far more fun than I expected her to be.

Tweeting out my wish list for the Oscar noms the night before, I realized that many (all?) of my favorites from last year are in some way about grief and loss. Make of that what you will.


Sophia Brooks - Feb 11, 2022 5:20:01 am PST #3089 of 3455
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

I guess I should watch The Power of the Dog, then. It looks profoundly disturbing. The only one on the WHOLE LIST of nominations I have seen is tick tick BOOM, and I didn’t finish it. I will watch MacBeth and probably Encanto

I didn’t really ever love new movies like you guys- I prefer television, but I usually have seen a few!

The last year when I saw all the nominees was 1997. And I actually liked them all- Shine, The English Patient, Jerry McGuire????, Secrets and Lies, and Fargo. I imagine Fargo and Secrets and Lies still hold up, but Shine and The English Patient probably have problems. I do wish Naveen Andrews had become a big, big movie star.


-t - Feb 11, 2022 7:32:43 am PST #3090 of 3455
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

So many movies I have not seen! I usually realize there's a lot I haven't seen at this point, but this year it is a whole new level of missing out. All I've seen from megan's list is Black Widow and Matrix Resurrections. Movies feel like too much of a time commitment lately, I dunno. I know I want to see Macbeth but I haven't felt like I could sit still for it.


DavidS - Feb 11, 2022 7:42:15 am PST #3091 of 3455
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

I will watch MacBeth and probably Encanto

Encanto is great. I think you'll love it.


megan walker - Feb 11, 2022 11:24:24 am PST #3092 of 3455
"What kind of magical sunshine and lollipop world do you live in? Because you need to be medicated."-SFist

I guess I should watch The Power of the Dog, then. It looks profoundly disturbing.

It is. Like the The Lost Daughter, it has a slowness and almost awkwardness which is profoundly uncomfortable and tense-making (at least for me).

So many movies I have not seen! I usually realize there's a lot I haven't seen at this point, but this year it is a whole new level of missing out. All I've seen from megan's list is Black Widow and Matrix Resurrections.

Probably a third to half my list is Indie Spirit screeners, so not on the general radar, and some I only watched because they finally have an app that makes it really easy to do. I've pretty much seen the ones I was most interested in but I still have Parallel Mothers and Passing and then I'll probably watch a few more that are directed by women.

Movies feel like too much of a time commitment lately, I dunno. I know I want to see Macbeth but I haven't felt like I could sit still for it.

A lot of my movie selections are based on time involved. I have to really want to see something that clocks in over 2 hours. Since the Math Greek has been here, and we are both fairly cautious pandemic-wise, we've pretty much settled into a routine of work during the day, late afternoon walk, dinner & a movie. Longer movies only happen if dinner ends up on the early side. Luckily Indie Spirit movies tend to meet that and, if they are over, it is not because of unnecessary bloat.

Speaking of unnecessary bloat, I just watched Nightmare Alley. It has a lot to recommend it, but man does it drag in the middle. In the last few days, I've watched that and Tick, Tick... Boom! (not a great film, but interesting and there's a moment where it sort of clicked into place for me) and CODA. CODA was much better than I expected. A sweet heartwarming family drama/sports film dynamic. Not a great film, but certainly a crowd-pleaser. It's a remake of a French film that I've seen clips of because it stars one of the more popular French winners of their version of The Voice.

Other fun, shorter films I would recommend from my list are Shiva Baby (on HBO) and Plan B (on Hulu, and, if you like that, check out the recent similarly themed Unpregnant on HBO).


sj - Feb 11, 2022 4:27:19 pm PST #3093 of 3455
"There are few hours in life more agreeable than the hour dedicated to the ceremony known as afternoon tea."

The Lost Daughter definitely had that uncomfortable feel, but it also made me lol a couple times.


Matt the Bruins fan - Feb 12, 2022 2:26:34 pm PST #3094 of 3455
"I remember when they eventually introduced that drug kingpin who murdered people and smuggled drugs inside snakes and I was like 'Finally. A normal person.'” —RahvinDragand

Fellow horror peeps recommended an indie horror comedy (?) Lo and I watched it this week. It's almost like a filmed stage play, but the prosthetics/makeup on the titular demon were A-movie quality. I had fun watching, and one of the supporting characters made me really miss Andy Hallett as Lorne.


megan walker - Feb 17, 2022 2:01:35 pm PST #3095 of 3455
"What kind of magical sunshine and lollipop world do you live in? Because you need to be medicated."-SFist

I continue to watch recent critical darlings at an alarming rate, though I did for some reason also get Gambit (a delightful 1960s caper starring Michael Caine & Shirley MacLaine) out of the library. I think Buffistas would really enjoy that one.

Apple had a 99c rental deal for Titane so I decided to brave that one, even though Ducournau's previous film, Raw, literally made me sick and I couldn't finish it. This was also body horror (and even more bizarre plot-wise) but I made it through. Definitely a unique vision to be sure.

Two Indie Spirit films, one fiction, the other a documentary, did some interesting weaving of narratives. Parallel Mothers is sort of hard to describe. It seems rather straight-forward on its surface but goes all sorts of places I didn't expect. It is definitely a film where being forced to use subtitles (Note: I generally put captioning on anyways, even in English) is a benefit because it makes the double meaning of a lot of the text more obvious. I liked it, but I'm not sure Cruz's performance is so "amazing" that she deserves an Oscar nomination. It looks gorgeous. Sometimes I think Almodóvar is the Nancy Meyers of Europe when it comes to kitchens I covet. It will be interesting to see how this one stacks up against the other foreign-language films once we've seen more of them.

I didn't really want to watch Procession, which is about pedophile priests, but the Math Greek is generally more interested in documentaries these days so I told him to go ahead and that I would work with it in the background. I ended up more fascinated by it than he was. I thought it was a really interesting process, part-documentary, part-trauma therapy, telling the story of the men involved by having them come together to develop and film dramatic scenes depicting their abuse and/or representing the power dynamics of the church as they saw them. Powerful stuff.

I also saw Soderbergh's latest, Kimi, on HBO and loved it. Of course, I also love The Net, which is essentially what it is, updated for our post-pandemic world. Definite recommend, if only for Zoë Kravitz's hair.