|
saltburn, lol. what a ridiculous movie
|
# ? Jan 8, 2024 13:58 |
|
|
# ? Jun 3, 2024 16:21 |
|
The Maltese falcon.
|
# ? Jan 9, 2024 05:53 |
|
boogie nights -> magnolia back to back. feel like anderson was really into coen bros when making boogie nights.
|
# ? Jan 9, 2024 07:33 |
|
Bonjour Tristesse. Not the kind of film I usually watch, but it was thoroughly riveting. The protagonist comes across as scheming and independent but also not necessarily the sharpest knife in the chest, which made for interesting viewing. I wonder if it had Code approval; I recall reading that Preminger was one of the filmmakers who managed to chip away at the Code partly by independently funding many of his own films (he had the producer credit on this one) and successfully releasing them without Code approval. The father's lifestyle seems like it would have run afoul of numerous provisions in the Code, but perhaps it's kept just vague enough to have "passed."I got the tude now posted:boogie nights -> magnolia back to back. feel like anderson was really into coen bros when making boogie nights. I watched Boogie Nights with Anderson's commentary a while back and he cited Scorsese (Raging Bull, specifically) as the main influence on the film. Definitely some Coen Bros-esque antics in there too. Sir Mat of Dickie fucked around with this message at 10:26 on Jan 9, 2024 |
# ? Jan 9, 2024 10:24 |
|
Been gaming too hard on my Pathfinder: Wrath of the Righteous poo poo to watch many movies lately so I just finished the first of the year, which I got on blu ray as a Christmas gift: The Giant Gila Monster (1959). 50s B-movie in its most distilled form. The monster never appears in the same shot as any of the actors because it’s just an actual live Mexican beaded lizard that they filmed walking around miniature sets and dubbed in booming footsteps sound effects while it walks, then they cut to someone screaming or a vehicle exploding. Sometimes they don’t include any miniatures for scale so you’re just kind of watching a lizard walk around for a bit. The main character is both a hot-rodding greaser and an aspiring rock-and-roller, and I assume the actor was an aspiring musician too who agreed to be in the movie as long as he got to whip out an instrument and sing a few times for no real reason. There are not one but two separate wacky comic relief drunk driver characters. It’s got heart though, characters are likable and the southwest setting and vibe gives it character. And while I kind of made fun of the effects I did really like them, loved the shots of the lizard crawling over the wrecked train models. Check it out if you like 50s monster b-movies. Also the first feature film shot and produced in Dallas which is neat since I’ve lived in the DFW metroplex most of my life. It was filmed and shown as a double feature with The Killer Shrews which was also included with the blu ray I got so I’ll probably watch that before too long.
|
# ? Jan 9, 2024 22:50 |
|
13 Assassins Great right up until the actual battle. Superb dramatic performances, beautiful sets and scenery, nice grounded story with some B-movie touches where the redditor villain gets to literally chew scenery. For the actual fight, the choreographers seemed really concerned with making a 13 vs. 200 fight as plausible as the rest of the film. So, just like other descendants of Seven Samurai, the 13 set up an ambush, right, and divide and confuse the attacking force, except most of the devices they use are themselves totally ridiculous. Leaving aside the stampeding bulls, about the fourth time a big CGI wooden wall slid sideways across the screen with no wheels I was fully out of it. Apparently I watched the 'extended' release by mistake, so this may be my fault, but the battle also dragged on for practically a loving hour without a lot of variety in the back half. The comic relief guy was annoying. I'm not sure I watch enough anime to authoritatively call him 'anime' but yeah Punch Drunk Love I didn't know much about this except it was by PT Anderson. Because of the director I was expecting this to be something like 160 minutes long and considerably grimmer. Instead it's a small, sweet love story where Phillip Seymour Hoffman has a great bit part and my beautiful wife Emily Watson never wears a bra. With 13 Assassins, another cautionary tale about misdirected horniness. Collateral I watched this twice in a month, the second time with my mother, who was clearly getting impatient in the last half hour. Can't really blame her. It does fall off pretty steeply the moment the taxi crashes. For my part, I was annoyed because my parents' big expensive new TV and speaker bar were both garbage. You could barely make out a third of all the lines, the dark scenes (about 3/4 of the movie) looked like youtube videos, and fullscreen didn't work right over the HDMI connection, leaving a line of pixels around the edge. I'm sure they just picked up whatever crap Costco was pushing. Anyway, Collateral remains one of my favourite movies, but I may have learned a lesson about trying to proselytise this stuff to my parents. Or maybe I'll be driving myself crazy trying to get Miller's Crossing to look right on their screen next Christmas, who knows. As for the actual movie, I don't know. It's always easier to pick out things I dislike, but there's so little to dislike outside the little stall after the crash – but the fact that you can pick out the exact 5-minute period where the pace falters just shows how perfect and propulsive the rest of the film is. Collateral is a pared back, essential kind of machine, like a lathe maybe. A single motor drives the whole assembly, spinning smoothly in its housing as the director lets more and more characters bite into its gears, more parts converge on the axis of rotation. The look of it, the absence of stage lighting, the focus on the materials of the environment, often reinforces this impression of some kind of industrial artefact for me. The scratched plastic partition, the shattered windshield, the asphalt and concrete of the roads and metro; Vincent variously lit by back-alley floodlights, sodium street lamps, nightclub lasers, fluorescent hospital bulbs; silhouetted against the predawn constellation of city lights. The headlights reflected from the eyes of a coyote. It reminds me of working in a factory, the lights all white and straight overhead, bouncing dully off every grimy steel surface. And the lines, man, God. The way Mann has three or four characters end a sentence with '...like that' to mean 'etc' or 'and so on', a phrase I've never heard outside this movie. It shows they mean business. They come from the world of special ops guys who 'go into the private sector'. They can identify 'real tradecraft'. They 'watch their background' and know those SWAT hand signals. That sublime first taxi ride with Max and Annie flirting over their knowledge of surface street traffic patterns.
|
# ? Jan 10, 2024 06:12 |
|
Sir Mat of Dickie posted:Bonjour Tristesse. Not the kind of film I usually watch, but it was thoroughly riveting. The protagonist comes across as scheming and independent but also not necessarily the sharpest knife in the chest, which made for interesting viewing. I wonder if it had Code approval; I recall reading that Preminger was one of the filmmakers who managed to chip away at the Code partly by independently funding many of his own films (he had the producer credit on this one) and successfully releasing them without Code approval. The father's lifestyle seems like it would have run afoul of numerous provisions in the Code, but perhaps it's kept just vague enough to have "passed." It’s specifically the donut shop robbery that wa so 100% a coen bros move. The format shifting to show multiple perspectives felt like classic coen too
|
# ? Jan 10, 2024 21:53 |
|
The Iron Claw. Solid movie. Well done and very sad which is to be expected. Kind of wondering if the film originally wanted to have a more supernatural approach because there's a very brief scene where you think you see David's ghost, and then nothing until the end when all the dead brothers join each other. But probably would've been a bad decision to have the dead brothers hovering about in the background the entire film. Although it wouldn't surprise me if on a rewatch they were actually in the background of a few more scenes.
|
# ? Jan 11, 2024 21:39 |
|
MJF got his poo poo in
|
# ? Jan 11, 2024 21:39 |
|
ted episodes 1 and 2 im a tedhead now
|
# ? Jan 12, 2024 00:26 |
|
The King of Comedy. Felt incredibly relevant in 2024. Honestly this clicked with me more than the other Scorsese movies I’ve seen.
|
# ? Jan 13, 2024 01:27 |
|
The Boy and the Heron was lovelySmirking_Serpent posted:The King of Comedy. Felt incredibly relevant in 2024. Honestly this clicked with me more than the other Scorsese movies I’ve seen. have you seen After Hours
|
# ? Jan 13, 2024 02:46 |
|
Lester posted:The Boy and the Heron was lovely It’s on my list!
|
# ? Jan 13, 2024 02:49 |
|
A Serious Man Amazing cinimatography, loved the score, and the ending is absolutely phenomenal. Story is loving brutal lol.
|
# ? Jan 13, 2024 05:23 |
|
Anatomy of a Fall It’s a great courtroom drama and also a really good marriage movie. This movie owns. It owns!!!!!!
|
# ? Jan 13, 2024 05:55 |
|
Leadthumb posted:A Serious Man lol
|
# ? Jan 13, 2024 05:57 |
|
Leadthumb posted:A Serious Man such a good movie. Sy Ableman ftw
|
# ? Jan 13, 2024 06:40 |
|
Leadthumb posted:A Serious Man underrated kino
|
# ? Jan 13, 2024 08:47 |
|
|
# ? Jan 13, 2024 08:48 |
|
Can Sussman eat? Sussman can't eat.
|
# ? Jan 13, 2024 08:52 |
|
We can't know everything
|
# ? Jan 13, 2024 08:54 |
|
grand budapest hotel. loving rules
|
# ? Jan 14, 2024 05:00 |
|
Fungah! posted:grand budapest hotel. loving rules it rules so much, my favorite Anderson movie
|
# ? Jan 14, 2024 05:14 |
|
Fungah! posted:grand budapest hotel. loving rules
|
# ? Jan 14, 2024 05:26 |
|
symbolic posted:it rules so much, my favorite Anderson movie its a great movie but I can't imagine it being a favorite compared to like Rushmore but yes it is fantastic
|
# ? Jan 14, 2024 05:47 |
|
That Little Demon posted:its a great movie but I can't imagine it being a favorite compared to like Rushmore but yes it is fantastic tbh i havent seen Rushmore, not most of my Anderson movies. tierlist as as follows Budapest > Asteroid City > Tenenbaums > Fantastic Mister Fox
|
# ? Jan 14, 2024 05:57 |
|
GBH is probably his best but Bottle Rocket will always be my fave.
----------------
|
# ? Jan 14, 2024 06:08 |
|
Cars
|
# ? Jan 14, 2024 06:19 |
|
symbolic posted:tbh i havent seen Rushmore, not most of my Anderson movies. tierlist as as follows see Rushmore and Life Aquatic
|
# ? Jan 14, 2024 07:47 |
|
rushmore is s+ tier
|
# ? Jan 14, 2024 09:31 |
|
That Little Demon posted:see Rushmore and Life Aquatic
|
# ? Jan 14, 2024 14:55 |
|
That Little Demon posted:see Rushmore and Life Aquatic i still need to see rushmore but life aquatic is my #1
|
# ? Jan 14, 2024 15:02 |
|
symbolic posted:tbh i havent seen Rushmore, not most of my Anderson movies. tierlist as as follows go freakin watch life aquatic!!!
|
# ? Jan 14, 2024 15:04 |
|
That Little Demon posted:see Rushmore and Life Aquatic Fungah! posted:go freakin watch life aquatic!!!
|
# ? Jan 14, 2024 15:12 |
|
Isle of Dogs is ok. Not the best, but worth a watch
|
# ? Jan 14, 2024 15:57 |
|
Conspiracy (2001) Kenneth Branagh was pretty good on this as Heydrich, it's a really tense and well made movie, surprised it was a made for TV thing for HBO.
|
# ? Jan 14, 2024 16:57 |
|
May December - Occasionally funny but…all these people spent this time making this movie and I don’t really know why. Natalie Portman was insane basically throughout. The acting was good but…what was the point?
|
# ? Jan 14, 2024 17:02 |
|
Killers of the Flower Moon. Had been holding off because my grandpa wanted to see it too and he’s too old for sitting in a theater for three and a half hours anymore. Great movie, I’ve seen a lot of people say that it’s Scorsese’s best and while I’m not sure I agree, I’m not sure I disagree either. Loved DiCaprio’s performance and character as being a dimwit that you can almost sympathize with as just someone blinded by greed and manipulated by de Niro’s absolutely diabolical character and just too stupid to realize what the obvious next step in the plan would be, but he crosses the line too far too often to deserve it. The scene after he testifies against Hale and unburdens himself and says that his soul is clean, but still can’t admit to Mollie that he was poisoning her insulin, is going to stay with me a long time and I’m still wondering if he truly knew what he was doing and was lying to her or if he was in denial and lying to himself, though he clearly knew what he had been doing at least in the back of his mind even if he didn’t want to admit it to himself. I can see why Lily Gladstone is getting all the awards buzz too even in a cast as stacked as this one, her character was fairly stoic throughout but when she does cut loose a bit she’s an incredible actress.
|
# ? Jan 14, 2024 22:15 |
|
Rewatched Hana-bi/Fireworks. I was really swept by the orchestral score this time around, as well as by the paintings (which were actually done by Kitano).
|
# ? Jan 15, 2024 04:30 |
|
|
# ? Jun 3, 2024 16:21 |
|
e1 of s4 of true detective. can’t decide if it’ll be as bad as s5 of fargo or not but the pilot was rear end probably just gonna rewatch scavengers reign again during the snowstorm here instead
|
# ? Jan 15, 2024 04:40 |