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Movies You've Seen Recently III: The Third Chapter

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He was great, but watch more movies. Thread from yesterday about the best child actors is a good source of advice.

You caught my with a hyperbolic sentence. Pierce Gagnon, for his age, can't be 10, he's near the top of my list. He had facial expressions beyond his age and was completely convincing during the math sequence. The closest child actor that terrified like that would be Drew in Firestarter.
 
Finally saw Silver Linings Playbook tonight.

Great film. Fantastic characters and performances supporting them - it was nice to see Robert De Niro seemingly give a shit again. Probably my film of the year (although I still have a few left to see).
 
We will die with miserable "dignity" & let our culture wither to nothingness before we let the godforsaken federal government rescue us from a hurricane and plug us up to modern medical equipment (I know, I gasped in horror too!) to deliver us from disease and death! Fuck tha police!!!

FEMA is totes made out to be the devil in this movie, and it is utterly bizarre. Seriously, idiotic & confused bromides wrapped in vomit-inducing out-of-place shakeycam realism - constantly jockeying with forced myth-making poesy for dominance of the film's atmosphere, and losing - as delivered by an adorably lovable child in the mystical bayou where dirt poor people ought to just set up & die rather than accept a hand? Two or three nice scenes and the actress playing Hushpuppy aside, I just do not get the adoration poured on this movie at all.

I do like the film, but that was a huge sticking point for me, as well.
 
Happy New Years from below the Red River!

Django Unchained ('Tino)

Don Johnson got a pretty good role for once.

So too did Sam Jackson—who, as per usual, puts a lot of effort into crafting his own hypocritical character. Django ultimately becomes the Siegfried of legends told, remembered for his swanky attire, cool demeanor, and occasional fits of irony. But Django Unchained particularly succeeds in marrying a Leone spaghetti western to '70s blaxploitation, and much of the film's so flawless that the genuine flaws stand out.

I think that some sequences, shots, and even in-shot effects don't work as well as they should. The way Tarantino likes to adjust depth-of-field in a static shot, where two characters in a dialogue aren't all that separated to begin with, feels out-of-place with the movie's visual style. Nor does the overuse of anachronistic non-diegetic music work too well within the story's perimeter (though, I must say, Tupac's still a damn fine choice!). But worst of all's the inclusion of a training montage that wastes time in the film that Tarantino could have used for other purposes. I think he could have incorporated Django's growth as a gunner into the fight sequences for dramatic effect; Unchained's already full of interesting movie references anyway, so I don't think gutting the montage would hurt the overall experience.

Everything else in Django Unchained runs smoother than superconducting coins. Gibs radically glance off of strike points with a distinct sense of style, and every tense moment before a big explosion services the story and the big money shot incoming. The whole cast of actors never lets up in playing their parts to the best of their abilities, ensuring that viewers never have to worry about characterization and evolving relationships throughout. Perhaps the most surprising little mix of great casting and versed film-making comes when Tarantino's bit part explodes in a fury of dynamite, right after speaking in a laughably-bad Australian accent and looking like John Wayne all the while. If anyone wants to go out with a bang, then it's the director himself! It's not an ambitious story by any means, but Django Unchained balances itself on the threshold between genres, styles, and historical messages that still hold relevance today. And, because its 4-act structure doesn't meander like in many of Tarantino's earlier movies, Tarantino's film communicates the ultimate message of will to power in a clever and unexpected finale that, once again, involves Sam Jackson.

Joe Bob sez check it out.

****

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La Cage Aux Folles (Molinaro)

There's a reason this is one of the most frequently-watched Italian films, and it involves three reasons: Ugo Tognazzi, Michel Serrualt, and Ennio Morricone. It's so amusing to see three great entertainers in one package, a film that explores its subject matter with humorous hijinks that never let up. I'm grateful that someone went and made it in the first place!

However, I do have my reservations about La Cage Aux Folles. What's here works very well, yet Molinaro's direction feels too awkward and unready. The camera wanders away from the actors much too often, instead preferring to zoom in nearly all the time and give the impression that everyone is caged in—Tognazzi's reserved socialite, Serrault's honest homosexual homme, and all the transvestites and ultra-conservatives included. But why go for location shoots and a sense of openness in various parts of the movie? I don't like dissonance in direction, and this play adaptation would benefit from tighter and more consistent cinematography. It doesn't help that, outside of Tognazzi, Serrault, and Claire Maurier as Renato Baldi's former spouse, the actors provide unremarkable interpretations of their characters that contrast with the performances formerly mentioned.

La Cage Aux Folles also dithers in its pacing from time to time, meaning that more important sequences like Renato's pep talks with Albin lose runtime to redundant vignettes like Albin's shop visits. Much of the movie deftly gets ready for its final act, either through funny exposition or through naturalistic dialogues, so the slower moments stand out the most right within the film's middle. I'm only saying this because La Cage Aux Folles otherwise succeeds as a comedy of manners with archetypal themes of acceptance and social disorder, and what initially seems like mere ribald vaudeville turns into a sensitive comedy almost right from the start. Renato and Albin make for a dynamic double act; other characters like the bride's father and Laurent act primarily as foils to this duo's promiscuity, the former increasingly antagonistic and the latter already resigned to his own values. Slapstick disguises sad ironies of fate all throughout the script, and it's Tognazzi's deadpan deliveries and Serrault's swooning femininity that tie every little gag there.

As a play adapted for the big screen, La Cage Aux Folles also benefits from the usual luxuries of great set design, colorful costuming, and Morricone. In particular, the composer's gift with melodies and setting the right mood for any story renders his musical score both lush and oddly straightforward; whenever the music begins to sound like "elevator music", I get the feeling that Morricone wanted to provoke constant smirks from the audience. Everything from the butt-in-the-wall-panel to Jacob's fluctuating outfits comes together at just the right moments in the film, generating audiovisual humor that never quits giving. Of course, I'm mostly interested in that catchy soundtrack. The other elements I just mentioned—well, I ought to take those for granted. La Cage Aux Folles would be nothing without Laurent painting Renato's white walls brown with the manager's own gaudy makeup.

Joe Bob sez check it out!

***

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Yojimbo (Kurosawa)

Who's the Two-Bit Samurai now?!

Not Mifune. His performance sells not just Sanjuro's subversive simmer of a personality, but also the strange artificiality of the town he redeems by the end. I like to think that Yojimbo revolves around Sanjuro's quest for mental balance. When one gang makes massive gains over the other, so too does a part of his personality go out of whack. It's remarkable to think that, even though the movie sags within the middle act, and that the acting can get unreasonably theatrical in usually subtle moments of the screenplay, Kurosawa's film justifies its own flaws in the process of crafting a tense plot.

Most of the acting works fine—even if Mifune chews the scenery up, every performance counts in separating Sanjuro from the crowd. But what bugs me is the insistence on lengthening certain sequences that speak for themselves the first time around. I already know the gigantic thug's been beating Sanjuro within an inch of his death—why should I see the same activity over and over again? It's distracting moments like these that hold Yojimbo back every now and then. But it gets past these injuries regardless, and I'm coming to love the Kurosawa-Mifune collaborative period more and more.

Joe Bob sez check it out.

****
 
Has IFC announced a date for that one in the US yet? They seem to be dragging their feet on that film.

definitely dragging their feet. UK already got their release. wonder if IFC is holding out hoping to capitalize on some oscar buzz with a possible nomination in Sound Editing or Mixing. i guess we'll find out shortly
 
Just watched "harakiri"--entertaining and beautiful movie. More understated than what you would expect from a "samurai" film, but tension-filled throughout and a great payoff at the end.
 
I liked BSS until the revelation.

Yeah, that one certainly knocked me for a loop. I think it's because
of how well the film builds in suspense and tension, you keep expecting it to take a sinister turn, but it never happens and the end result is just kind of confusing
. Loved the tone and atmosphere though, and the soundtrack is definitely a large part of that.
 
Ted - Nope, never been a fan of Seth Macfarlane and still aren't. Mila Kunis looking like girl friend material was unexpected but that didn't save the movie from being a boring love comedy. Not bad CGI though, I'm surprised to admit.
 
I love you, man - Thought this was bare jokes.. :)

Pitch Perfect - Nowhere near enough jokes and nowhere near as funny as it is advertised to be.
 
Pulp Fiction: First time watching it, one of the greatest movies I ever seen.
Dazed and Confused: Another great movie. Love Mcconaughey's character.
Donnie Darko: One ****** up film.
 
You certainly had a great 3 film stretch right there. Has anyone ever wasted their time with S.Darko, one these days my curious nature plans on seeing how horrible it is.
 
You certainly had a great 3 film stretch right there. Has anyone ever wasted their time with S.Darko, one these days my curious nature plans on seeing how horrible it is.

I saw it. It's worth watching as cheesy B...or C movie fare. There's one guy who starts out as this awkward sort of likable character and through a meteor turns into a complete over-the-top psycho ham actor, and it's pretty entertaining. It's a bad movie, though.
 
Jaws: haven't seen it since I was around 10, liked it a lot more this time round. Shaw's brilliant, his monologue especially is fantastic writing. Spielberg is very assured behind the camera, it looks great, sounds great. I do think the cat and mouse chase between the three and the shark goes on a bit too long; Bruce pops up a bunch of times before he's finally got. But really enjoyed it. 8/10
 
Rewatched Who are you Polly Maggoo?

96Cel.jpg

Pretty hard to explain why I love this film, it feels so dream-like. Thanks to whoever made me discover that. Pretty sure it was swoon...
 
Saw Forbidden Planet. That Robbie sure was charming, however clumsy lol. It was nice to see Nielsen in one of his younger roles too. I thought the effects and background looked great (for an older movie) and loved how it was us traveling in flying saucers.

I liked the concept of subconscious monsters
 
Rewatched Who are you Polly Maggoo?



Pretty hard to explain why I love this film, it feels so dream-like. Thanks to whoever made me discover that. Pretty sure it was swoon...
Swoon definitely likes to talk about it a lot; I didn't enjoy it and I still don't like it, but I can see why other cinephiles do. There's not much else out there quite like it.
 
The Expendables 2

I was trying to find something more...eh, "explody" to watch until Dredd 3D is available for renting/streaming on the 8th (a movie which I have heard nothing but awesome things about), so i thought I'd finally get around to checking this out.

Oh God why did I bother.
 
Rob Ager posted a new analysis of a hidden telekinesis theme in the Shining. If you haven't seen Rob's videos, he has as good an eye for film as Red Letter Media if not better, but he typically studies themes and how they're presented in their films, and he keeps it informational instead of comedic. If you want to understand Kubrick's filmmaking better, I urge you to watch it.

His spatial analysis of the Shining is also brilliant.
 
The Expendables 2

I was trying to find something more...eh, "explody" to watch until Dredd 3D is available for renting/streaming on the 8th (a movie which I have heard nothing but awesome things about), so i thought I'd finally get around to checking this out.

Oh God why did I bother.

I'd say Expendables 2 is more "explody" than dredd 3d...it's just super dopey about it. Then again, I am in the minority here thinking that dredd 3d isn't all that great.
 
Skyfall - surprised by how much I enjoyed this. The action was well directed and I generally felt they got the right balance between all of the elements that make up a Bond film, without getting carried away by being self-referential or overdoing the high-action set pieces. I think it may be my favourite of all the Daniel Craig Bond films.
 
The man from nowhere was good stuff.
I was a bit put off at first by how slow it was going, but looking back on it, it made a lot of sense for it to go down that route, especially with how they kept building towards what a force of nature that the main character is with each action scene, in showing off more and more of his abilities. It's a really neat way to show his progression and it made that entire final sequence all the more exciting.
 
Headhunters (Hodejegerne): Great little thriller. Absolutely hilarious script (the humor translated incredibly well), and though it almost loses its way in the third act, I thought it tiptoed the black comedy line well enough that I could buy everything that happened. Or at least not mind. Spurts of violence, lots of blood, great leads, and a very clever script.
 
Headhunters spoiler:
Roger escaping the farm was the funniest goddamn thing, especially when the dog's corpse kept swaying back and forth.
 
Punch Drunk Love - Great film, Adam Sandler gives a good performance here.
The romance didn't really effect me much emotionally, but It's a refreshingly original romantic comedy overall and worth seeing!

3.5/5
 
I've seen a couple more 2012 movies. Most to least enjoyed:

Cloud Atlas
Looper
Skyfall
The Dark Knight Rises
The Raid: Redemption
Argo
21 Jump Street
The Cabin in the Woods
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
The Avengers
Haywire
John Carter
Wreck-It Ralph
The Pirates! Band of Misfits
Underworld: Awakening
Prometheus
 
The Bridge on the River Kwai
Fabulous.

Life Of Brian
Quite good. Hadn't seen it before. Loses steam towards the end though.

Trouble With The Curve
Campy as hell but I've seen worse movies and Amy Adams is really cute.
Clint has a couple good moments but overall it's wasted on such a cheesy script.

Timberlake needs to stop being in movies. Just awful.
 
Just finished Looper and thought it was good. One thing that bugs me though, how did
Sara know what a Looper is
? It never did explain that.
 
I watched Matrix Reloaded and Revolutions for the first time this evening. Just finished, in fact. So while the ending wasn't altogether terrible, it wasn't altogether sensible either. A lot of, um, leaps. They did not make me believe what was happening was happening. The last 10 or 15 minutes or whatever it was. Up until that, I thought everything was going well.
 
Catching up on some 2012 releases.

Life of Pi - Curiously unmoving. The early family scenes made me think I was in for a much more complex movie than what I actually got: a visually splendid but ultimately hollow story undermined by a really flat lead performance (anyone else think that Pi lacked charisma?) Also, I'm not sure the frame scenes which told us what to think and what the whole thing meant were necessary. Saw it in 3D and was left wanting a brighter, more vivid picture.

Once Upon a Time in Anatolia - The first act felt interminable but the movie as a whole was hypnotizing once I became accustomed to its unique pacing and rhythm. Loved the way this movie gradually sketched its characters through small gestures or lines of dialogue, until they feel fully lived-in by the end. Gorgeous cinematography which seems to externalize the deep loneliness lurking inside them, too.

Elena - I enjoyed watching Elena and her cold husband's interactions, juxtaposed with her trying to help out her working-class son. When the plot kicked in I was a little disappointed. Not sure I bought
the murder or her turn to murder
. Some of the class dialogue was too on-the-nose, as well. But it's engrossing nonetheless. And you can really understand where each of the characters are coming from because they all think they are right.
 
Les Miserables (2012)
I really enjoyed this a lot. I've never seen a film sung all the way through, and this one, despite being almost 3 hours moved right along all the way to the end. Some songs were better than others, but my favorite movies have always been the ones that make me feel something, and this one was probably the most emotional experience I've had with a film this year. Also Hathway knocked her role and "I Dreamed a Dream" right out of the park, and is almost a lock for an Oscar, I think.

Collateral
I've seen this before, but it had been awhile, so I decided it was time for a rewatch, and it's still really great. Cruise and Foxx are both at the top of their game here aided by a fantastic script, and this film belongs as Exhibit A to everyone in that other thread saying Tom Cruise plays the same character in all his movies. I really need to see more of Mann's movies. I've seen this, Heat last year, and Miami Vice I saw in theaters and don't remember much at all. My only gripes here is that the first 15 minutes or so moves on a little to slowly for my liking and there's an Audioslave song that doesn't seem like it belongs in the film well at all, but those are minor gripes really. It was a lot of fun rewatching this.
 
Les Miserables (2012)
I really enjoyed this a lot. I've never seen a film sung all the way through, and this one, despite being almost 3 hours moved right along all the way to the end. Some songs were better than others, but my favorite movies have always been the ones that make me feel something, and this one was probably the most emotional experience I've had with a film this year. Also Hathway knocked her role and "I Dreamed a Dream" right out of the park, and is almost a lock for an Oscar, I think.

Collateral
I've seen this before, but it had been awhile, so I decided it was time for a rewatch, and it's still really great. Cruise and Foxx are both at the top of their game here, and this film belongs as Exhibit A to everyone in that other thread saying Tom Cruise plays the same character in all his movies. I really need to see more of Mann's movies. I've seen this, Heat last year, and Miami Vice I saw in theaters and don't remember it well at all. My only gripes here is that the first 15 minutes or so moves on a little to slowly for my liking and there's an Audioslave song that doesn't seem like it belongs in the film well at all, but those are minor gripes really. It was a lot of fun rewatching this.
Mann movies you MUSTTTT watch: The Insider and The Last of the Mohicans.

Watch them both nao.
 
I'm watching indie game the movie right now. I really hope most indie devs are not like this, most of them are coming off as smug assholes. Makes me not want to support them.

You got the braid guy thinking he's the second coming of gaming jesus. The super meat boy guy thinking anything mainstream is shit, and his game is the best shit ever. And then the FEZ guy who is... Maybe the least smug of the bunch. N/m he just said he would kill himself if game failed, good lord.
 
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