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Movies You've Seen Recently III: The Third Chapter

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I think this is my first actual movie post in one of these threads. I'll try to make it a habit just to stay game for this year's challenges. I still haven't decided if I'm doing 50 or 500 films.

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Anyway, I started the year with And Then There Were None (1945)

Ten strangers are brought to an island mansion, and one after another, they're murdered. The dwindling survivors each wonder who the asshole is. (An adaptation of Agatha Christie's "Ten Little Indians.")

It's an overall straightforward and cliche whodunnit. The only peculiar thing here is how effective it is—especially in regard to the cast. You'll want to believe that each guest is both innocent AND guilty of the killing the others. It helps that the script and the camera both favor the mystery rather than the grisly killings (which mostly occur just offscreen). The result is that the film gets better as the cast dies off, and the drama heightens in a way that similar films almost never manage. Pretty good!


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The Agony and the Ecstasy

Charles Heston plays another suffering believer, Michelangelo, as Pope Julius II suckers him into painting the Sistine Chapel. (Adapted from the Irving Stone novel)

I've been putting this film off for years and years, only because I love "artist movies" and I've exhausted most of the classics. I finally watched it to get fired up for the new year.

I enjoyed it of course, but I wasn't sure that I had until the end.

Agony's trouble is that there's not a single meaningful supporting character. My preference is usually for a small cast, but a pseudo-epic needs texture, and Agony has none (save for Michelangelo's silly "love interest"—a thread that mercifully goes nowhere). As a result, Agony's main course—the love-hate relationship between Michelangelo and the Pope—is left alone to endure a full 2+ hours, so their passive-aggressive bitchfest cycles over a few times too many. It's nevertheless the best part of the film, and it reaches a nice enough place by the end that I forgive the whole damn thing. I also forgive most of the historical exaggerations, because I'm already close with the history, and I realize that this is a fucking movie.

The photography let me down a bit; 1965 is about the time that color design went south. But the production design within the chapel was well-executed, and it was nice to think of those frescos before they were irrevocably ruined by the "restoration."

Overall, I'm biased, but I thought it was pretty good.


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Good shit all around. But this week's winner is Black Sunday (1960)

A dead witch with holes in her face torments a family of aristocrats at their castle in scenic Italy. (Adapted from Gogol)

This is my first Mario Bava film, and I think also my first Italian horror. And a fine place to start, because LORD! Does Bava know how to stage a beautiful image. He's a truly visual director, similar to von Sternberg in his obsessive cinematograpy.

Like Sternberg, he takes crazy shapes and textures, lights them just enough to give them form, but still keeps them organized by value. Then he puts them into action with (or against) the interest of the shot. His values aren't as painterly as von Sternberg's, but this only means that everything looks sharp and wicked in the contrast. They're equally rich.

THIS is how you make a low budget look generous:

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Set Designer: "I did the best I could, Mr. Bava. We only had like ₤10."




Bava: (laughs) "₤9 too many:"

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Bava could sell you a backwards photograph of your own SHIT.

Seeing the way he lights a face, or frames a coffin, or puts distance between a tree and a grave, it makes me want to draw on my walls with charcoal. It's almost arousing like a good painting, and I have to bite my lip and smile because I can tell Bava's getting excited by the same things. He's just a guy who's eager tell the world what he's in love with.

What's more, it's amazing that he shows any restraint at all when he has what I call the "horny eye." Lots of directors even without horny eyes will shoot too much, but Bava only shoots what he has to. The way he gets off is by staging a mood to match the scene, and by the preciousness of how he does it, you can tell that he's turning himself on. There are several types of horny eyes, but Bava's in particular are perfect for scenic horror.

He's my kind of guy.

I really hope Bava's other films share these aesthetics, because I'm lining them up on Netflix. Black Sabbath is next. I want to see how horny Bava gets with color!


EDIT: the movie itself was pretty great too

EDIT 2: letterboxd is fun
 
Don't really know what to think of End of Watch. The bromestry between Gyllenhaal and Peña was believable and executed well, the rest, not so much. It did do a good job (I think) of portraying the adrenaline-fuelled, tense and fuckin' scary atmosphere cops operate in.
 
Just watched Dazed and Confused. I loved it. Something about this film felt incredibly real to me, the mannerisms, the lack of hyperbole concerning high school society, the fact that the humor was simply the humor of a couple friends shooting the shit. Also, I loved the fact that this was essential an art-house film masquerading as a teen sex/drug comedy. Fantastic.
 
cant believe the roll Cameron was on.

First The Terminator and then years later he makes T2, even bigger and badder,then he goes on to do True Lies,another flawless action movie and last Titanic.


and Aliens ofc
 
THIS is how you make a low budget look generous
Seeing the way he lights a face, or frames a coffin, or puts distance between a tree and a grave, it makes me want to draw on my walls with charcoal. It's almost arousing like a good painting, and I have to bite my lip and smile because I can tell Bava's getting excited by the same things. He's just a guy who's eager tell the world what he's in love with.

This was a really nice post as a whole, and hopefully you do stick around and continue posting.

Judging by your reaction to the Bava flick, I'm pretty sure you'd get similarly excited about the movies in Warner's Val Lewton set. I remember spending days staring at the lighting, shadows, and composition of them and just being amazed at how incredible they are to just soak in.
 
Just watched Dazed and Confused. I loved it. Something about this film felt incredibly real to me, the mannerisms, the lack of hyperbole concerning high school society, the fact that the humor was simply the humor of a couple friends shooting the shit. Also, I loved the fact that this was essential an art-house film masquerading as a teen sex/drug comedy. Fantastic.
It's an evolution of his previous movie Slacker, which I would recommend you watch next if you haven't already. Slacker's got more influence from Robert Bresson and a lot less overt comedy—the film does have a unique charm that's shows the variety of life in Austin more than even Dazed and Confused.

Note to self: Cosmic Bus responds to people who write about Bava and Val Lewton. I better watch some of that stuff now.
 
Today I finally got around to seeing The Big Lebowski for the first time. It was On Demand and after years of recommendations, I went for it.

I can see why it's a cult hit. Highly amusing all the way through with some laugh out loud moments.
 
Today I finally got around to seeing The Big Lebowski for the first time. It was On Demand and after years of recommendations, I went for it.

I can see why it's a cult hit. Highly amusing all the way through with some laugh out loud moments.

It'll only grow on you as well. Next time you watch it, it'll be even better. Fucking great film.
 
This was a really nice post as a whole, and hopefully you do stick around and continue posting.

Thanks, I'd like to!

This was a really nice post as a whole, and hopefully you do stick around and continue posting. Judging by your reaction to the Bava flick, I'm pretty sure you'd get similarly excited about the movies in Warner's Val Lewton set. I remember spending days staring at the lighting, shadows, and composition of them and just being amazed at how incredible they are to just soak in.

You're spot on with Val Lewton! I love all of his films that I've seen, especially The Body Snatcher and I Walked With a Zombie. They get me fired up in the same way Bava does.

My favorite Lewton film is The Curse of the Cat People. It's such an unusual and beautiful film, and there's something unusual and beautiful in every frame to match. There's a scene near the end where the little girl gets lost in the woods, and imagines that she's being chased by the Headless Horseman. It's a short sequence, but the way it's produced is just awesome. Lewton was an amazing problem solver. He does Sleepy Hollow justice—on a shoestring budget—in about twenty seconds!
 
About to watch Apocalypse Now for the first time. Saw Redux a few years ago, so hoping that it feels better without that fucking plantation scene.
 
Bava post

Great post on Black Sunday.

My favourite Bava horror films would be:

The Whip and the Body
Lisa and the Devil
Blood and Black Lace
A Bay of Blood
Hatchet For the Honeymoon

Non- horror Bava worth watching:

Rabid Dogs
Danger: Diabolik

From Bava, you would want to watch Dario Argento.
 
About to watch Apocalypse Now for the first time. Saw Redux a few years ago, so hoping that it feels better without that fucking plantation scene.

The amount of times I've watched something randomly only to come to this thread and see someone else post about it is astounding.


I just watched theatrical Apocalypse Now for the first time yesterday, and it's unquestionably the better version. I was okay with Redux, but the pacing in the original lends itself so much more to the decent into what's pretty much hell on earth. Looks fantastic on blu-ray as well.
 
Recently watched:

The Last Circus - Entertaining film about two circus clowns who fight over the love of a woman. Slightly lost its way in the second half of the film but definitely worth a watch. 4/5

The Skin I Live In - Almodovar in top form - loved the twist. Best watched not knowing too much about it. 4.5/5

The Cabin in the Woods - Pleasantly surprised with the concept but felt the execution could have been handled better, especially in the finale. 3.5/5

Looper - Decent film which, perhaps unnecessarily, flirted with two usually distinct genres. I was not wholly convinced by the ending, but was satisfactorily entertained. 4/5
 
I saw a special screening of 2001: A Space Oddessy at my local theater.

During the intermission a guy stood up and started talking about the movie. He worked on the special effects and gave us several stories about him and Kubrick.

He said that he was having midnight sandwhichs with Stanley and convinced him to use the music to start out the film, instead of a long explanation thing that he was going to use. Very cool.
 
Recently watched:

The Last Circus - Entertaining film about two circus clowns who fight over the love of a woman. Slightly lost its way in the second half of the film but definitely worth a watch. 4/5

The Skin I Live In - Almodovar in top form - loved the twist. Best watched not knowing too much about it. 4.5/5

The Cabin in the Woods - Pleasantly surprised with the concept but felt the execution could have been handled better, especially in the finale. 3.5/5

Looper - Decent film which, perhaps unnecessarily, flirted with two usually distinct genres. I was not wholly convinced by the ending, but was satisfactorily entertained. 4/5

your scale might need some work when 'worth a watch' and 'decent film' yield 4/5 ;)
 
Great post on Black Sunday.

My favourite Bava horror films would be:

The Whip and the Body
Lisa and the Devil
Blood and Black Lace
A Bay of Blood
Hatchet For the Honeymoon

Non- horror Bava worth watching:

Rabid Dogs
Danger: Diabolik

From Bava, you would want to watch Dario Argento.

All of these films are now in my Netflix queue (all the ones they have, that is). Danger: Diabolik was already near the top, just because it looks too rad.

Suspiria and Inferno are on the list as well, so Argento will get his due share soon. Thanks for the tips!
 
All of these films are now in my Netflix queue (all the ones they have, that is). Danger: Diabolik was already near the top, just because it looks too rad.

Suspiria and Inferno are on the list as well, so Argento will get his due share soon. Thanks for the tips!

Make sure to toss in Deep Red, Tenebre, and Opera while you're at it!
 
your scale might need some work when 'worth a watch' and 'decent film' yield 4/5 ;)

Haha, I only tend to throw around superlatives on films which are 5/5 ;)

All of these films are now in my Netflix queue (all the ones they have, that is). Danger: Diabolik was already near the top, just because it looks too rad.

Suspiria and Inferno are on the list as well, so Argento will get his due share soon. Thanks for the tips!

No problem!

As the guy above said, for Argento add in Deep Red, Tenebre and Opera. I would also add The Bird With Crystal Plumage.
 
Masterpiece of a film. So different from the restrained perfection of The Godfather, Coppola never feels in control; it's a chaotic mess of a movie, but that just feels perfect.

Difference is night and day. AN is a masterpiece while Redux is an overlong misfire.

I just watched theatrical Apocalypse Now for the first time yesterday, and it's unquestionably the better version. I was okay with Redux, but the pacing in the original lends itself so much more to the decent into what's pretty much hell on earth. Looks fantastic on blu-ray as well.

You're both right. Looks fucking incredible and is paced far far better.
 
I had almost forgotten that I had this in my netflix queue. I know what I'll be watching today!

It will be neither my first Bava nor my first Italian horror, though I suppose it'll be my first Bava horror as I've only seen Rabid Dogs and Diabolik.

Welcome to movieGAF, by the way. It's my favorite little home on this corner of the net.

Thanks for the welcome!

Black Sunday really caught me off-guard with its photography. I have a huge bias for good visual design, but this is a great film all on its own, so it's easy to recommend it. And it seems there's plenty more Bava horror for us to enjoy on Netflix instant. Let's hope they're all this good!

Make sure to toss in Deep Red, Tenebre, and Opera while you're at it!

No problem!

As the guy above said, for Argento add in Deep Red, Tenebre and Opera. I would also add The Bird With Crystal Plumage.

Added, thank you both!

I've given Argento a February booking, because Bava paid up front, and I've already promised Audrey Hepburn that I'd finish her filmography in January. The only films of Audrey's that I have left are the 70s/80s pictures, War and Peace, and her more obscure cameos. She and I have had a 20+ year love affair, so it's gonna be a sad goodbye.

*pulls out chair* I guess this means I'm in for the 500 movie challenge.
 
Coppola does some glorious things with the camera in AN; when Willard and the gang rock up and meet Kilgore for the first time, and there's just things on fire and guns and dead Vietcong and children everywhere and Willard/Kilgore fill up just enough of the screen so that it isn't necessarily a close up just showing them, nor is it an establishing shot to show all this horror. It's just this permeating sense growing and manifesting around them and they're not paying it any attention. They're just walking around, talking about orders and surfing. It's so deliberate in its avoidance of making the dead bodies of a Vietnamese child the focus of the scene, and I'd think its Coppola condemning the nature of his characters in such a way. He does some beautiful fucking things. You have this slaughter of a cow given the slow motion treatment, and then a bunch of heads just lying around in the background while Hopper runs around talking shit.

What a great fucking movie. Rise of the Valkyries gave me chills.
 
What a great fucking movie. Rise of the Valkyries gave me chills.

Don't you think it got a sort of comical deformation, throughout the years, due to the obsessive parodying of it in pop culture? Haven't watched the film in a while but i'm a bit afraid of that scene ruining the tone of the movie, now.

It's a butchered version of the film made by splicing in a bunch of live-action in order to make it more palatable, I think.

It didn't work, obviously.
Oh, so i gotta be careful what i get then, thanks for the heads up. ;)
 
Don't you think it got a sort of comical deformation, throughout the years, due to the obsessive parodying of it in pop culture? Haven't watched the film in a while but i'm a bit afraid of that scene ruining the tone of the movie, now.

I've only ever seen the film twice; once in Redux, once here. But there's just something about it, everything comes together. It's not even necessarily the music, but the helicopter shots, the fucking flaming fire everywhere, the grenade in the helicopter, Kilgore just chilling out and things go to shit around him. It's a real hypnotic scene.

Such a beautiful movie on Blu Ray.
 
I've only ever seen the film twice; once in Redux, once here. But there's just something about it, everything comes together. It's not even necessarily the music, but the helicopter shots, the fucking flaming fire everywhere, the grenade in the helicopter, Kilgore just chilling out and things go to shit around him. It's a real hypnotic scene.

Such a beautiful movie on Blu Ray.

You ain't kidding.
 
That movie is really good when Marlon Brando isn't on screen

I still think its great when he is. The ending might go on a little too long but he's fantastic in it; it fits the theme of the film with this fucking nightmarish visual aspect and this weird porky bald bloke quoting poetry and shit. Love it.
 
I love Apocalypse Now! It's one of those larger than life movies, with the original book, the documentary and everything. We had a lecturer at our university that analyzed the shit out of it, it was mind blowing.
 
Ordet

Superbly acted and directed, it doesn't feel like a 50s movie. However, the ending hurt it a little. The film is perfectly made, just that the ending was too fantastical for me.

To a point I saw it as the director's way of saying religion is bogus. I thought that it was showing how religious stubbornness can separate people (coming from a very religious family, I thought it was interesting), but I suppose it would have been very negative had it ended that way.
I liked how Johannes broke down the first time he attempted to resurrect Inger, made me think it was proof of him being just crazy (my problem with the ending is that it validated him). I also liked how Morten refused to accept the relationship with Anne (because of religion), until he found out her father refused the proposal too. It was funny how Morten thought the same as Peter, but agreed due to pride.
I loved the film, just didn't love the ending, but mostly for personal reasons.
 
Just watched One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest last night. Great film, very sad it took me this long to see it. Glad I got the box set for Christmas.
 
Continuing my post 2000 comedy run while awake at 4am, 50/50

Pretty good. JGL is good and sells the emotional moments, Rogen makes for an increasingly endearing screen presence, and Anna Kendrick has the nicest smile in the movies. Bryce Dallas Howard is given an utterly fucking thankless role though, and maybe that plot point could have been jettisoned a bit. Wasn't as funny as I'd been led to believe either, save a few Rogen zingers. The one about Gorbachev was good. 3/5

edit: Cuckoo's Nest is a fucking incredible film
 
Should I read Kesey's novel first before watching the film? I've been abstaining from a view for quite a while, even though it's Milos Forman and Jack Nicholson in one blow.
 
Should I read Kesey's novel first before watching the film? I've been abstaining from a view for quite a while, even though it's Milos Forman and Jack Nicholson in one blow.

I can't say that it will help or hinder, but I saw the film, loved the fuck out of it, read the play for an A-Level performance and found that lesser than the film. There's so much quality in Nicholson's performance that I don't think reading the book would necessarily distort your view of the film, but its far less time consuming and it is brilliant. I'd say just watch it on its own merits. It's great.

Not that I know whether our tastes correlate at all :lol, but I got around 550 films logged on my letterboxd, and 25 of them are 10/10s. OFOTCN is one of them.
 
Alright—thank you all for the assurance.

I try not to hand out too many 5-star ratings either—and, even if the product's perfect enough to deserve, that doesn't always mean it's a great movie.
 
I can't say that it will help or hinder, but I saw the film, loved the fuck out of it, read the play for an A-Level performance and found that lesser than the film. There's so much quality in Nicholson's performance that I don't think reading the book would necessarily distort your view of the film, but its far less time consuming and it is brilliant. I'd say just watch it on its own merits. It's great.

Not that I know whether our tastes correlate at all :lol, but I got around 550 films logged on my letterboxd, and 25 of them are 10/10s. OFOTCN is one of them.

I don't think there is really necessary to read it to love the film. It's not like there is any background information needed to understand everything (unlike anime movies :P).

I have 809 moviesc logged and 47 5/5. I guess I've been much more forgiving. OFOTCN is definitely a 9 for me though.
 
I don't think there is really necessary to read it to love the film. It's not like there is any background information needed to understand everything (unlike anime movies :P).

I have 809 moviesc logged and 47 5/5. I guess I've been much more forgiving. OFOTCN is definitely a 9 for me though.

I am very curious what your favorite film is.
 
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