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The Visitor
Liquid Sky
Schlock
Legend of the Eight Samurai
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The Visitor and Liquid Sky seem like movies I should like more than I actually do.
Schlock is fun. Not one of Landis’ classics, but no movie with a gorilla suit can be all bad.
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You've probably seen Eight Samurai, and I wish it was a better copy.
That account isn't deep, but I was thinking about posting some of the more prestigious films like Ju Dou or Tampopo.
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Some light on Lamont Johnson, unsung 70s director.
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I dare anybody to make it 13 minutes into this Japanese children's show from 1971 by Tezuka Osamu (Astro Boy, Metropolis (2001)) and deny that it's one of the craziest things you've ever seen:
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A little context: an old "special lady friend" visited from Japan last month. It just so happened to coincide with my third attempt at purchasing a copy of the 2001 anime adaptation of Tezuka Osamu's 1949 comic version of Metropolis having borne fruit, and I was excited to watch it (the first attempt yielded a repackaged copy sold as new that looked like somebody had sneezed on the bottom of the disc, and the second was a pirated copy).
So we watched Metropolis. Great movie. Might be one for the "Missing Movie Files," I'm not sure. After watching it, she told me about this Tezuka Osamu cartoon she enjoyed as a little girl (she's 63), and how her father had walked into the living room while it was playing one day, and upon witnessing it, turned off the tv, exclaimed that this was not a children's show, and forbade the kids from watching it again.
So we did a little YouTube search, and, score. You know that feeling of finding tv memories from your childhood on YouTube. That's where she went. I watched a 63 year–old woman become her 6 year–old self before my eyes, exploding into gleeful colors of pure nostalgiagasm.
We watched it, and oh my god we laughed our asses off. I mean this shit is crazy. Could Tezuka really have not been on drugs? Because this show would be great on drugs. I'd play this at any stoner party without hesitation. Or any drunk party, or any party for that matter. I'd show the first two episodes, anyway. Future episodes kinda fizzle into a more–or–less regular kids' show after that, though not without their moments, but those first two episodes... they are something very, very special. So, imbibe if you got em, and, well...
Rampop II wrote:
I dare anybody to make it 13 minutes into this Japanese children's show from 1971 by Tezuka Osamu (Astro Boy, Metropolis (2001)) and deny that it's one of the craziest things you've ever seen:
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Trailer for Godard's new (and final) 20 minute film.
Director's cut of Manoel de Oliveira's Abraham's Valley which is receiving a special screening.
Jacques Rivette's 1969 L'Amour Fou (passable VHS with subs)
Man Ray's 1923 Return To Reason experimental short
Skeleton of Mrs. Morales, Mexican thriller/comedy (unsubbed)
Yasujiro Ozu's 1947 Record of a Tenement Gentleman
Bonus Ozu (because there are so many left to see), Flavor of Green Tea Over Rice, 1952
And for no reason other than Youtube doesn't have the 1983 doc Mississippi Blues by Tavernier/Parrish, here's Memphis '69, a doc covering the Memphis Country Blues Festival featuring Rufus Thomas, Sleepy John Estes, Bukka White and John Fahey.
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I should really watch The Face of Another again....it's been a long time and I loved that
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Some early Matthew Chapman thrillers
(This one looks interesting - a fictional take on the behind-the-scenes making of Kubrick's Killer's Kiss, with Peter Coyote playing "Stanley" the director.)
(Requires sign-in. Helen Mirren in Hussy, from 1980)
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Thanks for those. Heart of Midnight kind of blew me away, so I’m eager to check out more of Chapman’s work.
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Rock wrote:
Thanks for those. Heart of Midnight kind of blew me away, so I’m eager to check out more of Chapman’s work.
Heart of Midnight is such a good film that I was thinking it was made by a more well-regarded director, and was suprised to see that Matthew Chapman has not made too many other films, and doubly suprised that he's been more successful as a writer than a director, as many of the reviews of Heart of Midnight note that the film is much better in its film style than in its screenplay. (Although it does make one wonder how much better such mundane 90s thrillers like Consenting Adults or Color of Night could have been under Chapman's eye.)
You're likely better off to find a better copy of Hussy elsewhere. This copy is very dark and grainy, essentially obscuring the very nudity that it's supposed to hide behind the sign-in.
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I actually like Color of Night quite a bit. I think Richard Rush’s knockoff De Palma direction makes the movie consistently interesting to look at. Perhaps Chapman might have been able to imbue more emotional resonance into the material, but the film as is has a certain charm from its incoherence and nonsensical qualities. I think it’s a pretty good stab at an American giallo.
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I wouldn't mind giving Color of Night a second chance, especially considering a better visual style and a better cast, since I haven't seen it in 30 years, and I won't deny that my opinion was colored by the poor reviews of the time. My memory of it, however, is pretty much mundane 90s psuedo-porn, much like Body of Evidence or something. Definitely not DePalma-esque.
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I don’t know if you saw it on VHS at the time, but I think seeing it in a nice transfer was definitely conducive to my appreciation. It’s playing on the Criterion Channel at the moment, but I suspect it’ll hit Tubi at some point (seems a lot of movies with Kino Bluray releases end up on there at some point).
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In wake of Glenda Jackson, for anyone who hasn't seen it, this incredible film, from Peter Brook in 1967, of the notorious Marquis de Sade play about the French Revolution, staged by the inmates of the asylum that de Sade was committed to. (This performance was also reinacted briefly in the 2000 film Quills, but this one is the definitive version.)
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Just as I was wondering what's been going on recently with Collative Learning, the film analysis channel run by Rob Ager, this little beauty showed up in my recommend feed.
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For Frederic Forrest, written by Terrence Malick.
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For Alan Arkin, also written by Terrence Malick