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Five stars for the American flag on the TV.
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The latest from Quentin Dupieux - I think I'm now up to date - is another surreal comedy about a Power Ranger-type group of superheros, the Tobacco Force, which uses the toxins of tobacco - members are named Nicotina, Ammonia, Mercury, Benzene, etc - to suffocate the intergalactic forces of Evil. But even our elite superhero teams need a breather every now and again, but unfortunately an idylic respite can't delay the march of global annihilation.
Smoking Causes Coughing throws a lot of balls in the air, and you're liable to get hit by a couple of them on the way down. Another Dupieux triumph.
8/10
French writer/director Christophe Honore has made about a dozen of the most acclaimed 21st Century French contemporary young adult relationship dramas - he's been a common nominee at Cannes over the last two decades. This is the first of his films that I've seen, although my preliminary interest was more about catching one of Lea Seydoux's early roles. Here, she plays a schoolgirl attending a new school shortly after her mother's death, and finds herself the object of multiple affections, including the more complicated attraction from her Italian teacher (Louis Garrel). The attraction is easy to sympathize with, as Seydoux has the elegant ability to embody an impressive range of classic Gaulic chanteuses, seeming to ravel together Anna Karina, Jeanne Moreau and Isabelle Adjani into one, and still have her own signature soul in reserve. It seems effortless to rest the film on her strengths, but there's plenty of other performances (Garrel particularly) that keep it engaging beyond the merely melodramatic source material.
8/10
Like Someone In Love is Abbas Kiaorstami's follow-up to Certified Copy, this one set in Tokyo involving a young escort (a softly alluring Rin Takanashi) and her elder client (Tadashi Okuna) who tries to care for her in light of a jealous boyfirend (Ryo Kase). The writing, rhythm and performances of the film elevates the story above such a mundane sketch, and finds a wealth of empathy in unsuspecting places. Like Certified Copy, it's a film where the human relationships become far more of the focus than the banal romantic cliches. The only knock against the film is a rather unresolved conclusion. It is interesting that the original title was The End, and it would be Kiarostami's final film released in his lifetime. Okuna's resolute professor is clearly an avatar for the 72 year old director.
8/10
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The Tomb of Ligeia
Nowhere to Hide
F.F.P.
The Terror
Superware Party
The Comedy of Terrors
Helga, She Wolf of Stilberg
House of Wax
Wolf Creek
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Rock wrote:
It's interesting to consider whether my lukewarm reception to Haunted Palace was due to having seen Ligeia first. Noting both your much more positive reaction to Palace with these common similarities between the films, I think that Ligeia is still superior, but maybe I wouldn't have felt that Palace then felt so also-ran by comparison.
Rock wrote:
Really was hoping this was part of your Vincent Price buffet.
Rock wrote:
I'll grant your points on the villain performance, but I still really hate this whole class of bleak, sadistic horror films. The sheer fact of its honesty - without the disingenuous moralizing of Saw or Hostel - doesn't let it off the hook for me.
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Jinnistan wrote:
Rock wrote:
It's interesting to consider whether my lukewarm reception to Haunted Palace was due to having seen Ligeia first. Noting both your much more positive reaction to Palace with these common similarities between the films, I think that Ligeia is still superior, but maybe I wouldn't have felt that Palace then felt so also-ran by comparison.
I think all of these movies play better together, so would suggest revisiting these two as at least a double feature.
Jinnistan wrote:
Rock wrote:
Really was hoping this was part of your Vincent Price buffet.
I will try to get to that one this October. Probably Mystery of the Wax Museum as well.
Jinnistan wrote:
Rock wrote:
I'll grant your points on the villain performance, but I still really hate this whole class of bleak, sadistic horror films. The sheer fact of its honesty - without the disingenuous moralizing of Saw or Hostel - doesn't let it off the hook for me.
I don't like this kind of movie period (except the Hostel movies), but I found this one less offensive than some others. Still not an endorsement, tbh, but maybe a hope that Jarratt can give a similar performance in less noxious fare.
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Rock wrote:
Yeah, not a great movie. The S&M Ursula stuff is definitely the highlight.
You ever seen any of those Sabrina Siani flicks? She did a couple of Franco's cannibal films, but not Ferox I don't think.
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She was in Conquest, which I’ve seen. But you don’t see her face in that lol
I’ve got White Cannibal Queen on my watchlist. I understand she plays the titular role.
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Rock wrote:
I’ve got White Cannibal Queen on my watchlist. I understand she plays the titular role.
Emphasis on the titular, apparently.
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Rock, what did you do to the formatting?
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It wasn’t me lol
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But looks like the url tag stopped working.
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Also I’m no longer getting the mobile site on my phone.
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Rock wrote:
But looks like the url tag stopped working.
All of the [url]and [img] are no longer working. The [youtube] embeds seem to be unaffected. There are no administrative changes on my end, as all image permissions are still turned on.
Boardhost sent me an automated reply this morning saying someone would be looking into it. I haven't seen anything anywhere about discontinuing these functions for free users. Perhaps we're learning that the forum's security for free users is not terrific.
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Rock wrote:
Also I’m no longer getting the mobile site on my phone.
I disabled mobile temporarily while troubleshooting. It should be available now.
And now that it is can you tell me if the mobile version is experiencing similar url and img issues?
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Okay, yeah, mobile site is back on. I’m getting the same tag issues there: no url or img, YouTube works ok.
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The quotes aren't showing the name of the user you quoted, but otherwise things look ok (url tags and images are back).
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Rock wrote:
The quotes aren't showing the name of the user you quoted, but otherwise things look ok (url tags and images are back).
Yeah, that's weird about the quotes. Was this some kind of HTML glitch? I'm not sure how something like quote attribution could get lost with that.
(When I edit posts, the quote attribution is still there, even for older quotes previous to this glitch. No idea why they aren't showing.)
Last edited by Jinnistan (8/29/2023 10:01 pm)