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#46 | |
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Cinematic Vision
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Fantastic thread, so thanks for that oolie! And great reviews Did anyone watch Revolver? (Guy Ritchies film) I wanted to know what everyone thinks to it, because there were so many negative reviews but I loved it. |
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#47 |
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fashion elite
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oolie coco great thread!
Karma worthy me thinks![]() Most people I know tend to be really excited about Ben Stiller-esque comedies and such. And that is...not me. Definitely not me. I love a laugh, but too much of a slapstick phenomena going lately and it's really starting to irritate me. Nothing can beat great acting and realistic dialogue. Realistic being the key word!! Prob. won't post in here much but will def. read.
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I just got up. I don't cheer when I just got up. |
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#48 |
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front row
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I saw A very long engagement yesterday, which I had already seen a long time ago. Anyone else liked this movie?
I think the cinematography is amazing... and the characters' facial expressions look like they were taken from vintage comic books. |
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#49 | |
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fashion icon
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#50 |
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seagreen serenades
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thanks for the thread, oolie coco.
electricringo, I watched a very long engagement again last week. I had to have it on dvd. I love the way it's technically a war film,but that it sidesteps the monotony of life in the trenches and shows the softer sides of all the soldiers. i also love the almost whispered humour, like when Mathilde steps out of her wheelchair and says 'It doesn't just happen at Lourdes'. Like with Amelie, it's the little details that stand out, like her ongoing and childish reasoning with faith: ' If I don't break the (apple) peel Menech is alive'. I myself used to do this when my cats were gone and presumed dead so i was surprised and delighted to see it in a film. I think it's just of those warming stories that restores your faith in the often crappy world. twilight fairy - I remember your clockwork orange obsession alright i agree that it's all that it's cracked up to be. aside from the humour and the many lasting images it burns into your memory (the milk bar, the William Tell fast forward, the eyes wiiide open)...it's just visually magnificant. And it satirises the world so well : 'It's funny how the colors of the real world only seem really real when you viddy them on the screen' I only read the review of Match Point after I had seen it (at a preview) and somehow i managed to miss all the rave ones, instead finding some that matched my view that Woody had well and truly kept his eye off the ball this time. So much of it bothered me. I agree with oolie coco, that the wealthy siblings were fine, but Nola and Chris really wrecked my head. Jonathan Rhys Meyers was as stiff and wooden as could be, and if he was as Irish as they kept saying, why did his accent sound so forced and English... And... I still don't understand the appeal of this Scarlett one, do you have to be male to see the attraction of her and her ample bosom ![]()
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Last edited by strawberry daiquiri : 15-01-2006 at 04:35 PM. |
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#51 | |
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V.I.P.
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strawberry daquiri, I never reviewed "Match Point". I don't want to take credit for a review I never gave!
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But actually comedies are actually my favourite type of film, by far I loved 'Wedding Crashers' ...but I have a thing for Owen Wilson and Vince Vaughn... |
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#52 |
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V.I.P.
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I thoroughly enjoyed A Very Long Engagement too!
A Jeunet film through and through and I DON'T think it's basically 'Amelie' set in the 20's. That would be an insult. For a start, it couldn't be more stark and honest about life in the trenches, the imminent death that faces the troops, the desperation that they all go through (imagine being court marshalled for self infliction of pain). I thought it really got those bits right yet still made them enthralling and slightly amusing to watch as each one of those people on Bingo Crepiscule was made into a significant and unique character (the way that Jeunet highlights character quirks straight off....similar to the way Anderson signposts his characters in Tenenbaums). The underlying strain of course is the puzzle, the mystery of Manech's whereabouts. When parts start to slot in, you really start to anticipate what's going to happen and just as Mathilde never loses hope, so too do you as you root and root. Bottom line is, this film made me give a damn and her courage and hope actually moved me (which is very rare when usually something is so predictable, you're too bored to care). It looked spectacular too....from the grim and grit of the trenches to the sun-kissed home of Mathilde where it's as if her hope and love for Manech lit the whole place up. The score was very sweeping and grand which suited the film. I too loved the little bits of humour that popped up from time to time as they were very much recognisable from Jeunet's past films Delicatessen and Amelie but not really the thing that made this film worth watching.
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'A fashion that does not reach the streets is not a fashion.' Coco Chanel. MyStyleDiary My blog - Style Bubble - http://stylebubble.typepad.com/style_bubble/ |
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#53 | |
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trendsetter
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I'm going to go and recommend The Chumscrubber. It has an all-star cast - Glenn Close, Rita Wilson, Ralph Fiennes, Carrie-Anne Moss, Jamie Bell, Camilla Belle, Justin Chatwin, Lou Taylor Pucci to name a few. It's not particularly a drama or a comedy, it's a perfect blend of both. The comedy is dark but still enjoyable. There's been comparisons to Donnie Darko and American Beauty, but I don't like comparing movies because it might often affect people's expectations. The story takes place in a suburban community where drugs (prescribed sometimes, but usually not) are prevalent. The community is dealing with the death of a young drug dealer, which somehow affects all of the characters and their stories intertwine. It's not a teen movie, nor is it a movie just for adults. Go past suburbia gone wrong setting and find that it's a movie about how people deal (or in most cases, don't deal) and the relationships that we have - father/son, mother/daughter, friends, romantic relationships and the like. Great acting from Jamie Bell and Glenn Close especially. Good music, too - especially Phantom Planet's cover of "Our House". Last edited by june gloom : 15-01-2006 at 07:24 PM. |
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#54 | |
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PopWillEatItself
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My favourite comedy of all times (and one of my favourite films ever) is "The Big Lebowski" by the Cohen Brothers. Every time I watch it I find it even funnier than the previous time and I never get bored of watching it (I must have seen it more than 30 times by now). Everything about it is so well thought of. The lines, the characters, the little details, the music, the wardrobe.... the dreams (one of the few times I really enjoyed dreams in a movie). Their humour is amazing and of the sort where you have to think about it in order to realize the comedy behind what has just been said or happened...Few movies have managed to entertain me this much. Jeff Bridges makes an exceptionally amazing Dude ("a lazy time wasting slacker"), as well as John Goodman playing the Vietnam Veteran still stuck in that time. But the truth is that the movie belongs to the secondary roles: Steve Buscemi is incredible, while John Turturro has the scene which is mostly remembered in the film. The biggest revelation of it all (at the time) was Philip Seymour Hoffman, who despite holding just a secondary part, in my opinion he managed to steal the movie. The guy is magnificent! This is one of my favourite things regarding this movie: each character is extremely well casted and the supporting parts are not just fillers (as in many films and especially comedies). They are the basis of the whole film. I rememeber when the film came out, there was a poster in the London Underground promoting it, saying just this: "If the world was made by the Cohen Brothers, it would be an amazing world!" I still remember it because this is how I feel everytime I watch their movies. The Big Lebowski is probably their best. To me, this is amazing film-making in every sense. |
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#55 |
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dream a little dream...
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One of my favorites is School of Rock! I really relate to Jack Blacks humor, and I find the movie entertaining each time I watch it!
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#56 | |
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Cinematic Vision
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#57 |
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backstage pass
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My favourite comedies are
This is Spinal Tap! Dr. Strangelove (if this qualifies as a comedy) The great dictator A fish called Wanda and of course Monty Python!
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Your right to wear a mint-green polyester leisure suit ends where it meets my eye - Fran Lebowitz |
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#58 |
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V.I.P.
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June Gloom: You're lucky that you get to see all the American indie flicks coz films like Junebug and Chumscrubber haven't even been released here yet!
I may have to get the US dvds....
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'A fashion that does not reach the streets is not a fashion.' Coco Chanel. MyStyleDiary My blog - Style Bubble - http://stylebubble.typepad.com/style_bubble/ |
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#59 | |
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fashion elite
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Owen Wilson doesn't bother me. He's funny actually. Not trying to offend anyone...I just don't see how anyone can like Vince Vaughn. He's *ok* in interviews, but I....ugg...his films....![]() Lol, I loved Meet the Parents. It was probably b/c I just love Robert DeNiro though. Now....Meet the Fockers is another story. ![]()
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I just got up. I don't cheer when I just got up. |
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#60 |
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V.I.P.
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DreamsareMade, I liked "meet the Parents" too. My point was I just didn't think Ben Stiller was funny in the film at all.
melt977, "The Big Lebowski" is one of my favourite comedies too. Jeff Bridges is amazing and I think John Goodman is one of the greatest actors of our time... I've said this a bunch of times on different threads, but my favourite film of all-time is a comedy... "Office Space". I love everything about it - to me it's perfect! ![]() |
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