Good "Cinema" You've Seen Lately...
guy_alcindor
621 Posts
Maybe it was "The Proposition" or something along those lines, or the Godard retrospective at your local art house, what hit you in the cinematic gourd lately?Recently watched Kenneth Anger's "Scorpio Rising", and John Waters' "Multiple Maniacs"... low budget trash-uloid at its best!!! Finally saw Roger Vadim's "And God Created Woman", pretty ehh...
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Underrated and impossible to see (except on a French import DVD), John Cassavetes??? LOVE STREAMS, based on a play by Canadian Ted Allan, reappears in this deluxe new print from Sony Entertainment. Cassavetes, who ushered in the American independent movement with his staggering debut SHADOWS, confirms in this, his penultimate film, the unflagging auteurism that made his body of work one of the most unique and unified of post-Fifties cinema. A thematic summation of his twenty-five-year career, LOVE STREAMS is a rough and raw examination of love: its limits and falsities, its teetering into delusion, its power to destroy and to set free. Robert Harman, played with remarkable strength by Cassavetes (when Jon Voigt pulled out of the project mere weeks before shooting he was forced into the role, though suffering from the cancer that was to take his life) is a high-rolling, perpetually inebriated romance novelist with wildly unorthodox research methods living up in the Hollywood Hills in a house filled with a bevy of babes and a cross-section of Noah???s Ark. Gena Rowlands, preternaturally enthralling, is Sarah Lawson, Robert???s loopy sister whose recent divorce (from Seymour Cassel, in a re-casting of MINNIE AND MOSKOWITZ) results in her estrangement from her daughter, and a lunacy that is equally tragic and absurd (note the GREED-like epic expansion of her hair). The depths of desperation are mined and contrasted through Robert???s ambivalence towards love and Sarah???s embarrassingly juvenile surfeit of affection. The performances are so naked that their fragility cuts through the film???s fiction, making LOVE STREAMS ???a movie that gets better with every viewing??? (Dennis Lim, The Village Voice). Not to be missed.
http://www.criterionco.com/asp/release.asp?id=286
i thought this was really really funny and ahead of its time.
Repulsion
Really one of the better standouts of the blaxploitation genre
disturbing, but good
My favorite movie in a longtime- highly recommend!
oh missbassie. missbassie missbassie.
lol - i know i know - when will you come to the light?
There is a good French remake of this that came out recently.
perhaps a stiff drink, a gazillion cigarettes and two las vegas hookers will help?
i can't believe how much smoking there was in that film...i don't think there was one scene without smoking. usually a lot of smoking ina movie makes me want a cigarette, not after this movie though!
Joseph Gordon-Levitt is blowing up right now. Brick is probably the best new movie I've seen in 6 months, although I think Brick is not for everyone (i.e. it will probably piss off about 50% of the people who see it)
Anyway, the last memorable movies I've seen recently
In theater: Brick - It's a great juxtaposition of film noir archetypes and high school drama. Amazing that this was a debut feature-length film for the director.
On DVD: Bad Day At Black Rock - Just a great, well-paced, suspensful, noir-meets-modern-western with a one-armed WWII vet played by Spencer Tracy uncovering the dirty secret of a sleepy western town.
Saw this for the first time over the weekend. It was good, not spectacular. Sellers is the fuggin' man, though, and the set design and colors and whatnot are great.
Only one 9 minute reel survives of this full-length film
shot in 1928. I saw it for the first time on TCM the other night,
although apparently they show it quite often as filler between films.
Yes, only 9 minutes, but it manages to convey more romance, drama, tension,
passion and beauty in 9 minutes than most films can get across in 2 hours.
Garbo's only "lost" movie - watch for it.
I really liked Brick.
Here's an old movie I hadn't seen before (the first 30 mins is )
And this documentary was great (actually how I found out about the movie above)
Ha ha, the exact thing happened to me. Caught the Z Channel doc on IFC, and ran out and rented Le Magnifique right after. Since then, my local video store (Videoscope in Mtn View, highly recommended) has aquired it on DVD, are the extras worth a second renting?
Also, for those who enjoyed Brick, might I suggest The original 1949 D.O.A., which is now available free for download from the Internet Archive.
Yeah the original DOA is classic. Does anybody know the name of the 1940's noir movie where Dan Duryea plays a drunk piano player framed for murder? Great movie from what I remember, but it has been many years since I've seen it.
The Black Angel
Based on one of Cornell Woolrich's best novels - and now available on DVD!
Yeah that's the one...good looking out! I'll have to rent that one again.
Great ending too from what I remember.
most impactful thing ive seen in a while
of hawks and sparrows --- Pasolini at his lightest. good late night shit
man this was kinda heavy. chris marker seems likea bit of a dick but the film itself its quite breathtaking