current film strut

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  • FrankFrank 2,373 Posts
    I watched these two over the past couple of days and hugely enjoyed them both:



    Possessor was a recommendation by MarcoFunk. I think I have to re-watch both.

  • ketanketan Warmly booming riffs 3,170 Posts
    Frank said:
    I watched these two over the past couple of days and hugely enjoyed them both:



    Possessor was a recommendation by MarcoFunk. I think I have to re-watch both.

    i've been wanting to see both of those.  thanks for the encouragement.

    my parents wanted to watch the mauritanian the other day, so i checked it out. it's pretty well made but i wish kevin macdonald had more emotion (or something) in his films.  i started his pele documentary last week... it's brilliant watching the man lay out his story on screen, but it's also a bit too undramatic in tone.  i dunno. 

    not current but i'm going to be watching cache for the 3rd or 4th??th time next week and can't wait to sit down with it again. besides, with France, it's always going to be kind of current...  https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-56360817 (sorry, not getting political, raj! )


  • FrankFrank 2,373 Posts
    Thanks Ketan, downloading Caché right now...

  • ketanketan Warmly booming riffs 3,170 Posts
    Frank said:
    Thanks Ketan, downloading Caché right now...

    just know that it's not a horror movie.  have you seen anything else by michael haneke?  one of the versions of funny games, perhaps?


  • FrankFrank 2,373 Posts
    ketan said:
    Frank said:
    Thanks Ketan, downloading Caché right now...

    just know that it's not a horror movie.  have you seen anything else by michael haneke?  one of the versions of funny games, perhaps?

    I don't watch too many straight up horror movies these days. I totally loved La Llorna, just watched it last week, not really a horror movie even though it's been marketed as one.

    https://youtu.be/Ewc-tpT0-J0 

    How is the 2nd Funny Games? I watched the first one and loved it. Always had a soft spot for Home Invasion movies.



  • ketanketan Warmly booming riffs 3,170 Posts
    Frank said:
    ketan said:
    Frank said:
    Thanks Ketan, downloading Caché right now...

    just know that it's not a horror movie.  have you seen anything else by michael haneke?  one of the versions of funny games, perhaps?

    How is the 2nd Funny Games? I watched the first one and loved it. Always had a soft spot for Home Invasion movies.


    i didn't watch it actually.  the first one blew me away, but i didn't feel the need to see how he would americanize it.  


  • FrankFrank 2,373 Posts
    ketan said:
    Frank said:
    ketan said:
    Frank said:
    Thanks Ketan, downloading Caché right now...

    just know that it's not a horror movie.  have you seen anything else by michael haneke?  one of the versions of funny games, perhaps?

    How is the 2nd Funny Games? I watched the first one and loved it. Always had a soft spot for Home Invasion movies.


    i didn't watch it actually.  the first one blew me away, but i didn't feel the need to see how he would americanize it.  

    hehe, I can remember having had the exact same sentiment


  • FrankFrank 2,373 Posts
    Also re-watched the Spanish Argentinian the Secrets in their Eyes a few days ago (amazing) and passed on the US version even though it has Nicole Kidman in it. BTW, Invisible Man kicked some unexpected ass despite the tedious CGI bullshit.

  • Wait, what? They made an american version of Secrets in Their Eyes? God damn, I'm tempted to watch it strictly from morbid curiosity. I did avoid the Funny Games remake though. Caché is one of my favorites, though I don't know if I'll watch it again. Haneke movies aren't good-time comfort rewatches.

    But in a totally different tone, I rewatched Alex Ross Perry's The Color Wheel. I really liked it when it came out and it holds up completely on a second viewing. It's a comedy about two siblings made of distilled unpleasantness, and you still end up caring about them. Gorgeous 16mm BW. It kept getting called mumblecore but it was apparently very intricately scripted. While I don't usually care about "spoilers" as most people use the term (oh no you ruined how han solo's spaceship looks boo hoo), there's an element to The Color Wheel that is a huge spoiler present in almost any press about the movie. I think to know it beforehand is pretty ruinous to the experience. So if you're gonna watch it just watch it first, don't read about it.
    ketanFrank

  • CRABFUNKCRABFUNK 33 Posts
    Hardly current but I keep coming back to Frank for some reason or other. I think it contians some basic truths that are not intuitive or expected. Anyone else into this one?





    DuderonomyJimster

  • ketanketan Warmly booming riffs 3,170 Posts
    Never saw it tbh!  I'll have to add it to the list after The Secret In Their Eyes. 

  • dizzybulldizzybull Eerie Dicks 338 Posts
    One night in Miami was a lot better than I expected it to be. 

  • JimsterJimster Cruffiton.etsy.com 6,955 Posts
    CRABFUNK said:
    Hardly current but I keep coming back to Frank for some reason or other. I think it contians some basic truths that are not intuitive or expected. Anyone else into this one?





    I liked the film, he's obviously more a tragic character in the film but as long as you know the distinction it's all good.

    My brother worked on a TV show that the real Frank did a regular guest-spot on.  I was in the audience a few times.  I remember he (as Frank) wore these white jeans with tons of small biro-written messages on them, which he never stood still long enough for me to read properly, but it reminded me of all the scribblings you see 24-carat nutters make on their prison walls or in skin-bound journals.  His humour was pretty nuanced though... He opened for the Spice Girls at one big gig and started with:

    "Scream if you love [insert name of Spice Girl here]!" (cue massive screams from crowd)

    "Scream if you love [insert name of next Spice Girl here]!" (cue massive screams from crowd)

    "Scream if you've got Betamax!"... (crickets  ).... "I've got Betamax and wondered if anyone wanted to swap films with me."

    I mean, that takes balls.

    He (Chris IRL) was a completely different person without the mask - I mean, very regular, you would never know he was Frank unless you knew.  My brother used to sit with him in the studio canteen sometimes and they would chat about art and how shit the tea was, but he wasn't one of these always "ON" people like you'd imagine Jim Carrey or peak Robin Williams to be.


  • JimsterJimster Cruffiton.etsy.com 6,955 Posts

    Saw this recently.
    Cinematography is excellent.  Really makes you feel stuck with them and suicidal.  Sooo... not entertaining, as such.  But, gripped.  Like the wanking doll.
    Sea-dog saltiness :  MOST SALINOUS
    Did the conclusion make me feel robbed of my time and in the mood to throw a Chinese takeway at the telly? 


  • ketanketan Warmly booming riffs 3,170 Posts
    I felt much of the same, and remain in awe of this one.  Wondering if I'll ever want to watch it again on the one hand, but so "glad" I saw it because it's like being on a very long roller coaster.

    I actually saw this in the theatre when i was on my own traveling for work.  I love a good spliff before a good film, but I was running late for the screening and I managed to inhale perhaps a bit too much, too quickly before going inside and getting settled, and I had a weird psychological/physiological reaction that I've only had two other times in my life with the lettuce. So, for the first 20-odd minutes of the film I was essentially paralyzed in my seat and panicking about whether I was actually breathing enough to survive (I was; it was paranoia). My physical situation mellowed out pretty quickly but the paranoia sort of lingered becuase of how GRIPPING the dialogue/visuals are.  It was like a 4-D movie for me, in that way. 
    Did the conclusion make me feel robbed of my time and in the mood to throw a Chinese takeway at the telly? 

    It was such an intense viewing that I felt a form of... um... release by the ending.  I'll leave now.


  • CRABFUNKCRABFUNK 33 Posts

    Jimster said:

    He (Chris IRL) was a completely different person without the mask - I mean, very regular, you would never know he was Frank unless you knew.  My brother used to sit with him in the studio canteen sometimes and they would chat about art and how shit the tea was, but he wasn't one of these always "ON" people like you'd imagine Jim Carrey or peak Robin Williams to be.

    Cool. Sidebottom never really made it here (He was anti-comedy before that was even a thing), but that head is iconic. What is his connection with this movie? 

  • JimsterJimster Cruffiton.etsy.com 6,955 Posts
    The humor of the OG Frank was definitely Manchester/NW-Related so possibly wouldn't have travelled well anyway, unless you could relate.  Even then, it was like a surrealist take on it.

    Without googling, IIRC one of his old bandmembers (before Frank, Chris was an underground muso of sorts) got into screenwriting and/or filmmaking and the Frank Movie was supposed to be a kind of salute to their madcap days of old, before the idea morphed into something on a parallel timeline.  I can't remember if the OG Frank died before this was made so it could have also been part tribute. 

    The OG Frank/Chris died of cancer unfortunately.
    CRABFUNKDuderonomy

  • DuderonomyDuderonomy Haut de la Garenne 7,789 Posts
    CRABFUNK said:
    Hardly current but I keep coming back to Frank for some reason or other. I think it contians some basic truths that are not intuitive or expected. Anyone else into this one?





    I watched this with my wife and asked her why when the French dude spends the entire film only speaking French, it’s cool, but when I do it with English, it’s post-Imperialistic arrogance LOL.

    I’m still beyond shit at Catalan, Spanish, and now French.



    Fucking great film btw!


  • ElectrodeElectrode Los Angeles 3,130 Posts
    "Duderonomy said:
    I’m still beyond shit at Catalan, Spanish, and now French."

    Don't give up. My goal is Portuguese. This week I saw Sicario 2, as there were no other new movies I haven't seen yet with those dub/sub options on Netflix. What a downer film.
    Duderonomy

  • ketanketan Warmly booming riffs 3,170 Posts
    Frank said:
    Also re-watched the Spanish Argentinian the Secrets in their Eyes a few days ago (amazing)

    watched it the other day and loved it.  turned the procedural a bit inside out very effectively.  will not bother with the u.s. version...


  • FrankFrank 2,373 Posts

    ketan said:

    not current but i'm going to be watching cache for the 3rd or 4th??th time next week and can't wait to sit down with it again. besides, with France, it's always going to be kind of current...  https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-56360817 (sorry, not getting political, raj! )

    Thanks for bringing Caché to my attention. I enjoyed it a lot. What's your theory on who is behind the camera?

    After marinating on it for a while I came to see this more as a parable and the shot down the street to maybe stand for a changed public and individual awareness making those with blood on their hands nervous and feeling trapped.

    I read up on the '61 massacre (ca. 200 is the rather "conservative" guesstimate of the true body count) a few years ago and it boggled my mind how something this insane, large scale and traumatic could just have been buried.


    Over the past 10 months I did some research about my home area's past during the last 2 years of the 2nd WW and the following French occupation period which was eye opening in more ways than I could count.

    I was 11 in early 1979 when the Holocaust tv series was aired in Germany which led to intense discussions or rather the intense blocking of those from the side of my 2 nazi grandfathers, one of which was a blacksmith and had held held himself a French prisoner of war as a personal slave. All family members insisted that nothing like this had ever happened in our idyllic Black Forest. I can't get too deep into this but none or only very small parts of this shit were ever known to me or any of my older friends who grew up in the same area. I counted more than a dozen concentration camps in a 40 mile radius around my village and found out that the nearest town, about 6 miles away, was where some of the the last survivors of a death march from a camp built in and around an underground wunderwaffen factory had been massacred in an open field and buried in a mass grave. Too much crazy shit to mention here but yes, Caché definitely hit the spot for me.



  • FrankFrank 2,373 Posts
    I just watched this today and liked it a lot.


  • Having just watched The Battle of Algiers for the first time (to my shame), Caché now has a much stronger context to me, though I loved it before with only my dim knowledge of the independence struggle. I consume a greater than average amount of French media and Caché is literally the only time I ever heard about the Paris massacre without seeking it out myself... it is most definitely buried. I took it as a parable too - for guilt with getting away with it, maybe. People love to pretend the past doesn't affect anything when they've benefited.

    It's interesting finding out what family history gets buried - I've got family from the American South, mostly poor backgrounds - my mom has suspicions that some on her side could've been in the Klan in the early 20th century. My dad has been researching some blank spots in our family past. His dad was adopted and he found the biological mother, who gave him up as a baby. We'd assumed it was a teenage shame pregnancy and so on, but she seemed to have been pretty liberated for the 1920s and lived what seemed to be a pretty modern and full life after it. Looking at the adoption papers, though, which presumably somebody in the family has always had, the adopting couple, the family I get my name from, made some explicit requests for "no Greek or Jewish ancestry" to the agency. They even kinda tried to justify it in their cover letter with a sort of "we just want the baby to look like us, this isn't a race thing". I mean that stuff directly leads to who I am. I felt awkward being the one family member to point out that stuff when we looked at all the documents. Dead silence until I couched it in "hey the '20s were the height of Klan membership, it could've been worse!"

    It's no mass grave but people get really uncomfortable even with stuff like that. I can only imagine the postwar generations in Germany grappling with the long shadow of Nazism.

  • FrankFrank 2,373 Posts
    Having just watched The Battle of Algiers for the first time (to my shame), Caché now has a much stronger context to me, though I loved it before with only my dim knowledge of the independence struggle. I consume a greater than average amount of French media and Caché is literally the only time I ever heard about the Paris massacre without seeking it out myself... it is most definitely buried. I took it as a parable too - for guilt with getting away with it, maybe. People love to pretend the past doesn't affect anything when they've benefited.

    It's interesting finding out what family history gets buried - I've got family from the American South, mostly poor backgrounds - my mom has suspicions that some on her side could've been in the Klan in the early 20th century. My dad has been researching some blank spots in our family past. His dad was adopted and he found the biological mother, who gave him up as a baby. We'd assumed it was a teenage shame pregnancy and so on, but she seemed to have been pretty liberated for the 1920s and lived what seemed to be a pretty modern and full life after it. Looking at the adoption papers, though, which presumably somebody in the family has always had, the adopting couple, the family I get my name from, made some explicit requests for "no Greek or Jewish ancestry" to the agency. They even kinda tried to justify it in their cover letter with a sort of "we just want the baby to look like us, this isn't a race thing". I mean that stuff directly leads to who I am. I felt awkward being the one family member to point out that stuff when we looked at all the documents. Dead silence until I couched it in "hey the '20s were the height of Klan membership, it could've been worse!"

    It's no mass grave but people get really uncomfortable even with stuff like that. I can only imagine the postwar generations in Germany grappling with the long shadow of Nazism.

    Thank you for this, you almost made me do what I've always been good at; derail a thread on Soulstrut. But the post proved too long so I put it up on facebook instead.

    Now where's a butthurt gremlin when you really need it?






  • ketanketan Warmly booming riffs 3,170 Posts
    Frank said:

    ketan said:

    not current but i'm going to be watching cache for the 3rd or 4th??th time next week and can't wait to sit down with it again. besides, with France, it's always going to be kind of current...  https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-56360817 (sorry, not getting political, raj! )

    Thanks for bringing Caché to my attention. I enjoyed it a lot. What's your theory on who is behind the camera?

    After marinating on it for a while I came to see this more as a parable and the shot down the street to maybe stand for a changed public and individual awareness making those with blood on their hands nervous and feeling trapped.

    I read up on the '61 massacre (ca. 200 is the rather "conservative" guesstimate of the true body count) a few years ago and it boggled my mind how something this insane, large scale and traumatic could just have been buried.


    Over the past 10 months I did some research about my home area's past during the last 2 years of the 2nd WW and the following French occupation period which was eye opening in more ways than I could count.

    I was 11 in early 1979 when the Holocaust tv series was aired in Germany which led to intense discussions or rather the intense blocking of those from the side of my 2 nazi grandfathers, one of which was a blacksmith and had held held himself a French prisoner of war as a personal slave. All family members insisted that nothing like this had ever happened in our idyllic Black Forest. I can't get too deep into this but none or only very small parts of this shit were ever known to me or any of my older friends who grew up in the same area. I counted more than a dozen concentration camps in a 40 mile radius around my village and found out that the nearest town, about 6 miles away, was where some of the the last survivors of a death march from a camp built in and around an underground wunderwaffen factory had been massacred in an open field and buried in a mass grave. Too much crazy shit to mention here but yes, Caché definitely hit the spot for me.


    That's a heavy history - and that's the thing about war, there are "winner" and "losers" but even the winners have to deal with the fall out eventually.  


    *Spoilers*  I haven't watched Cache in at least a decade, and I know that I was never fully satisfied with my explanation (vis a vis the details on the screen).  But I remember seeing it as about how well-meaning upper middle class French people have a way of talking about things the right way but not fully reckoning with the privileges they have enjoyed due to France's history of colonization.  I think I felt like it wasn't the older man because the impact of colonization on him was more immediate trauma and, well, you know what happens to him.  But the younger generation both understands the history of colonization clearly, can clearly see the injustice of the status quo (intergenerational trauma), and have the rest of their lives ahead of them; so they're watching, and things could get hectic if the status quo doesn't change.  

    I'm actually watching this tonight and discussing it with a group of students tomorrow - and those discussions are always illuminating, so I'll circle back with a newer answer.  I can see how today, there's much more "wokeness" (i hate that term) out there, but how deep is that understanding?  And clearly a large amount of people still aren't willing to see the past and present from another perspective. So I expect Cache will remain highly relevant for some time....

    By the way, these are some great quotes from Haneke about his films that suggest it's really more about what YOU see in it.

    Michael Haneke: “I always say that a film is like a ski jump. The film constructs the jump and enables the spectator to jump. It's up to each member of the audience to jump, and they're all going to jump differently. I create tension. I raise certain questions. That's my intention, but it's to give the audience a chance to respond.

    The film ends in the head of the viewer, not on the screen.”

    Andrew O'Hehir: On the simplest level, you want to leave us asking: What happens next? What will the events we have seen lead to, and how do we think about them?

    Michael Haneke: Yes, and why? Why do things happen like this? Everybody has to find his own explanation.

    ---

    "It's important to always try to tell a story in a way where there are several credible possible explanations. Explanations that can be totally contradictory!"-- Michael Haneke


  • ketanketan Warmly booming riffs 3,170 Posts
    Having just watched The Battle of Algiers for the first time (to my shame), Caché now has a much stronger context to me, though I loved it before with only my dim knowledge of the independence struggle. I consume a greater than average amount of French media and Caché is literally the only time I ever heard about the Paris massacre without seeking it out myself... it is most definitely buried. I took it as a parable too - for guilt with getting away with it, maybe. People love to pretend the past doesn't affect anything when they've benefited.

    It's interesting finding out what family history gets buried - I've got family from the American South, mostly poor backgrounds - my mom has suspicions that some on her side could've been in the Klan in the early 20th century. My dad has been researching some blank spots in our family past. His dad was adopted and he found the biological mother, who gave him up as a baby. We'd assumed it was a teenage shame pregnancy and so on, but she seemed to have been pretty liberated for the 1920s and lived what seemed to be a pretty modern and full life after it. Looking at the adoption papers, though, which presumably somebody in the family has always had, the adopting couple, the family I get my name from, made some explicit requests for "no Greek or Jewish ancestry" to the agency. They even kinda tried to justify it in their cover letter with a sort of "we just want the baby to look like us, this isn't a race thing". I mean that stuff directly leads to who I am. I felt awkward being the one family member to point out that stuff when we looked at all the documents. Dead silence until I couched it in "hey the '20s were the height of Klan membership, it could've been worse!"

    It's no mass grave but people get really uncomfortable even with stuff like that. I can only imagine the postwar generations in Germany grappling with the long shadow of Nazism.

    Again, that's pretty heavy - and I never tire from the realization of how long human history is, and therefore how recent and highly relevant to the present the events of the last few hundred years are. 

    This quote from Paris is Burning stays relevant:



  • DuderonomyDuderonomy Haut de la Garenne 7,789 Posts

    It's interesting finding out what family history gets buried - I've got family from the American South, mostly poor backgrounds - my mom has suspicions that some on her side could've been in the Klan in the early 20th century. My dad has been researching some blank spots in our family past. His dad was adopted and he found the biological mother, who gave him up as a baby. We'd assumed it was a teenage shame pregnancy and so on, but she seemed to have been pretty liberated for the 1920s and lived what seemed to be a pretty modern and full life after it. Looking at the adoption papers, though, which presumably somebody in the family has always had, the adopting couple, the family I get my name from, made some explicit requests for "no Greek or Jewish ancestry" to the agency. They even kinda tried to justify it in their cover letter with a sort of "we just want the baby to look like us, this isn't a race thing". I mean that stuff directly leads to who I am. I felt awkward being the one family member to point out that stuff when we looked at all the documents. Dead silence until I couched it in "hey the '20s were the height of Klan membership, it could've been worse!"


    My father's family are from the South. Dirt poor. For his school vacations, my dad picked cotton every summer. Didn't own a pair of shoes until a pair had gone through his two older brothers first. One meal a day for most of his childhood. My grandmother probably had some kind of mixed-race ancestry. She had really high cheek bones, very thick, frizzy hair, and a massive ass. My father, rest his MAGA soul, would try and pass it off as possibly being Cherokee blood. I think the reality is probably black blood (this is Mississippi after all), but all of my family on that side are so hardcore racist that's not something I would even say out loud to them LOL.


  • Frank said:

    I just watched this today and liked it a lot.
    Just read a blurb on this and it looks great, will seek it out.

  • FrankFrank 2,373 Posts



    Anybody watched this one yet? For sure demands a repeat viewing... phew...


  • dizzybulldizzybull Eerie Dicks 338 Posts
    Frank said:



    Anybody watched this one yet? For sure demands a repeat viewing... phew...

    I don’t think I can watch movies that are “brutal” anymore. I love comedic gore but that’s about it. But movies that ate just downers I can’t watch anymore. I went through a phase where I was curious so I watched movies like A Serbian Film, irreversible, murder set pieces, etc. but none of it did anything for me. 

    I crave a good horror movie once in a while but it’s so rare to watch something I actually enjoy. I think I might just be too old...?

    Jimster
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