Dr. Strangelove said:
Hey guys, despite my growing addiction to Deadly Premonition...
i hate you. it would be a crime against everything decent if this doesn't get a PAL release
sankt-Antonio said:
could it be that one of the samurai (the one that is no real samurai) is the archetype of every manga/anime character to come? how he moves, how he talks, scratches his head... and that was in the 50s ... ???
i don't know jack about anime and manga, but this may very well be the case, because Seven Samurai set the mold and established archetypes for many, many things.
here's what i've seen the past week:
Spring, Summer & various other seasons (2003)
i agree with Strangelove on this one; didn't do much for me at all. the imagery is nice but that can't be said about the rest of the movie. i'm usually a sucker for blatant symbolism because it makes me feel smart, but it was taken to an unbearable extreme here.
Summer with Monika (1953)
early Bergman. adapted from a quintessentially European novel which, although I haven't read it, rang very familiar because these kinds of books are a dime a dozen over here. at times i was getting flashbacks of having to read dutch literature in high school. still, the presentation was excellent and the characters worth observing. it never reaches the heights of the movies he made in the following years, but a nice foundation is being laid here.
The Outlaw Josie Wales (1976)
only my second Eastwood western after Unforgiven. Leone was his teacher but this very much follows the tradition of Ford. many of the secondary characters seemed to come straight out of the Ford lexicon. nothing about this is particularly original, but it doesn't really need to be as it's basically an amalgam of everything that makes westerns awesome. there really must be only a handful of westerns that aren't about revenge in some way or other.
The Freshman (1925)
i'm not very familiar with Harold Lloyd. the only other movie of his i've seen is Safety First, and this hardly compares. there're some good jokes but they're spread too thin, and some of them drag on for much too long. his suit falling apart during a party is funny for 5 minutes, not so much for 20. but i am getting a bit too negative here. it's an enjoyable movie, but Safety Last is just so great that i couldn't help but be disappointed.
Code 46 (2003)
probably the most serene sci-fi movie i've ever seen; it feels almost like i dreamed the whole thing up. it reminded me of godard's alphaville, another great dystopian movie, in the way the special effects are sparse, and that lighting and sound are used to establish a mood that makes the present seem futuristic. it presents the future in a negative way, but doesn't do so as hysterically paranoid as most dystopian fiction. it presents some interesting ideas: genetic manipulation, global village used to facilitate social control/repression... nothing too profound, but the ideas never get the better of the intimate story that lies at the movie's heart. samantha morton is just preternaturally talented and tim robbins was great as well.
Orphée (1950)
damn. cocteau must have been a hell of a polymath, considering that directing wasn't his primary occupation yet he managed to do things with the medium no one else did. Orphée takes some of the brilliant surrealism from Blood of a Poet and works it into a remarkably spellbinding narrative. one thing i love about both movies is how cocteau equates the artistic process with life itself. writing about Orphée i find myself at a loss for words. there are so many ideas and concepts to describe and i feel i've only discovered half of them, and i only grasped half of the meaning of the ones i did find. will watch it again soon.
Dolls (2002)
damn. kitano sets out to make the saddest movie ever, does a hell of an admirable job. a haunting tableau about love, loss and abandonment. like Orphée it takes such a strong hold of the senses and the emotions that i need to see it again to understand it better. i read that kitano claims this to be his most violent movie, which is funny because Scorsese said the same thing about The Age of Innocence, another minor masterpiece.
Conte d'été (A Summer's Tale) (1996)
damn! this is close to perfect. i'm a Rohmer neophyte, this being my second of his movies after Love/Chloe in the Afternoon, but i don't think i'm overstepping my boundaries when i say that he really understood people. at the very least he understood the subset of people that i fall under, because i see so much of myself in his lead characters. it's like anthropology on celluloid. Summer's Tale really isn't about much else than a dude on vacation trying to make up his mind which of 3 girls he likes best, and there's very little drama or any sort of action or even plot, but man i was enraptured for every second.
edit: forgot a few movies :/