Sonic Youth Gossip

Sonic Youth Gossip (http://www.sonicyouth.com/gossip/index.php)
-   Non-Sonics (http://www.sonicyouth.com/gossip/forumdisplay.php?f=5)
-   -   >>the last movie you watched (http://www.sonicyouth.com/gossip/showthread.php?t=9589)

Severian 10.23.2017 06:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dirty bunny
I absolutely ADORE Hellbound: Hellraiser II. It's just so fucking weird I love it (Phantasm is the only other movie I can think of that is as insane as this, and I love it too). I gave it 5 stars out of 5
I think Hellraiser 3 was okay but I honestly haven't watched any of the movies beyond that. Maybe I should do that some day.


NO! Don’t! No! Do not watch any Hellraiser movies after Hellbound!

Seriously man, your enjoyment of the franchise is at stake here. I know you’ve seen and somehow like??? Hellraiser III, (must have seen it a few decades ago... maybe in early high school?) but VENTURE NO FURTHER!!!

The ideal play is to watch Hellraiser and Hellbound and then STOP RIGHT FUCKING THERE to preserve your appreciation for the awesome weirdness of those two great movies.

Promise me... PROMISE me you will not watch another single solitary frame of any post-1990 Hellraiser film. It’s for your own good! I envy the fuck out of you.

deflinus 10.23.2017 07:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Severian
NO! Don’t! No! Do not watch any Hellraiser movies after Hellbound!

Seriously man, your enjoyment of the franchise is at stake here. I know you’ve seen and somehow like??? Hellraiser III, (must have seen it a few decades ago... maybe in early high school?) but VENTURE NO FURTHER!!!

The ideal play is to watch Hellraiser and Hellbound and then STOP RIGHT FUCKING THERE to preserve your appreciation for the awesome weirdness of those two great movies.

Promise me... PROMISE me you will not watch another single solitary frame of any post-1990 Hellraiser film. It’s for your own good! I envy the fuck out of you.


Yea Hellbound is so fucking bat shit crazy that it becomes incredible

tw2113 10.23.2017 09:04 PM

Heavenly Creatures

dirty bunny 10.23.2017 10:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Severian
NO! Don’t! No! Do not watch any Hellraiser movies after Hellbound!

Seriously man, your enjoyment of the franchise is at stake here. I know you’ve seen and somehow like??? Hellraiser III, (must have seen it a few decades ago... maybe in early high school?) but VENTURE NO FURTHER!!!

The ideal play is to watch Hellraiser and Hellbound and then STOP RIGHT FUCKING THERE to preserve your appreciation for the awesome weirdness of those two great movies.

Promise me... PROMISE me you will not watch another single solitary frame of any post-1990 Hellraiser film. It’s for your own good! I envy the fuck out of you.


haha they're really that bad huh? well in that case I guess I can resist the urge

greenlight 10.25.2017 12:16 AM

I have never seen Stranger Then Paradise. so is it good yeah?

ilduclo 10.25.2017 08:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by greenlight
I have never seen Stranger Then Paradise. so is it good yeah?


Jarmuch, so, yeah.

LifeDistortion 10.26.2017 10:17 AM

I've been watching a horror movie a day for October. This past week I watched He Never Died. I thought that was pretty good. The Host which I've been putting off seeing. I do like Bong Joon Ho's movies. The Host was great. Then I watched Sun Choke, fantastic thriller.

Severian 10.26.2017 12:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by greenlight
I have never seen Stranger Then Paradise. so is it good yeah?


Absolute must-watch film. No bullshit. Seriously. Check it out.

!@#$%! 10.26.2017 01:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by h8kurdt
 


Watched this again last night. It was someone else's choice as he'd never seen it before and I wasn't relishing the idea of watching this again. Honestly, both Truffaut and the/ film are massively overrated. To mind boggling levels at that

i meant to ask this a long time ago but—really, overrated? or more like— has it been absorbed so much into the language of film and the culture it’s hard to see it anymore for what it was?

greenlight 10.26.2017 01:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Severian
Absolute must-watch film. No bullshit. Seriously. Check it out.


I will check it out.

_tunic_ 10.26.2017 01:39 PM

 


this movie was on TV last week, actually only saw the last half of it but I liked it a lot. Yes it's outdated (it's from 1971), but amazingly enough, the animations seemed to be less so than the actual actors. And it stars Angela Lansbury, which was the reason that I didn't watch it completely. But she turned out quite alright as well.

demonrail666 10.26.2017 01:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by !@#$%!
i meant to ask this a long time ago but—really, overrated? or more like— has it been absorbed so much into the language of film and the culture it’s hard to see it anymore for what it was?


I'm not the biggest fan of that particular film but I disagree that Truffaut is overrated. If anything I'd say he's unfairly overshadowed by Godard, who was more innovative and made some brilliant films but nothing as brilliant as 400 Blows. IMO.

tw2113 10.26.2017 10:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by _tunic_
 


this movie was on TV last week, actually only saw the last half of it but I liked it a lot. Yes it's outdated (it's from 1971), but amazingly enough, the animations seemed to be less so than the actual actors. And it stars Angela Lansbury, which was the reason that I didn't watch it completely. But she turned out quite alright as well.

Always a good viewing in my mind, though I don't watch it constantly by any means.

h8kurdt 10.27.2017 11:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by _tunic_
 


this movie was on TV last week, actually only saw the last half of it but I liked it a lot. Yes it's outdated (it's from 1971), but amazingly enough, the animations seemed to be less so than the actual actors. And it stars Angela Lansbury, which was the reason that I didn't watch it completely. But she turned out quite alright as well.


Man, I watched this film so many times when I was a kid.

Quote:

i meant to ask this a long time ago but—really, overrated? or more like— has it been absorbed so much into the language of film and the culture it’s hard to see it anymore for what it was?

Nope. Overrated.

400 Blows is good, I'll give you that. However that's the exception for me. I don't find the stories he chooses/writes interesting. For me, both Truffaut and Godard's total love for American films, gangster films especially, just come across as poor imitations. Whether it be Shoot The Piano Player by Truffaut or Alphaville (shudder) by Godard I watch them and think "Nah, I'd rather watch any other American noir"

Don't me wrong there are interesting moments in Jules et Jim. The montage of real WWI footage being the highlight for me. However, too much just bores me.

There's a difference between characters you don't like and characters that don't interest you. For the characters in Jules et Jim it's very much the latter.

Severian 10.27.2017 11:48 AM

Wow. I’m surprised by the Bedknobs & Broomsticks fandom here.

evollove 10.27.2017 12:05 PM

The Big Sick

Ruined by the hype. I heard nothing but great things, expected to be blown away, but it's a quiet, well-made little film with a few plot holes and some good laughs. No one mentioned any of that.

Need something funny to watch this weekend. What?

!@#$%! 10.27.2017 12:27 PM

i vaguely remember that flying bed from infancy. only vaguely. i really don’t know shit about it.

as for jules et jim i gotta run and can’t argue this one right now. won’t argue personal tastes though. but just to say that there was a before and an after these movies.

funny that we’re talking about stranger than paradise at the same time because clearly it’s the american offspring

ok gotta run but... yeah

ps- melville! does it better

ilduclo 10.27.2017 03:49 PM

Big Sick was pretty well OK. Agree, nothin special. Also on that list, Trainspotting 2. A few Welshian moments, but kind of buried in a feel good story line. Welsh does do a pretty fine soliloquy on modern times, though...

demonrail666 10.27.2017 04:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by !@#$%!
there was a before and an after these movies.


Good way of putting it.

Severian 10.27.2017 07:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ilduclo
Big Sick was pretty well OK. Agree, nothin special. Also on that list, Trainspotting 2. A few Welshian moments, but kind of buried in a feel good story line. Welsh does do a pretty fine soliloquy on modern times, though...


Tell me true: does it justify its own existence?

I’ve seen the original Trainspotting exactly ONE time, and thought it was brilliant, such was the impression it left on me. It’s hard to think of a movie that needed a sequel less than Trainspotting. Career high for all involved. It would have to do some pretty wild shit to even convince me that if needed to be made.

So, did it?

LifeDistortion 10.27.2017 08:40 PM

I saw Trainspotting 2 last week. I enjoyed it. Is it going to change how you feel about the first Trainspotting? Or did it NEED to be made? Simply put no, but is it a fun ride while you're watching it? I would say it is. Its an enjoyable movie. Its not the needle in the arm of adrenaline the first one is, of course not, and I think the movie itself acknowledges that.

h8kurdt 10.28.2017 11:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by !@#$%!
i vaguely remember that flying bed from infancy. only vaguely. i really don’t know shit about it.

as for jules et jim i gotta run and can’t argue this one right now. won’t argue personal tastes though. but just to say that there was a before and an after these movies.

funny that we’re talking about stranger than paradise at the same time because clearly it’s the american offspring

ok gotta run but... yeah

ps- melville! does it better


So. I've read more than enough books about the whole French new wave movement, seen enough films to know who was doing what and why. That doesn't mean I'm going to like somebody just cos I'm meant to.

Give me and Agnes Varda film over both those guys if you wanna talk about the new wave scene. I've also gotten more out of any Renoir film than I have from both Godard's and Truffaut's films

!@#$%! 10.28.2017 11:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by h8kurdt
So. I've read more than enough books about the whole French new wave movement, seen enough films to know who was doing what and why. That doesn't mean I'm going to like somebody just cos I'm meant to.

Give me and Agnes Varda film over both those guys if you wanna talk about the new wave scene. I've also gotten more out of any Renoir film than I have from both Godard's and Truffaut's films

right i mentioned i wasn’t gonna discuss tastes because if you just don’t like the people you don’t like it.

so i’m not addressing what you like or don’t like but your use of the adjective overrated. which is not about your tastes but the rating people give it.

if you read all these books you said then you know all the innovations that jules et jim brought to film and what it meant to for its time and for filmmaking history then you can admit it’s an important film but you don’t like the characters.

i have the same problem with leni riefenstahl btw. super important innovator, bores me to tears, hate her main character.

h8kurdt 10.28.2017 12:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by !@#$%!
right i mentioned i wasn’t gonna discuss tastes because if you just don’t like the people you don’t like it.

so i’m not addressing what you like or don’t like but your use of the adjective overrated. which is not about your tastes but the rating people give it.

if you read all these books you said then you know all the innovations that jules et jim brought to film and what it meant to for its time and for filmmaking history then you can admit it’s an important film but you don’t like the characters.

i have the same problem with leni riefenstahl btw. super important innovator, bores me to tears, hate her main character.


Aye, I'm well aware of what they did for cinema and I think I mentioned that before. Problem is, were they doing anything decent with it? It's all well and good using techniques and pushing the auteur theory but if you aren't doing anything interesting with it then it's just masturbation.

“I’ve never gotten anything out of his movies. They have felt constructed, faux intellectual, and completely dead. Cinematographically uninteresting and infinitely boring. Godard is a fucking bore. He’s made his films for the critics. One of the movies, Masculin, Féminin, was shot here in Sweden. It was mind-numbingly boring.”

Bergman said that. Whilst I'm not holding him as the fountain of knowledge it goes someway to explaining that just cos they were the critics darlings doesn't mean I'm going to like them.

!@#$%! 10.28.2017 12:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by h8kurdt
Aye, I'm well aware of what they did for cinema and I think I mentioned that before. Problem is, were they doing anything decent with it? It's all well and good using techniques and pushing the auteur theory but if you aren't doing anything interesting with it then it's just masturbation.

“I’ve never gotten anything out of his movies. They have felt constructed, faux intellectual, and completely dead. Cinematographically uninteresting and infinitely boring. Godard is a fucking bore. He’s made his films for the critics. One of the movies, Masculin, Féminin, was shot here in Sweden. It was mind-numbingly boring.”

Bergman said that. Whilst I'm not holding him as the fountain of knowledge it goes someway to explaining that just cos they were the critics darlings doesn't mean I'm going to like them.


ha ha ha ha

i agree with bergman! godard is fucking boring. he just lectures and lectures. i did like masculin féminin some though, mostly due to anna karina, but he’s more intellectual than an artist. couldn’t stand le weekend or pierrot le fou and don’t plan to see much of his stuff any further. film socialisme— spare me the lectures, thanks.

but truffault wasn’t godard and he was actually entertaining, and his innovations did serve a narrative and dramatic purpose, plus they made it possible for generations of independent filmmakers to tell their own stories, AND for hollywood to be reborn by a crop of fresh people like scorsese or coppola who commanded its industrial resources to great success.

look, i just googled “scorsese jules et jim” and blam, see:

http://www.bfi.org.uk/news-opinion/n...ese-influences

no books required (but there’s a book mentioned as a reference if you wanna read it)

in any case i (personally) did like jules et jim. and i fell in love with jeanne moreau when i saw her in this— who wouldn’t?— and so it was jules et jim et moi (le voyeur). i haven’t seen it in a long time though. but a story of how the idylls and idealism of youth can’t survive cynical old age and a rotting historical time? and told in such a refreshing way? sure, why not. and i love french endings. fuck happiness, ha ha ha.

Torn Curtain 10.28.2017 12:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by h8kurdt
 


Watched this again last night. It was someone else's choice as he'd never seen it before and I wasn't relishing the idea of watching this again. Honestly, both Truffaut and the film are massively overrated. To mind boggling levels at that

I totally agree and can't rep you ("You must spread some Reputation around..." blah blah blah).

demonrail666 10.30.2017 02:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by h8kurdt
Aye, I'm well aware of what they did for cinema and I think I mentioned that before. Problem is, were they doing anything decent with it? It's all well and good using techniques and pushing the auteur theory but if you aren't doing anything interesting with it then it's just masturbation.

“I’ve never gotten anything out of his movies. They have felt constructed, faux intellectual, and completely dead. Cinematographically uninteresting and infinitely boring. Godard is a fucking bore. He’s made his films for the critics. One of the movies, Masculin, Féminin, was shot here in Sweden. It was mind-numbingly boring.”

Bergman said that. Whilst I'm not holding him as the fountain of knowledge it goes someway to explaining that just cos they were the critics darlings doesn't mean I'm going to like them.


There are individual scenes in most of Godard's films that I love. It's trying to take a full movie that I struggle with. I still haven't got through the whole of Weekend in one sitting but that infamous traffic jam tracking shot is just brilliant. You can go through most of his films and find the same thing. There are 'slow' directors, who people often consider boring because of the pace of their storytelling (Bergman, Tarkovsky, Antonioni, Fellini, Ford, etc) but who, so long as you can deal with that pace, are fine. Godard's films seem quick, because they're hectic, but they just always seem to feel 3x longer than they actually are. Tarkovsky, Antonioni, etc, are slow, no getting away from it, but they can somehow entrance me in a way Godard never really does.

evollove 10.30.2017 02:27 PM

A slow pace is at least pacing, and I think it's fine that, say, Bergman films unfold leisurely. You feel you're in the hands of an artist who is in control. The metronome may be set a certain way, but it's deliberate.

Godard's films seem slow because they are fucking boring. (Dear lord, good luck with anything he made post-70s, with maybe two or three exceptions. Even the trailers are snooze-fests.)

Big difference, I think.

!@#$%! 10.30.2017 02:29 PM

i think we all agree we hate godard

but why lump truffaut with his mess?

demonrail666 10.30.2017 02:51 PM

Let's compromise then. Godard is shit and Truffaut only made one great film ... which probably had more to do with Jean-Pierre Leaud's performance than Truffaut's direction.

I did like him in Close Encounters though.

demonrail666 10.30.2017 02:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by !@#$%!
why lump truffaut with his mess?


i keep reading that as why lump truffaut with messi?

!@#$%! 10.30.2017 03:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by demonrail666
Let's compromise then. Godard is shit and Truffaut only made one great film ... which probably had more to do with Jean-Pierre Leaud's performance than Truffaut's direction.

I did like him in Close Encounters though.


haa haa haa haaa

i like most of his moobys. the whole antoine doinel cycle.

as for “greatness” i think both jules et jim and 400 blows are candidates, but i’d have to mull it over and probably rewatch to make any sort of well-founded claims (apart from historical evidence).

evollove 10.30.2017 03:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by demonrail666
Truffaut only made one great film


I don't know if it counts as "great," but I really like Shoot the Piano Player.

And although not "art," Wild Child and Small Change have always pleased me.

Rob Instigator 10.30.2017 03:26 PM

Every Godard film I have ever seen is a piece of shit aimed at fucking soft-ass people who have no real problems in their lives, except to whine and cry about their fucking bullshit relationships. fucking forget that fuck for good. master of the dull, the interminable pointlessness, the fucking creme de la creme of poser art wanna be's who claim his greatness.

demonrail666 10.30.2017 03:32 PM

Yeah, I don't think he's a bad director, but I do think his reputation may be a little inflated. He's not a director I have strong opinions about in either direction. Which might be the problem. I mean at least Godard's almost guaranteed to provoke a response.

EDIT: As demonstrated by Rob.

Severian 10.30.2017 05:04 PM

I don’t think I’ve ever seen a Godard film, actually. Not thinking of any off hand anyway.

I just watched Silence of the Lambs for some reason. Still good, in case you were wondering.

h8kurdt 10.30.2017 05:12 PM

Well I'm glad I'm not the only one to have the same feelings regarding Truffaut and Godard.

Anyway, I'm currently in the process of moving house and whilst doing all that I've been on Harrison Ford fix. So here's my FORD FIX MIX!

h8kurdt 10.30.2017 05:21 PM

 


Just finished this one tonight. Honestly, I didn't even know about this and yet supposedly it was a MASSIVE hit when it came out. I really enjoyed it, plus I'm a total sucker for court room dramas. When a film does it well and doesn't feel like it's having to spoon feed everything to you I'm a happy man and this is no exception. Pus it shows that Harrison Ford is actually a decent actor.

 


#As I walk through the Amish paradise#

It's a real weird idea for a story tbh and one that shouldn't work, but again ol' Harrison helps makes it work. Anyway, makes me feel there should be more Amish people in films.

 


ACTION FORD! I remember I kept seeing this in Blockbusters when i first came out and wanting to watch it. 20 years later I finally have. Basically you know what you're gonna get before you even start the film. Also, I didn't realise Gary Oldman was in this stealing every scene as he does.

 


Fucking love this film. Seen it so many times and it never gets boring.

"I didn't do it!"
"I don't care"

Ace.

ilduclo 10.30.2017 05:22 PM

can't say I've seen much, but Breathless and Alphaville are pretty great.

!@#$%! 10.30.2017 05:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ilduclo
can't say I've seen much, but Breathless and Alphaville are pretty great.

contempt too, but that was all before he turned full egghead

with masculin-feminin he started getting into “theory” and i think by may 68 he was full maoist or something, and thus pursued his own version of the cultural revolution, attempting to lecture and indoctrinate everyone.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 06:52 AM.

Powered by vBulletin Version 3.5.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
All content ©2006 Sonic Youth