Wednesday, August 29, 2018
#67 - The Blood of A Poet
I call this entry - "The Blood of a Poet, or what the hell did I just watch?"
This is a surrealist sort of film, meant to provide images rather than a plot or narrative - this is a good movie to have a cliffs notes or wikipedia entry read BEFORE you watch
Of course, as the director points out Surrealism wasn't a thing in film when he did this - if there were 50's or 60's it might feel like a drugged out college director's debut but of course, Jean was a poet, and sought to create and make images out of the poet's struggles and lives
Might be worth a second watch at 55 minutes - an incredibly interesting snippet is that it was commissioned by a French Viscount who had a scene in it where he's in a balcony applauding, but when it was realized they were applauding over a gruesome scene filmed seperately, they forbid their footage and the balcony members were reshot with actors
a bit of a whacky film but no worries
RB
Tuesday, August 28, 2018
#66 - The Orphic Trilogy
So evidently, now the boxed set spines have a number and then the movies - So technically #66 is just the SPINE for this box set but my OCD won't have me skipping numbers - so I have an entry to talk about
Jean Cocteau was here before in film #6 - Beauty and the Beast - This series of three films are various takes on the story of Orpheus - (what now we'll have four in 68 films?) - The first and last films also bookend the film output of Jean, being his first and last film. He was also a heck of a poet, writer, etc, but we're only doing films here, man - films...get with it
Not sure what I'm going to make of these but the first one is only 55 minutes so it should be doable
Most of this set is out of print - good ol' Netflix comes thru - even Filmstruck only has one of the three in it's library right now
Monday, August 27, 2018
#65 - Rushmore
#65 was probably added to the collection almost as soon as it was released (1998 release, 2000 addition) -
Amazingly, I never saw this when it came out till just now - I was more of a band and music guy in the late 90's - but this is an excellent film
Jason Schwartzman cements the lead role, with Bill Murray and Olivia Williams providing the three sides of the love triangle at a private Prep School where these three characters push and pull at each other with great amusement and dialogue.
I think what's most interesting about this film is there is a LOT to not like about Jason's character, Max Fischer. Max is, for lack of a better word, probably today what we would call a serial harasser. His attempts to woo Olivia's character, Rosemary, play out quite often in real life and end in restraining orders, toxic masculinity, and the like. What the movie succeeds in doing is giving us just enough to root for him still, despite his obvious failings and arrogance.
You never truly feel either his character or Bill's is a bad guy - just decent guys getting pulled into some bad behavior
Of course, Wes Anderson has a filming style all his own - you can almost identify one of his movies based on some of the little things he does in a film, like tone, music, and dialogue - I love that you can recognize a director's style by the kind of story and the way he films it and that he can make it a unique thing, instead of being an interchangeable cog in the machine.
Fun fact, he co-wrote this with Owen Wilson and Luke Wilson gets a small part - good for him - LOL
Saturday, August 18, 2018
#64 - The Third Man
#64 is considered by some to be one of the best British Films ever made - a Noir flick about racketeers in Postwar Vienna - The Third Man
Disclaimer - it took a while to get thru this cause I was interrupted a lot - I'm sure one complete viewing would have been nice - maybe someday...
A pretty good film with Joseph Cotten as an American going to see a friend in Vienna for a job, and later investigating his mysterious death - the city of Vienna really stands out here as a set piece - not for it's beauty necessarily, but for it's devastation - 4 years later, the remains of the war were still obvious - half destroyed buildings, ruined and burned out cars - quite the contrast from films that highlighted the beauty of places like Rio or Venice as I've seen in some of the other films
the music was interesting too - probably the first soundtrack I've heard on a Zither -
There's a lot of good Criterion features including some voiceover, two commentaries, some documentaries, etc - BUT the disk is out of print on Criterion - and it's not even on Filmstruck and even has a delay thru Netflix right now.
I would have enjoyed it more had I been able to watch it straight thru but it is what it is - the camera angles and lighting and B/W make it a jarring piece at times - and the accents make me wish for subtitles occasionally, but it was a pretty good film that kept you hanging along for quite a while
RB
Saturday, August 11, 2018
#63 - Carnival of Souls
#63 is a B-movie horror film with some interesting influence and backstory - a true cult classic - Carnival of Souls
Story goes the Director saw a spooky pavilion out by the Great Salt Lake, and decided to write an entire movie around it. This is a low budget horror film about a woman who survives a car crash, only to move to Salt Lake City and begin finding her stalked by ghoulish figures, the main one being an old man played by the director himself.
The first thing that struck me immediately was how it could be (and was) an influence for another cult classic, Night of the Living Dead - Black and White, with a woman being stalked and chased is right up there with the opener of that film. In another amusing similarity, both films had forgotten to put a copyright mark on their print titles, so both passed into public domain.
Criterion has re-released it in blu-ray and DVD with lots of special features, sadly only a couple of which were on my disk 1 from Netflix. Not on filmstruck either, sadly. BUT you can find several copies online and I see it all the time in those budger 50 horror film packs you can get at the used book store.
Surprised I hadn't seen it yet and it was pretty good - I won't spoil it for you except to say that it's even worth a second watch to hear the commentary
A spooky organ makes up the majority of the soundtrack, and gives the film a little something extra, especially as how the woman is an organist.
good for Halloween and other scary movie events - and probably it's on Mystery Science Theater 3000 - LOL
RB
Monday, August 6, 2018
#62 - The Passion of Joan of Arc
#62 is widely regarded as one of the finest films in Cinema, and I think it's our first silent film?
The Passion of Joan of Arc is a masterful film about closeups - costumes/sets are sorta shortchanged here - more like an artistic mockup of a real castle/rooms/inquisition than an authentic set piece and I heard the costumes are the same
But this film's primary focus (and an unusual one for a silent film) is on the closeup - especially the closeups of Renée Falconetti who we won't see again in the movies. Her acting here is astonishing as with just her face, she conveys a full range of extreme emotion from fear to terror and joy - all with those eyes that seem almost angelic upon closeup
There are some great stories about this film (discussed in the extra) - about how the first negative was lost in a fire and they rebuilt the film using ALTERNATE takes - eventually THAT version was lost - and some versions had extra cuts and missing scenes cause the Church objected -
fast forward to 1981 and a copy is found in an Oslo closet of the first print - no one is sure why, but it's the first negative with all scenes intact, so we get this wonderful print here.
Also some interesting essays about 20 vs 24 frames a second (personally I was fine with 24 and 100 minutes is a little long for me on a silent film - I prefer 80 - LOL) - and lots of soundtracks - 3 separate ones you can use and audio commentary
Like Autumn Sonata, I think every aspiring actor/actress could watch this film and realize just how much the face can and should give you - good stuff
Saturday, August 4, 2018
#61 - Monty Python's Life of Brian
Sorry this took a while - moving and all
This was the fourth most popular film in the UK in 1979 and probably got most of that viewing on outrage and calls of blasphemy - but it's a decent film - I noticed right away the quality of the sets was very good, and it turns out they borrowed some in Tunisia from the film Jesus of Nazareth filmed the previous year
It's a fun Monty Python romp, although I do think the Holy Grail is better, IMHO - and it goes pretty quick - however the Criterion version is out of print - there are some decent more modern Blu-Ray versions on Netflix -
Not to come back with a yawner review - but it's just a Monty Python film :)
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