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I'm thinking about adding the run time of each movie I watch to my list this time around. I normally don't. But why the hell not?
Originally Posted by Dimension X
Why are these challenges in DVD Talk and not Movie Talk?
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I always thought these should be in Movie Talk.
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Originally Posted by caligulathegod
I always thought these should be in Movie Talk.
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Originally Posted by caligulathegod
Logging running times misses the whole point of the challenge. It's about the movies, not how much time you spend in front of the television. That's why I object to counting commentaries. It's all we can do to keep the DVD extra documentaries and interviews out of the challenges. Let it be about the movies, and nothing but the movies.
I disagree that "logging running times misses the whole point." Whether we're trying to fit in 100 movies in a month, or watch, say, 6000 minutes worth of movies in a month, there is still an objective goal. I understand that monitoring minutes as a concept sounds more clinical, and hitting a number goal sounds more like scavenger-hunt fun, but they're both still goals. Number of Titles Watched and Time Spent Watching are the only two units of measurement, and one must be employed; otherwise, it is not a challenge. By going with Number of Titles Watched, films with longer running times are less attractive. As demonstrated, watching all five Frankenstein films instead of the five more recent films I cited leaves the viewer with an additional three hours to spend; I could sneak in almost three of the Dracula movies, then, bringing my total to 8 Movies Watched instead of just 5, with only a little more time spent. The advantage clearly goes to shorter films. However, if the challenge measured Time Spent Watching, then there is no advantage. Instead of choosing 8 flims from the 1930s and 1940s, a viewer might instead favor more recent films and not be penalized for it; Oldies Viewer's 8 titles don't outrank Newbie Viewer's 5 titles, because they've both spent comparable time with the titles of their choosing. And that, I believe, is entirely the point of the challenge. But, again, I'm just throwing this out there as something to think about. Everyone else favors tracking Number of Titles Watched, and that's what I'll do. I have no intention of counting commentaries, or multiple cuts of the same film, because I agree that those merely pad the count. I never thought to ask until now, but I'm guessing movies watched in a theater during the eligibility period count? One of our local theaters is doing its annual Horror Through the Decades film series in October, showing a film each Saturday at midnight from each decade from the 1940s through the 1980s, with a 1960s double-feature. I doubt my wife and I will make it out for all five weekends, but we're hoping to get out to at least one; maybe the double-feature. |
Originally Posted by MinLShaw
I disagree that "logging running times misses the whole point."
By going with Number of Titles Watched, films with longer running times are less attractive. As demonstrated, watching all five Frankenstein films instead of the five more recent films I cited leaves the viewer with an additional three hours to spend; I could sneak in almost three of the Dracula movies, then, bringing my total to 8 Movies Watched instead of just 5, with only a little more time spent. The advantage clearly goes to shorter films. I never thought to ask until now, but I'm guessing movies watched in a theater during the eligibility period count? One of our local theaters is doing its annual Horror Through the Decades film series in October, showing a film each Saturday at midnight from each decade from the 1940s through the 1980s, with a 1960s double-feature. I doubt my wife and I will make it out for all five weekends, but we're hoping to get out to at least one; maybe the double-feature. |
What a lot of people don't get is that it isn't so much about running times, quantities, or who can get the most films in. It's about the movies. Ever flip through the channels and come across some movie you love and then you stop and actually watch it all the way through? Ever look over your shelf of DVDs and see a bunch of titles and think, well, maybe I'm not in the mood for this right now even though I love it? Ever get into a conversation about movies and someone will mention a movie you've been meaning to see but have never gotten around to it? Ever think, it's October and I'd love to watch some Horror films but what should I watch? Ever want to have a sense of community with your fellow DVDtalkers? That's what it's all about. It's not about numbers but about looking over your fellow DVDtalkers' lists and getting inspired to see a movie you hadn't thought about, or seeing who shares your tastes or is in opposition to yours. That's what was so depressing about perusing the Sci Fi lists. There were many lists with over 100 entries but not more than 10 titles actually listed. Seeing the X-Files listed 70 times in a row was disheartening, to say the least. Anyway, it's about having an excuse to sit and watch a specific genre just for the joy of the genre.
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Originally Posted by caligulathegod
What a lot of people don't get is that it isn't so much about running times, quantities, or who can get the most films in.
Originally Posted by caligulathegod
It's about the movies.
Originally Posted by caligulathegod
Ever want to have a sense of community with your fellow DVDtalkers? That's what it's all about.
Originally Posted by caligulathegod
It's not about numbers but about looking over your fellow DVDtalkers' lists and getting inspired to see a movie you hadn't thought about, or seeing who shares your tastes or is in opposition to yours.
Originally Posted by caligulathegod
That's what was so depressing about perusing the Sci Fi lists. There were many lists with over 100 entries but not more than 10 titles actually listed. Seeing the X-Files listed 70 times in a row was disheartening, to say the least.
Originally Posted by caligulathegod
Anyway, it's about having an excuse to sit and watch a specific genre just for the joy of the genre.
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We're getting good feedback this year. Keep it up, everybody, even you disagree with all of us. Feedback and debate is good.
The Horror challenge has been one of the few that names "movies" right in the title. The other challenges probably aren't as well represented "theatrically" as Horror. Holiday needs anything it can get, indeed it is probably mostly TV. Sci Fi has been part of TV since Captain Video, so it fits. Academy Awards challenge has built in parameters. Perhaps disheartening was too harsh a word. I never said anything about taste, though. Doesn't matter if people watch 2001:a space odyssey or Battlefield Earth, it's all good. I'll even admit there's kind of an elegance to completing an entire TV series. It just made for some boring lists. Besides, Horror as a genre probably has the shittiest films ever that actually get a modicum of respect. Would any other genre give Joe D'Amato the time of day? Anyway, in sports, whenever one side gets too successful they tweak the rules to make it more competitive. The first years we had a few that made 100+, but last year we had multiple 300+ lists. No one cheated, but perhaps it wouldn't hurt to purify the challenge a bit. Not asking much. Horror Movie Challenge? Let it be about Horror Movies. No DVD extras, no fluff, no Docs, no TV shows. Just Movies. |
Originally Posted by NoirFan
Daughter of Horror was the only one on my list last year, clocking in at 55 minutes.
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Good points. Although I still say we need to steer away from making it competitive. We don't want to encourage sheer volume (although I admit I was guilty of that in the last challenge, I had special circumstances). We want to encourage discussion and some form of "group participation".
When we started this thread last year there was discussion of a list of movies for people to share in, I think one per day. I think that would be a great idea. Post a list of a somehow-agreed-upon top 31 films, ending in Halloween, and encourage everyone to watch it that specific day, giving us all something to discuss that day. If we have prizes, we definitely need to discourage any thought of cheating by having absolutely no reward for mass numbers. Any over 100 go into a random, no difference between someone who watched 100 or 300. And we should encourage comments on each film we watch. The best part of the challenge for me last year was reading all your comments (and writing my own.) At some point, we need to make this discussion a little more useful. Instead of just random comments about all of the various factors and rules, perhaps we should tackle one subject at a time, and help Chad finalize the rules. It would be nice to have everything set well before October 1st, to help people plan purchases and rental queues. |
Originally Posted by Trevor
Good points. Although I still say we need to steer away from making it competitive. We don't want to encourage sheer volume (although I admit I was guilty of that in the last challenge, I had special circumstances). We want to encourage discussion and some form of "group participation".
When we started this thread last year there was discussion of a list of movies for people to share in, I think one per day. I think that would be a great idea. Post a list of a somehow-agreed-upon top 31 films, ending in Halloween, and encourage everyone to watch it that specific day, giving us all something to discuss that day. If we have prizes, we definitely need to discourage any thought of cheating by having absolutely no reward for mass numbers. Any over 100 go into a random, no difference between someone who watched 100 or 300. And we should encourage comments on each film we watch. The best part of the challenge for me last year was reading all your comments (and writing my own.) At some point, we need to make this discussion a little more useful. Instead of just random comments about all of the various factors and rules, perhaps we should tackle one subject at a time, and help Chad finalize the rules. It would be nice to have everything set well before October 1st, to help people plan purchases and rental queues. |
Yeah, I agree with all those. Random drawing for those that meet the challenge makes the most sense.
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Originally Posted by Trevor
When we started this thread last year there was discussion of a list of movies for people to share in, I think one per day. I think that would be a great idea. Post a list of a somehow-agreed-upon top 31 films, ending in Halloween, and encourage everyone to watch it that specific day, giving us all something to discuss that day.
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If there's interest, and Chad doesn't get mad, I can run another horror challenge during October following the sci-fi rules to get tv and movies.
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Originally Posted by Mister Peepers
(Post 8878832)
If there's interest, and Chad doesn't get mad, I can run another horror challenge during October following the sci-fi rules to get tv and movies.
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I agree doing two similiar challenges seems a tad redundant.
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I've been considering a compromise on one of my positions. Considering some movies will be rented, some participants might want to explore as much of the DVD as possible while it is on borrowed time. How about if it is required to watch the movie properly (that is, with the actual soundtrack), then if the participant wants he can watch the film again with commentary for half credit? This encourages watching the film the way it is supposed to be watched and allows folks to watch their commentaries without wasting valuable time. It shouldn't be too much to ask people in a movie-watching challenge to actually watch the movies. Watching the film as the filmmakers intended should not be considered "a burden". It is an intrinsic part of the challenge. However, if someone wants to then "experience more about the movie", he can do so without it costing him numbers in the challenge (we really can't dismiss the whole idea that we are trying to accumulate numbers, even if that shouldn't be the focus).
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Originally Posted by NoirFan
(Post 8876904)
That sounds like a good idea. Perhaps a separate thread for the pre-designated 31, to make discussion easier? As far as the actual films involved, how about each member planning on participating in the Challenge posts a list of their 31 suggestions, and the most popular 31 films are chosen? We could leave the suggestion thread open for 2 weeks or something, with only lists in the thread, and then tally the titles. As for the logistics of the tallying, I'll leave that to more creative folks.
I like the idea of a separate thread I guess, although it is probably not totally necessary. I can't imagine more than 15 or so of us taking the time to actually list 30 films, although I could be wrong. And I'd rather have some discussion first, and not just lists of votes. We could probably hash out at least a dozen for the list pretty quickly. |
I would assume Night of the Living Dead and Psycho would be easy to agree upon as titles.
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Originally Posted by NoirFan
(Post 8879281)
I would assume Night of the Living Dead and Psycho would be easy to agree upon as titles.
Friday the 13th? The Thing? |
Nightmare on Elm St, Texas Chainsaw Massacre, The Exorcist, The Shining, Evil Dead and Rosemary's Baby would probably be popular choices. Also, there should definitely be at least one silent film, though more than that could be a tough sell for some. How about Nosferatu?
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The obvious choice of Halloween
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Originally Posted by Mister Peepers
(Post 8879432)
The obvious choice of Halloween
Originally Posted by Trevor
(Post 8879262)
the 31st is a given of course.
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I know I'm going to try to get through the recent as yet untouched box sets I bought from DD. The Dario Argento Collection and The Two Mario Bava sets.
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I've got an untouched 21 film Hammer collection that will comprise a serious chunk of my October viewing.
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