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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by LJG765
(Post 12906730)
I'm making my way through Diablo Cody's Top 10 list. Down to one, Grey Gardens, which I have watched before. Just have to pick it up at the library on Monday. Watched Do the Right Thing and Dazed and Confused from it yesterday. I was pleasantly surprised by Dazed as I have seen it once before but wasn't that impressed by it. This time around I enjoyed it a lot more than I remember.
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
I have had no time for movies this month, but today I binged on terrific films
Nashville:. an old favorite I saw at the drive-in as a kid 41 years ago. A perfect snapshot of mid-70s America, and in some respects even more relevant today. The In-Laws: I remember laughing my ass off at the time, but it doesn't hit me the same way today. Still a perfectly constructed film, and Alan Arkin should have won an Academy Award nomination for his performance. High and Low: Although I prefer Kurosawa's samurai films, this is a brilliant depiction of a man caught in a horrible dilemma: should he ruin himself and beggar his family to save the son of his driver? In addition, this film brings together Kurosawa's favorite male leads: Toshiro Mifune, Tatsuya Nakadai, and Takashi Shimura. |
Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by Gobear
(Post 12906893)
Nashville:. an old favorite I saw at the drive-in as a kid 41 years ago. A perfect snapshot of mid-70s America, and in some respects even more relevant today.
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by LJG765
(Post 12903679)
I just finished The Blob. Going in, I wasn't thinking it was going to be great, just another B-movie. Those can be hit or miss for me; I either love them or hate them. I loved this one. What really sold me on it was the ending scene between Steve and Jane and her little brother in the diner. I think that scene alone is what gave it such long staying power and Criterion worthy. Even the effects weren't that bad. The acting was done quite seriously, too, which helped.
Not scary at all, but it didn't need to be. I would recommend, especially towards the end of the month if you haven't watched it before and want something horror themed. That same year--1971--on the Tonight Show, Ed McMahon and Doc Severinsen would do a segment with the audience where they'd ask them to "Stump the Band" and an audience member would suggest a song and see if Doc and the band knew it. If they didn't, the audience member would have to sing it. So these two girls got up, about my age, and they said "The Blob." And Ed and Doc shook their heads, so the girls sang the opening song from THE BLOB: "Beware of the Blob, it leaps and creeps and glides and slides across the floor, right through the door/and over on the wall, a splotch, a blotch, beware of the Blob!" A couple of years later I'm in film school talking with a classmate, a girl I liked, and she tells me about the time she and her friend sang the theme song from THE BLOB on the Tonight Show. |
Did you marry her?
^ And den?
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by Trevor
(Post 12905891)
Had my first ever screwed up blu-ray yesterday. The Criterion BD of The Lady Vanishes froze up on me about 3/4 of the way through. Tried it in three different players. Luckily, I was able to finish the fine film via YouTube, but hopefully Criterion will replace my disc.
Wasn't there some big hullabaloo with then and disc rot or something awhile back? |
Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by pacaway
(Post 12907007)
Trevor, look really close at the rings in the center of the disc, where the serial numbers, or whatever, are. Do you see the letters 'BVDL' anywhere?
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Re: Did you marry her?
Originally Posted by Ash Ketchum
(Post 12906986)
A couple of related Blob stories. When I was five, I saw the poster for the film at the local movie theater and it looked really scary, with the Blob covering buildings and people--you could see human outlines in the Blob. 13 years later I got to see the film when I programmed it for a Sunday afternoon film series at a local church. Of course, Steve McQueen had become a huge star in the interim and it was fun seeing him in an early role, playing a teenager (when he was 28). And the movie didn't have any images like the ones in the poster!
That same year--1971--on the Tonight Show, Ed McMahon and Doc Severinsen would do a segment with the audience where they'd ask them to "Stump the Band" and an audience member would suggest a song and see if Doc and the band knew it. If they didn't, the audience member would have to sing it. So these two girls got up, about my age, and they said "The Blob." And Ed and Doc shook their heads, so the girls sang the opening song from THE BLOB: "Beware of the Blob, it leaps and creeps and glides and slides across the floor, right through the door/and over on the wall, a splotch, a blotch, beware of the Blob!" A couple of years later I'm in film school talking with a classmate, a girl I liked, and she tells me about the time she and her friend sang the theme song from THE BLOB on the Tonight Show.
Originally Posted by Trevor
(Post 12906991)
^ And den?
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Re: Did you marry her?
Originally Posted by BobO'Link
(Post 12907120)
I'm now trying to decide whether or not to purchase a copy of Beware! The Blob (aka "Son of the Blob"). It'd be a blind buy.
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by Trevor
(Post 12906991)
^ And den?
Originally Posted by BobO'Link
(Post 12907120)
Enquiring minds want to know! :D
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Re: Did you marry her?
Originally Posted by Gobear
(Post 12907576)
You should probably try to find a stream of it first because it's a bargain basement production that awkwardly straddles the line between horror and deliberate camp. There's a bit of star power because it was directed by Larry Hagman (JR from "Dallas") and has brief cameos by recognizable stars like Godfrey Cambridge and Dick Van Patten. If you enjoy early-70s grindhouse flicks, however, then this just might be a treasure. Lower your expectations, no, lower than that, then cut them by 50% and you're there.
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Last few days here, I'm thinking I owe "the spirit of Criterion, or the thread" at least one new-to-me "hard" film to fully explore. By hard I mean the films I usually put off watching: the 3+ hour foreign language epics outside of my typical horror or action milieu.
Originally Posted by Ash Ketchum
(Post 12907585)
Sadly, nothing happened. I wound up dating her sister, who was attending the same school with a different major, for a while, though.
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Re: Did you marry her? No she died.
Originally Posted by BobO'Link
(Post 12908017)
So you're saying something along the lines of Evil Bong II or lower.
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by Ash Ketchum
(Post 12906986)
A couple of related Blob stories. When I was five, I saw the poster for the film at the local movie theater and it looked really scary, with the Blob covering buildings and people--you could see human outlines in the Blob. 13 years later I got to see the film when I programmed it for a Sunday afternoon film series at a local church. Of course, Steve McQueen had become a huge star in the interim and it was fun seeing him in an early role, playing a teenager (when he was 28). And the movie didn't have any images like the ones in the poster!
That same year--1971--on the Tonight Show, Ed McMahon and Doc Severinsen would do a segment with the audience where they'd ask them to "Stump the Band" and an audience member would suggest a song and see if Doc and the band knew it. If they didn't, the audience member would have to sing it. So these two girls got up, about my age, and they said "The Blob." And Ed and Doc shook their heads, so the girls sang the opening song from THE BLOB: "Beware of the Blob, it leaps and creeps and glides and slides across the floor, right through the door/and over on the wall, a splotch, a blotch, beware of the Blob!" A couple of years later I'm in film school talking with a classmate, a girl I liked, and she tells me about the time she and her friend sang the theme song from THE BLOB on the Tonight Show. I was able to find Jellyfish Eyes through my library and decided that I was in the mood to watch it tonight. Big mistake. This thing is awful. I have no idea what Criterion thought when they decided to release this. The acting is horrible, the animation is horrible (it has these CGI fantasy creatures throughout the movie). The plot of this is a interesting idea. All the children of a small Japanese town are given these little fantasy creatures named F.R.I.E.N.D.S. A new boy moves to town and their real purpose/creation comes to light. However, the combination of all the ideas just was done so poorly. The kids are cruel, but not in any redeemable way. The adults are just in this as ineffectual baboons. I gather there is supposed to be subtle hidden commentary on Japanese culture but it's beyond badly done. Skip this, skip it with prejudice. You'll be glad that you saved yourself this hour and forty minutes of pure dreck. |
Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by LJG765
(Post 12908499)
Jellyfish Eyes
4.9/10 IMDb 18% Rotten Tomatoes 34% Metacritic I got a batch of Arrow releases in the mail last night. I think they're doing a comparable job to Criterion releases, except most of the Arrow films I've heard of and tend to like more. A bunch of bonus features I care just about as much as Criterion and insert/booklet that contain a lot more information than Criterion. In both cases with both companies, I'm not interested in these supplementals most of the time but when it's a movie I like, they're both pretty good. |
Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
With three days left of the challenge to go, I just picked up Grey Gardens, The Graduate and La Dolce Vita from the library. Grey Gardens will complete Diablo Cody's Top 10 list, so I plan on watching that tomorrow. The other two were kind of last minute, hey, they look interesting and haven't watched them before so let's get them off the "watch at some point" list.
I notice it's been fairly quiet in here lately, have people stopped watching already and are preparing for October's Horror challenge? I have to admit to take taking the month off challenge wise and just watch fun movies and Halloween themed ones (not horror, but things like Halloweentown) as a nice break before the holiday challenge and after this one where I watch a lot more intense films. |
Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by LJG765
(Post 12909434)
I notice it's been fairly quiet in here lately, have people stopped watching already and are preparing for October's Horror challenge? I have to admit to take taking the month off challenge wise and just watch fun movies and Halloween themed ones (not horror, but things like Halloweentown) as a nice break before the holiday challenge and after this one where I watch a lot more intense films.
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by LJG765
(Post 12909434)
With three days left of the challenge to go, I just picked up Grey Gardens, The Graduate and La Dolce Vita from the library. Grey Gardens will complete Diablo Cody's Top 10 list, so I plan on watching that tomorrow. The other two were kind of last minute, hey, they look interesting and haven't watched them before so let's get them off the "watch at some point" list.
I notice it's been fairly quiet in here lately, have people stopped watching already and are preparing for October's Horror challenge? I have to admit to take taking the month off challenge wise and just watch fun movies and Halloween themed ones (not horror, but things like Halloweentown) as a nice break before the holiday challenge and after this one where I watch a lot more intense films. I've slowed down a lot this week due to other activities and anxiety deciding to mess about with my sleep pattern. A few days ago, I did watch Victim, a haunting film about the blackmail of homosexuals in 1960s London. It has some excellent performances as well as a social message that is still (sadly) relevant. Of course, the British laws that the film is critical are no longer in effect, but there are still places with such laws with even harsher punishments. And we still see rampant homophobia in our the US. Let's not forget that one of the Presidential candidates attended a rally in which a key speaker called for the murder of all LGBT people. So great job Basil Dearden, Dirk Bogarde, and Sylvia Syms. Please come back and make another movie. |
Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by LJG765
(Post 12909434)
With three days left of the challenge to go, I just picked up Grey Gardens, The Graduate and La Dolce Vita from the library. Grey Gardens will complete Diablo Cody's Top 10 list, so I plan on watching that tomorrow. The other two were kind of last minute, hey, they look interesting and haven't watched them before so let's get them off the "watch at some point" list.
I notice it's been fairly quiet in here lately, have people stopped watching already and are preparing for October's Horror challenge? I have to admit to take taking the month off challenge wise and just watch fun movies and Halloween themed ones (not horror, but things like Halloweentown) as a nice break before the holiday challenge and after this one where I watch a lot more intense films. |
Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
I managed to finish off the checklist today, despite it having been a crazy month of 70 hour work weeks, so I am pleased with that. I'm not sure if I will try for anything during the Horror Challenge crossover, since I think the only horror Criterion in my to watch pile is Kwaidan and a 3 hour+ film would probably not be the best way to start things off.
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by Trevor
(Post 12909468)
I use the other 11 months to prepare for the Horror Challenge.
Originally Posted by mrcellophane
(Post 12909501)
I love all three of those films! You're in for a real treat!
Originally Posted by shadokitty
(Post 12909536)
I haven't been watching anything for this Challenge lately. I just couldn't get into it this month. That's why I haven't been posting. I've just been warming up for next month.
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by LJG765
(Post 12910209)
I have to admit, horror is my least liked film genre. I hate pretty much all horror, though suspense I occasionally can enjoy.
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by LJG765
(Post 12910209)
I actually enjoyed the commentary of Grey Gardens more than the original film, though I think seeing the actual documentary first is needed. But the commentary was actually interesting and had good information/stories about the two Beales.
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
8 1/2 is superb.
I've also thoroughly enjoyed the first Zatoichi film, was very mildly underwhelmed by Sword of the Beast and moderately-impressed by Diabolique. Though - as Kim Newman pointed out - the novel twists and suspenseful moments have been imitated and redone so often that it cannot hve the impact now that it did then. The contact lenses were still creepy, though! I assume The Virgin Spring being so very, very much like Last House on the Left is widely known, but I wasn't (consciously) aware of it. Certainly made the relative uninreresting parts moot as the real plot revealed itself from amidst the normalcy of life. (Also, surely Game of Thrones casting Max von Sydow as a Raven is a multi-faceted inside-joke/reference..!) |
Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by BobO'Link
(Post 12910230)
Even the classic Universal horror films?!? Words fail me!!!
Originally Posted by mrcellophane
(Post 12910248)
There's a followup documentary called The Beales of Grey Gardens that it quite good. Also, the HBO film starring Drew Barrymore is worth watching. Then if you somehow develop Beale-fever, the soundtrack to the Broadway show is worth a listen! And then you can watch Mary Louise Wilson win a Tony for it and basically say "yeah, I desire this".
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by malazar
(Post 12910202)
I'm not sure if I will try for anything during the Horror Challenge crossover, since I think the only horror Criterion in my to watch pile is Kwaidan and a 3 hour+ film would probably not be the best way to start things off.
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
I finally cracked open my BD copy of Tess, which I haven't seen in years. Natassja Kinski's distinctive accent aside, it holds up well.
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by LJG765
(Post 12910307)
:) I have watched the follow up documentary but haven't seen the Barrymore film. It's funny as I was talking with my librarian about it when I picked this one up. She didn't know that there were either of the two, the follow up or the HBO movie. I have to admit, the Broadway show is new to me!
Here's the Tony performance: |
Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
I saw the musical and it didn't make that much of an impression on me. I haven't seen the documentary, though, and I don't know if that would've made a difference.
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by LJG765
(Post 12910307)
Well, I do appreciate them. I have the Frankenstein set and usually watch at least one or two them at Halloween. I guess what I'm trying to say is I dislike bloody, jump out at you, murder porn, gore for the sake of gore horror. I watched Psycho for the first time just a few years ago and really enjoyed it. I own Nosferatu. I'm trying to think of others like that, but there aren't that many. I think it stems from when I was about 4 or 5 and my sister would let me watch them, "cover your eyes and I'll tell you when you can look!" Yeah, look right at the kids being killed.
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by BobO'Link
(Post 12910720)
Whew! That means there's still hope! I don't like most of the "horror" films of the 70s on as many are of the "bloody, jump out at you, murder porn, gore for the sake of gore horror." I lean more towards the pre 1970 gothic and monster horror films. I could probably give you a list of those you'd like. None are of the ilk your sister teased/tortured you with.
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by Trevor
(Post 12910738)
Plus Halloween episodes of sitcoms count! And horror comedies are usually mild. Plus most horror television shows are somewhat tame. I'm thinking of marathoning Supernatural most of October.
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by mrcellophane
(Post 12910581)
The musical soundtrack is quite good. Unfortunately, I've never been able to see the show - just pirated clips on YouTube. The show's first act is a fictionalized day in the life of the Beales at the height of Grey Gardens (complete with a Kennedy) while the second act covers the documentary time frame.
Originally Posted by BobO'Link
(Post 12910720)
Whew! That means there's still hope! I don't like most of the "horror" films of the 70s on as many are of the "bloody, jump out at you, murder porn, gore for the sake of gore horror." I lean more towards the pre 1970 gothic and monster horror films. I could probably give you a list of those you'd like. None are of the ilk your sister teased/tortured you with.
Originally Posted by Trevor
(Post 12910738)
Plus Halloween episodes of sitcoms count! And horror comedies are usually mild. Plus most horror television shows are somewhat tame. I'm thinking of marathoning Supernatural most of October.
Originally Posted by shadokitty
(Post 12910755)
And if you have a Roku, Travel Channel will likely air their Halloween Attractions shows, and History Channel On Roku has Haunted History, as shows on ghosts count too.
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by The Man with the Golden Doujinshi
(Post 12910476)
I think I'm watching Sisters since I haven't seen it for a long time.
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
I'm ending with the month with A Few Good Men and The Rock--kind of a civilians vs. military men double feature.
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
I ended on a dud, The Graduate. I'm sure I'm in the minority, but I could not get into this film at all. It took 2 days for me to watch it which is highly unusual for me. Oh well, now I can mark it off my "classics to watch" list.
I still have La Dolce Vita but I just am not up for it tonight. I still plan on watching it before I return it to the library though, later this weekend, but I think I'm going to watch some "fun" movies or even some TV for a couple days first. |
Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Finally got to the Hidden Fortress. Knowing the Star Wars links, there was a lot to spot, but I don't think I'd have drawn any parallels without foreknowledge.
Eraserhead... don't get it. Corridor of Blood seemed more like a historical drama than a horror film, though there were vague mad scientist (and body snatchy) subplots. The Haunted Strangler is odd, but good though. Finished the month with two new Karloff films. Can't say worse than that! |
Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Lord, I had a great time this month! I ended up watching 24 films and one television episode. These included rewatching some favorites and exploring some films that I'd been meaning to watch for a long time. I'll make some more observations and pick out my favorites later when I'm not so tired!
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Decided to slip in one more, for double credit: Island of Lost Souls (1932), another first-time watch!
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Re: The 8th Annual Criterion Collection Challenge Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by LJG765
(Post 12911951)
I ended on a dud, The Graduate. I'm sure I'm in the minority, but I could not get into this film at all. It took 2 days for me to watch it which is highly unusual for me. Oh well, now I can mark it off my "classics to watch" list.
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