Brian Thibodeau wrote:Masterofoneinchpunch wrote:Non-Asian:
Black Narcissus (1947)
Nice . . .
Masterofoneinchpunch wrote:After your recommendation in Criterion thread, I had to make sure I got it. I will also put in higher in my Criterion queue when I receive it to watch sooner (probably behind House of Games but ahead of Bad Timing ).
Enjoying the Val Lewton set I recently received. I got other films too lately, but mostly 30s and 40s like "The Best Years of Our Lives (1946)".
Hoping to get that House of Games edition sometime in the future. Looks pretty nice.
Haven't bought much lately, though. Too much to watch already, and I'm finally watching it
ewaffle wrote:His genius is in the dialog--some of his movies, including "House of Games", would work beautifully as radio plays.
I have imposed a temporary (open-ended) partial (almost complete) moratorium on myself for further purchases. That doesn't sound like a huge a step but the stacks of DVD to watch and books to read can get out of hand--or at least they are now. It seems that the more I buy the less I read and watch so time to slow way down for a bit.
Brian Thibodeau wrote: ...I've been watching a lot of older stuff myself lately (although most of it was purchased ages ago, so not really part of this year's rummage)! Just finished the Esther Williams Collection Vol. 1 believe it or not! Good stuff, for the most part, especially her debut lead role in BATHING BEAUTY,which wraps up with a mammoth production number in the pool. Couldn't even imagine anybody pulling films like those off today.
...
Masterofoneinchpunch wrote:So more Criterion, Tartan Asian Extreme, Dragon Dynasty, Rarescope, Steve McQueen (almost done here), Hong Kong pre 60s, Chambara, horrible horrible Thai actioners , silent, Shaw Brothers, Kino, Bela Tarr, Westerns, Studio Classics, Vicki , Ozu, Kurosawa to get. Hence neverending.
Masterofoneinchpunch wrote:I'll be eventually watching that soon (Ester Williams so I believe it). I bought it for my mom on Christmas and I'll eventually borrow (I've bought her hundreds of musicals ; well she is a pianist).
Since I have an interest in so many genres and styles there will be no moratorium on purchases . I try to whittle those piles down , but then again I'll get a new lot for a great deal (the more you have in a particular area the harder it is to get lots; I have an RSS feed for Criterion lots, but every lot always has ones I have ; Brian must feel the same about HK films).
Brian Thibodeau wrote:
Stop it! Please, stop it! You're breaking down my resistance. It's such a fragile thing already . . .
...
How does that "RSS feed for Criterion lots" work, actually? I'm not very familiar with them to start with, so didn't know you could use 'em to scope out stuff for sale, assuming that's what you're doing. I've seen the occasional lot of HK titles on ebay, but yeah, they usually do have too many titles I've already seen, and single auctions + shipping usually amounts to more than I pay in the Chinese shops around here. But it never hurts to check. Of course, some day I'll probably be the one unloading bundles of HK discs the same way.
cal42 wrote:That's extremely useful - I didn't know you could do stuff like that!
Brian Thibodeau wrote:...just noticed this on the other Mr. T's very recently updated post at the top of the page! Glad to see you're still kicking around, sorta-kinda
Mike Thomason wrote:Yes, I still live and breathe! But at present, sadly not even the review blog has time for updates -- homelife and personal affairs have taken precedent over the last couple of months. We have a little boy on the way in August, and my mother's been taken very ill of late, so time is a bit more scarce at the beginning of this year than ever before.
I get the odd window to watch things, but not really the time to write about them (excepting an [email] interview with Kim Ki-Duk I've recently submitted for an American publication I freelance for), and even odder moments where I walk into the big variety stores, see some big commercial Western films I wanted to see on DVD in the bargain bins, and purchase them for nix with view to watch somewhere in the near to distant future. I reckon DVD will be a defunct format by the time I catch up!
cal42 wrote:I've been trudging through the stuff I've already bought and re-watching some gems from yesteryear. Like Brian, my library's pretty big now and I was searching for something to watch last night and came upon something I'd not watched before. My reaction was: "I can't believe I've never watched that" before putting it back and watching something I'd seen before .
Brian Thibodeau wrote:...so in a way, I have been keeping up with Hong Kong movies, but hopefully I won't risk ire by stating that I've only watched MAD DETECTIVE so far (twice, including the fest premiere ) and thought it was a remarkable little film. Maybe not peak Johnnie To and Wai Ka-fai (just to be safe here), depending on one's taste for their films, but really a nice left-field surprise with a title character who probably shouldn't be as likable as he is.
Mike Thomason wrote:I finally saw Eli Roth's HOSTEL! And I must say, for a modestly gory horror film, it was pretty decent . . .
And as a related aside, my previously published review of GONG TAU that I put up on my blog recently drew a rather savage, and staggeringly RUDE, response from a Malaysian* reader -- which didn't even see the light of day on the site as I deleted it before anyone else saw it as it wasn't the kind of feedback I'd like to encourage on the site . . .
NB: Apologies to Brian and anyone else who replied or added feedback to the blog before the New Year; I was messing around with the functions of it a short while back and accidentally deleted all the comments. I am such a putz with technology...
Brian Thibodeau wrote:I actually noticed that during a recent visit , but was wary of bringing it up in case it was an overall housecleaning or something! I figured perhaps the responses went away with some of those . . . interesting posts from the beginning of the year.
Mike Thomason wrote:In essence, per the blog of late, I've been a bit bored with it and had little to no desire to write much for it over the last few months. I pruned a couple of things I found wastes of space, terminated a few other things in error, and of course, dumped all of the comments with a wrong click of the mouse (never muck around with "select all" buttons). Maybe I might review all of the Swiss-released Jess Franco DVDs? The discs were all stellar quality, but the movies certainly weren't -- however, they all harboured loads of nudity and prurient content to make for the kind of reading that seems to be attracting the perves to the blog enmasse already. I'll go the lowest common denominator route after I plug up a review of Roth's HOSTEL for all and sundry -- that might keep my Malaysian "torture porn" fan happy!
Cal42 wrote:My own blog has suffered a fatal problem with comments in recent weeks. Basically, EVERYTHING was ending up in the spam box and Filmjournal's spam box is not a nice place to be ("Cheap Ambien!" "Discount Ambien!" "Ambien fatal dose!" "Wean youself off Ambien!") so I haven't been trawling through it at all.
Brian Thibodeau wrote:Hey, at least you guys GET feedback! My blog is so low-key—and full of movies no one probably wants to see anyways (INTERNET DISASTER? Come ON!)—that feedback is rare. Hell, sometimes I wonder if I forgot to click a button somewhere that allows people to post in the first place!
Granted, the implication of someone suffering is much more powerful than actually seeing the latex 'n karo syrup mechanics of it on screen, and in that regard, I though Roth did an OK job, even if I didn't see any point to it all (and I felt he still showed more than he probably needed to).
Guess it did what it set out to do. Roth's got potential, but he's been awfully one-note so far—and he's awfully self-assured based on a rather modest output (and CABIN FEVER sucked royally in my book; but feel free to change my mind, folks).
Chungking_Cash wrote:Implication is what made "The Texas Chain Saw Massacre" (1974) a flea pit classic and the lack there of in "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre" (2003) a 98 minute groan.
Perhaps I gave "Hostel" a marginally positive review based on comparison.
I did enjoy his fake trailer in the GRINDHOUSE theatrical release, though (THANKSGIVING, I think it was called). It really made clear his obsession with the soulless, mechanical novelty slashers of the 80's, for better or worse. The trampoline gag (which I've heard is shortened in certain regions) and the final "unveiling" at the dinner table were both rather amusing.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 58 guests