Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings
- Precious Doll
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The Agony and the Ecstasy of Phil Spector (2009) Vikram Jayanti 8/10
Kentucky Kernels (1934) George Stevens 5/10
The Girl from Monaco (2008) Anne Fontaine 2/10
Holly (2006) Guy Moshe 5/10
Bronson (2009) Nicolas Winding Refn 7/10
B.F.'s Daughter (1948) Robert Z. Leonard 4/10
Shirin (2008) Abbas Kiarostami 6/10
Jay (2009) Francix Xavier Pasion 5/10
Kentucky Kernels (1934) George Stevens 5/10
The Girl from Monaco (2008) Anne Fontaine 2/10
Holly (2006) Guy Moshe 5/10
Bronson (2009) Nicolas Winding Refn 7/10
B.F.'s Daughter (1948) Robert Z. Leonard 4/10
Shirin (2008) Abbas Kiarostami 6/10
Jay (2009) Francix Xavier Pasion 5/10
"I want cement covering every blade of grass in this nation! Don't we taxpayers have a voice anymore?" Peggy Gravel (Mink Stole) in John Waters' Desperate Living (1977)
Away We Go (dir. Sam Mendes) - 5/10
Manhattan (dir. Woody Allen) - 10/10
Woody Allen is the best consistently bad director. As the years go on, his provinciality and anti-intellectualism increases exponentially crippling him, but I will credit him for consistently pondering our lonely place on the planet, and the planet's lonely place in the universe. Manhattan feels like an accidental masterpiece in which the main story is really a bump on the road to love between Michael Murphy and Diane Keaton. Annie Hall is outstanding but Manhattan to me feels like the real deal, a movie that doesn't have to exist within quotation marks to be wise. Manhattan remixes Annie Hall and why Woody Allen wanted it dropped, I'll never know. It's his best film.
Edited By Sabin on 1244362567
Manhattan (dir. Woody Allen) - 10/10
Woody Allen is the best consistently bad director. As the years go on, his provinciality and anti-intellectualism increases exponentially crippling him, but I will credit him for consistently pondering our lonely place on the planet, and the planet's lonely place in the universe. Manhattan feels like an accidental masterpiece in which the main story is really a bump on the road to love between Michael Murphy and Diane Keaton. Annie Hall is outstanding but Manhattan to me feels like the real deal, a movie that doesn't have to exist within quotation marks to be wise. Manhattan remixes Annie Hall and why Woody Allen wanted it dropped, I'll never know. It's his best film.
Edited By Sabin on 1244362567
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The Maid (2009) Sebastian Silva 7/10
The Queen and I (2009) Nahid Persson 9/10
Breathless (2009) Yang Ik-Joon 6/10
35 Shots of Rum (2009) Claire Denis 5/10
The Queen and I (2009) Nahid Persson 9/10
Breathless (2009) Yang Ik-Joon 6/10
35 Shots of Rum (2009) Claire Denis 5/10
"I want cement covering every blade of grass in this nation! Don't we taxpayers have a voice anymore?" Peggy Gravel (Mink Stole) in John Waters' Desperate Living (1977)
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- Precious Doll
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Looking for Eric (2009) Ken Loach 4/10
Four Nights with Anna (2008) Jerzy Skolimowski 4/10
Is Anybody There? (2009) John Crowley 5/10
Four Nights with Anna (2008) Jerzy Skolimowski 4/10
Is Anybody There? (2009) John Crowley 5/10
"I want cement covering every blade of grass in this nation! Don't we taxpayers have a voice anymore?" Peggy Gravel (Mink Stole) in John Waters' Desperate Living (1977)
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Chalk (2006)
A very entertaining, low-budget mockumentary about young teachers in a Texas (?) high school. The performers are a little rough, and the film doesn't really go anywhere, but the characters are engaging, the gags work and the film flies by in 80 minutes. Worth a watch.
A very entertaining, low-budget mockumentary about young teachers in a Texas (?) high school. The performers are a little rough, and the film doesn't really go anywhere, but the characters are engaging, the gags work and the film flies by in 80 minutes. Worth a watch.
"Go into the world and do well. But more importantly, go into the world and do good."
- Minor Myers, Jr.
- Minor Myers, Jr.
Witchfinder General (1968; Michael Reeves) 7/10
Potent, but not alwasy engaging, tale of of a witchfinder, his torturer-assistant, a heroic soldier and a damsal in distress during the English Civil War. Terrific performance by Vincent Price.
Potent, but not alwasy engaging, tale of of a witchfinder, his torturer-assistant, a heroic soldier and a damsal in distress during the English Civil War. Terrific performance by Vincent Price.
"...it is the weak who are cruel, and...gentleness is only to be expected from the strong." - Leo Reston
"Cruelty might be very human, and it might be cultural, but it's not acceptable." - Jodie Foster
"Cruelty might be very human, and it might be cultural, but it's not acceptable." - Jodie Foster
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Catching up on TV series lately.
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit - Season 9
Still good but beginning to show its age. Adam Beach, so good in two episodes in Season 8 is wasted as a regular in Season 9. Smart move on his part in deciding not to continue with the series.
Supernatural - Season 1
Nice blend of humor and horror. Viewing Season 2 sporadically now, love the closing line in the episode guest starring Linda Blair in which Jensen Ackles asks his brother Jared Padalecki if she didn't look familiar and then said he had a craving for pea soup.
P.D. James Collection
Watched the first mini-series, Death of an Expert Witness from 1983. Missed the opening credits, couldn't place the classically beautiful young actress who played the lesbian secretary, cousin of the murder victim, but knew she was someone I'd seen before. I was shocked to find in the closing credits (after five hours of viewing!) that it was Brenda Blethyn who I was unaware of before Secrets & Lies. She looks completely different. Well crafted story, but I guessed the murderer almost from the beginning, even before the first murder was committed.
Edited By Big Magilla on 1244036213
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit - Season 9
Still good but beginning to show its age. Adam Beach, so good in two episodes in Season 8 is wasted as a regular in Season 9. Smart move on his part in deciding not to continue with the series.
Supernatural - Season 1
Nice blend of humor and horror. Viewing Season 2 sporadically now, love the closing line in the episode guest starring Linda Blair in which Jensen Ackles asks his brother Jared Padalecki if she didn't look familiar and then said he had a craving for pea soup.
P.D. James Collection
Watched the first mini-series, Death of an Expert Witness from 1983. Missed the opening credits, couldn't place the classically beautiful young actress who played the lesbian secretary, cousin of the murder victim, but knew she was someone I'd seen before. I was shocked to find in the closing credits (after five hours of viewing!) that it was Brenda Blethyn who I was unaware of before Secrets & Lies. She looks completely different. Well crafted story, but I guessed the murderer almost from the beginning, even before the first murder was committed.
Edited By Big Magilla on 1244036213
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Glad to read to enjoyed Mandingo Penelope. It has some of the best lines ever committed to celluloid. My favorite being James Mason's line 'Old Pearl's titied up big enough to feed twelve suckers'. So much of the dialogue was just hysterical. A few months ago we had some friends over for a Mandingo night - it was a hoot.
The Millionaire (1931) John G Adolfi 6/10
The Navy Comes Through (1942) A Edward Sutherland 2/10
Eskimo (1934) W S Van Dyke 4/10
Bluebeard (2009) Catherine Breillat 8/10
This film is a treat and quite uncharacteristic of Breillat's previous work. Something that you could take the kids to.
The Millionaire (1931) John G Adolfi 6/10
The Navy Comes Through (1942) A Edward Sutherland 2/10
Eskimo (1934) W S Van Dyke 4/10
Bluebeard (2009) Catherine Breillat 8/10
This film is a treat and quite uncharacteristic of Breillat's previous work. Something that you could take the kids to.
"I want cement covering every blade of grass in this nation! Don't we taxpayers have a voice anymore?" Peggy Gravel (Mink Stole) in John Waters' Desperate Living (1977)
Mandingo (1975; Richard Fleischer) 9/10
I honestly don't know how to react to this movie. An infamous film about sex and violence in the antebellum South, it's brutal, horrifying, silly, outrageous, and utterly, utterly compelling. Subtle it ain't, and I'm not quite sure how to classify Susan George's performance--fearlessly brilliant or staggeringly inept? At the very least, it's the total flip of Gone with the Wind, and probably a lot more accurate--as a portrait of race relations, gender roles and notions of honor that pervaded Southern culture at the time, it's pretty much on-target. But then it's also eye-rollingly over-the-top and distinctly uncomfortable. Is it trash or a genuine masterpiece? Or both? I think so.
I honestly don't know how to react to this movie. An infamous film about sex and violence in the antebellum South, it's brutal, horrifying, silly, outrageous, and utterly, utterly compelling. Subtle it ain't, and I'm not quite sure how to classify Susan George's performance--fearlessly brilliant or staggeringly inept? At the very least, it's the total flip of Gone with the Wind, and probably a lot more accurate--as a portrait of race relations, gender roles and notions of honor that pervaded Southern culture at the time, it's pretty much on-target. But then it's also eye-rollingly over-the-top and distinctly uncomfortable. Is it trash or a genuine masterpiece? Or both? I think so.
"...it is the weak who are cruel, and...gentleness is only to be expected from the strong." - Leo Reston
"Cruelty might be very human, and it might be cultural, but it's not acceptable." - Jodie Foster
"Cruelty might be very human, and it might be cultural, but it's not acceptable." - Jodie Foster