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  #16521  
Old 5th October 2012, 07:53 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SharonLynette View Post
The Trollenberg Terror (1958)
Is that from the R1 Image disc?

It looks gorgeous.
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  #16522  
Old 5th October 2012, 07:55 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Demdike View Post
Is that from the R1 Image disc?

It looks gorgeous.
It is. I should have said The Crawling Eye but I much prefer the other title.
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  #16523  
Old 5th October 2012, 07:59 PM
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Originally Posted by SharonLynette View Post
It is. I should have said The Crawling Eye but I much prefer the other title.
Did you enjoy it?

I think its a wonderful monster movie, despite being cheap i love the crawling eyes, and the model work is well done.
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  #16524  
Old 5th October 2012, 08:13 PM
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Originally Posted by Demdike View Post
Did you enjoy it?

I think its a wonderful monster movie, despite being cheap i love the crawling eyes, and the model work is well done.
I did. It's a good afternoon monster movie, visually it looks good and the plot is interesting.
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  #16525  
Old 5th October 2012, 08:15 PM
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Just fresh from a screening of Aguirre Wrath of God, and in many ways its Herzog's most brilliant work, a sorrowful doom filled film, at it's heart a strange and mesmerizing turn by Klaus Kinski, all sneering gestures and crab-like movements. He seems so absorbed in the role it's difficult to draw the line between character and actor, the cast seem genuinely afraid of him...

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  #16526  
Old 5th October 2012, 08:44 PM
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Originally Posted by Wes View Post
Just fresh from a screening of Aguirre Wrath of God, and in many ways its Herzog's most brilliant work, a sorrowful doom filled film, at it's heart a strange and mesmerizing turn by Klaus Kinski, all sneering gestures and crab-like movements. He seems so absorbed in the role it's difficult to draw the line between character and actor, the cast seem genuinely afraid of him...

By all accounts Klaus was quite a madman, although Jess Franco has said that he never had any problems with him at all. It seems a shame that cinema no longer has real characters like Klaus Kinski, Oliver Reed or Richard Burton.
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  #16527  
Old 5th October 2012, 08:51 PM
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Absolutely, well said

I have a copy of Kinski's book and interestingly, he mentions an incident from the Aguirre shoot where Herzog supposedly has a llama tied to a raft heading for rapids. Kinski expresses his hated for the "murderous Herzog" but of course no such scene is in the film. Perhaps the scene was trimmed but who can say. Herzog claims that Kinski filled the book with scandals to make it a best seller. It's certainly lively...

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  #16528  
Old 5th October 2012, 10:50 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SharonLynette View Post
The Trollenberg Terror (1958)

The Amazing Transplant (1970) - Poor acting, poor cinematography, ropey plot - I loved it.

Ghosthouse (1988) - I really like this film yet I seem to manage to forget that I've already seen it!
'The Amazing Transplant' is dazzling. I had to watch it three times in a row in an attempt to persuade myself an evil genius wasn't playing games with my mind (I'm still not convinced).
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  #16529  
Old 5th October 2012, 11:10 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Make Them Die Slowly View Post
THINGS. A zero budget, shot on super 8 film from Canada in the late '80s. This fits perfectly into the anti-film, school of film making, as such wonders as PSYCHED BY THE 4-D WITCH and the works of Nathan Schiff. The plot wanders in and out of the film as people endlessly talk, eat, drink and open cupboards. Never have so many cupboards been opened in one film. There's a far bit of gore on offer, in amongst the oddness on display and there's heaps of that. This is pure glory for those who like to be baffled, bored and put into a hypnagogic state by film.
As much as I like weird, f*cked up movies, I couldn't get my head round 'Things' at all. In fact, I remember having that rarest of experiences in home viewing, an almost physical response of pure hatred towards what I was seeing, so much so that at points I sprung from my chair raking my face with my nails and screaming "It's shit! IT'S JUST F*CKING SHIT!" at the screen until eventually my housemate sedated me. I never thought I'd feel any kinship towards the reactionary knobhead who supposedly trashed his TV on watching the Sex Pistols swear at a chat show host, but "Where's Bill Grundy now?" were the last words I muttered to myself before I collapsed weeping onto the floor beside my still chuntering DVD player. Thanks, 'Things', you dick(s).
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  #16530  
Old 5th October 2012, 11:48 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Frankie Teardrop View Post
As much as I like weird, f*cked up movies, I couldn't get my head round 'Things' at all. In fact, I remember having that rarest of experiences in home viewing, an almost physical response of pure hatred towards what I was seeing, so much so that at points I sprung from my chair raking my face with my nails and screaming "It's shit! IT'S JUST F*CKING SHIT!" at the screen until eventually my housemate sedated me. I never thought I'd feel any kinship towards the reactionary knobhead who supposedly trashed his TV on watching the Sex Pistols swear at a chat show host, but "Where's Bill Grundy now?" were the last words I muttered to myself before I collapsed weeping onto the floor beside my still chuntering DVD player. Thanks, 'Things', you dick(s).
You really should start up the 'viewing in the extreme' thread.
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