| ||||
And Fight For Your Life I believe....
__________________ Plutonium Shores - a journal cataloging interests, obsessions and random musings... so I don't forget. |
| ||||
I sat, mouth agape, for 94 mins last night watching the Criterion blu-ray of Days of Heaven. I've never been the biggest Malik fan, but, wow, this movie was fantastic. Literally every shot is a gem - only Barry Lyndon competes - Morricone's music is beautiful, the cast is perfect and, the icing on the cake, the transfer is well nigh perfect. Some complain that it's too slow but I've heard that criticism about every great movie from Solaris to 2001 to Once Upon a Time in America - its bullshit, applicable only if you suffer from acute ADD. In summation, If you're amassing Criterions, make sure you don't miss this one.
|
| ||||
Ghost Story Dawn of the Dead '78
__________________ BEYOND HORROR DESIGN |
| ||||
Ted - Seth MacFarlane expands his comedic chops by going from writing about a talking foul-mouthed baby, a talking dog, a talking goldfish and a talking sarcastic alien to...a talking foul-mouthed teddy bear. Just how does he do it? Now I'm by no means MacFarlane's biggest fan and happen to think Family Guy has been treading water for years but still approached this with an open mind. I really struggle to find much nice to say about it to be honest. Wahlberg and Kunis are good in the main roles and really work well together and the cgi Ted is a fully believable character but the gags are the typical lazy Family Guy style jokes for the most part - pop culture references, "har har he's gay!" tedium and scenes where character just slag off other films with the same slow in the same drawn-out conversational tone of every Family Guy character. The worst part was a spoof of the disco scene in Airplane. You know, the one THAT'S A SPOOF OF SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER. Seth Macfarlane doesn't do jokes, he does references and it's clever because people who've seen Airplane can go "Oh, that's a reference to Airplane!" whereas those who haven't (and I suspect this film is largely aimed at this demographic) will just see it as a joke in its own right (and this isn't the first time he's s̶t̶o̶l̶e̶n̶ ̶f̶r̶o̶m̶ referenced a joke in Airplane). There's also an awful bit of lampshading where the Ted character denies that he sounds like Peter Griffin as if this in some way excuses the familiar style, tone and delivery of 80% of his lines. Utter rubbish but if you still like Family Guy you'll probably like it (and at least all of the jokes were part of the narrative and not clumsily put-together cutaways) Jackass the Movie: great stuff! |
| |||
Watched Piranha, an old VHS copy. The print looked dark and graiiiiiiiiiiny. Me approve. Twas like a shot in the arm , after being spoiled by seeing so many cult films "restored" on dvd. This may seem like madness to the BD crowd. But I felt it all added to this, my favourite "undersea menace" film. Bradford Dillman!! The same "attack" shot repeated endlessly!! Badford Dillman!! Ahem.
__________________ [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC] [B] "... the days ahead will be filled with struggle ... and coated in marzipan ... "[/B] |
| |||
Quote:
__________________ [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC] [B] "... the days ahead will be filled with struggle ... and coated in marzipan ... "[/B] |
| ||||
Quote:
LADY SNOWBLOOD. A wonderful mix of over ripe drama and exploitation essentials. I especially enjoyed the music which leaps from traditional Japanese music to jazz to poppy torch songs then back again in a fairly haphazard way. It destabilises the flow of the film in an interesting way, though I'm not sure if this is by choice or luck. Either way, it added something extra to the film for me and increased my enjoyment of it no end. |
Like this? Share it using the links below! |
| |