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#121241 |
Senior Member
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Lots of Kore-eda's work touches me, and this is an especially effective film. Good news is that I Wish and Like Father, Like Son aren't out in Region 1 blu, nor is Nobody Knows. So since Still Walking is already a Crit title, I've been hoping for one of those dual-release-by-the-same-director months with Kore-eda. I wish.....
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Thanks given by: | blujazz (03-03-2015) |
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#121242 | |
Senior Member
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40 divided by 6 is 6.66, not 3.6. 6.66 big budget, heavily-advertised films per year seems like a lot to me. |
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#121243 | |
Banned
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Cut me some slack, I had just woken up. ![]() Look at this way: There are way more than 6 horror films released each year, but no one says, "OMG, I'm SO sick of horror movies! Why can't Hollywood make anything but horror movies!!?" |
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Thanks given by: | WonderWeasel (03-03-2015) |
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#121244 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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And how many crime/thriller films do you think will be released per year? And how many science fiction/fantasy films do you think will be released per year? And how many awful-looking comedies do you think will be released per year? |
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#121245 | ||
Banned
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Perhaps they were the wrong films to use as examples, but I still stand by my comments. Compared to the other films being produced in that era, both were outside the norm, used no-name actors and directors, and exhibited styles that were far from common. For that, I call them a type of art house films. By comparison, a film like Airport - with a $10 mil budget and list of stars - was more along the lines of a "Hollywood" production. But it's really just semantics, agree or disagree. Last edited by Bates_Motel; 03-03-2015 at 01:29 AM. |
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#121246 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#121247 | |
Senior Member
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Last edited by WonderWeasel; 03-03-2015 at 02:02 AM. |
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#121248 |
Power Member
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I haven't seen it, but there's one keyword in the IMDB list that I always wonder if it is accurate, or someone's idea of a joke:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1087578/...ef_=tt_stry_kw |
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#121249 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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And in general less budget for filmmakers who really are trying new and different things, or at the least will be contracted to direct those comic book movies ![]() |
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#121250 |
Power Member
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#121251 | |
Senior Member
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Yeah, 600 films is a lot, and the comic book movies make up a fraction of a percent of those... but how many of those 600 are going to get the same advertising and promotional budgets? Maybe 10-15? 98% of those films aren't going to get crammed down my throat the same way every one of those comic book films will. |
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#121252 |
Blu-ray Guru
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#121254 | ||
Banned
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But take a film like American Sniper. Budget somewhere around $50M, so still a lot, but not a lot in mega-budget movie terms. Or -- and I'm loathe to even bring this up -- 50 Shades of Grey, with an estimated budget of around $40M. Both of those films are going to bring way high profits, even once one accounts for marketing. And heck, the budget for Blair Witch Project was something like $20,000. ![]() But my real point is that there's nothing stopping any one of us from seeing all sorts of films each year. Right now, for instance, one of the local art house theaters in my area is showing Birdman, Red Army, and Leviathan. So, were I in the mood (and if I still saw films in theaters anymore) I could go see a pretty darn good triple feature which included a Best Picture winner, an excellent documentary, and what is supposed to be a fascinating Russian film. At another similar theater close to that one, Still Alice is playing, and in a week there a one-night only showing of She's Beautiful, a documentary about the early days of the women's movement. That showing includes a Q&A with the filmmaker. So, I while I understand that the media landscape makes it look like there are three or four movies playing at any one time at most, anyone who wants to know better is totally capable of doing so. We get everything from crazy religious movies to comic book blockbusters to low budget horror flicks to mega-sequels to dreadful rom-coms to some amazing animated movies to all the foreign stuff that flows in, and more. Granted, I only saw Interstellar, Hunger Games, and Gone Girl last year in the theater; so I'm not one of these people going to see these small documentaries or whatever. But I could be, is what I'm saying. So, I don't see the comic book era as being quite as bleak as some people are making it out to be. |
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Thanks given by: | WonderWeasel (03-03-2015) |
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#121255 | |
Senior Member
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Regardless, I can't get my head around Waterfront, Connection, and Godfather as non-mainstream pictures. Ahead of their time? Avant-garde? Underserved by suits who lacked artistic vision? Sure, that I buy. But they're unequivocally studio productions, (and all Best Picture winners) if not studio tentpoles. One could maybe conceive of them as "art-house" movies in the post-Jaws blockbuster epoch. I get the sense that prior to that, foreign films (akin to the Kiarostami movies that seeded this discussion) were what were considered "art house" fare. And certainly the home video availability of the subsequent decades, the independent cinema boom, as well as the democratization of the art form through cheaper software and equipment has also changed the "art house" definition as well...hence the point I was trying to raise about how "art house cinema" is something of a moving target. So, rather than lament attention spans, the devil internet, our cinephile island sinking into the sea or whatever pessimistic hyperbole we want to invoke today--let's take solace in the fact that this stuff is available. I can screen Kiarostami films for friends in my living room now and potentially make new fans. It's possible that people just don't know what they're missing because they're not embedded like we are. Right? Anyway, Certified Copy and Close-Up are mad great. I think that's all I really wanted to say. |
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#121256 | |||
Blu-ray Champion
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#121257 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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People can be ignorant and say, "oh absolutely nothing has changed in film audiences in the last 20 or 30 years, or hell, 70 years, so what's your point?". Well, there is a point here. People have changed. For example, Zen Buddhism posits that change is permanent and our only choice is to accept the moment or become just another tragedy trying to force our way uphill. Sure, I ought not need to quote things related to Zen, but if I can say that I've seen a "trend" or dare I say a "change" in the culture of moviegoing audiences in the last 20 or 30 years, its not some sort of fantasy or delusion I've created in my mind. ADHD, okay, as a mental disorder is far more prevalent in mainstream culture these days than it was way back in the 20th century when cinema was pretty different. Okay, folks, you probably think I sound like good ol' Jeffrey Goines the nutcase from 12 Monkeys again, but I rest my case. Yikes. 6.66...looks like the mark of the beast to me. Maybe these big action comic book hero movies are demonic or Satanic in nature? Hmmmmmm. Okay, yup, there I go again...crazy me. |
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Thanks given by: | WonderWeasel (03-03-2015) |
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#121258 |
Power Member
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#121259 |
Moderator
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![]() I cannot recommend Still Walking highly enough. I bought it over three years go as a blind buy. The only reason I bought it at the time was because I had a gift card and this was the only Criterion available in-store at Borders that I did not already own. From reading the description on the back, it sounded like a slow-paced talkie film that I would have to be in a certain mood to watch. I had my doubts about it but bought it anyway. Was I ever wrong. The story centers around an extended Japanese family's annual gathering on the anniversary of the oldest son's death. The acting, dialogue, and family dynamic are superb. The whole film has an intimacy to it that is very real and touches all the right emotional chords of family life - joyous and talkative, sometimes irritable, sometimes sad and contemplative, often touchingly humorous, and ultimately redemptive. I especially liked how the director frequently used the camera to show detail and mood. In my opinion, the film is brilliant. The director, Koreeda, takes a low-key approach to a slice of everyday life, showing us the gathering of the family, their interactions over several meals, interpersonal tensions, quiet demons, and conflicts involving modern vs. traditional cultural themes, and makes such a totally compelling and identifiable story that it easily resonates with a non-Japanese audience. An outstanding film. It is one of my absolute favorites in the Criterion Collection. This is the film that impressed me so much it pushed me to journey deeper into the wonderful world of Japanese cinema. I think it is pretty awesome when a movie can take you in new directions. Last edited by oildude; 03-03-2015 at 01:15 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | Infernal King (03-03-2015), RojD (03-03-2015) |
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#121260 |
Moderator
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