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#172801 | |
Banned
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#172803 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Personal Shopper wasn't my favorite of last year, that honorable spot goes to mother!, but it was one of the years best for sure. Sils Maria and Summer Hours are next on my list. They both sound like excellent films and I'll watch anything with Juliette Binoche. I've come to be in love with her. |
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Thanks given by: | theater dreamer (01-10-2018) |
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#172804 | |
Banned
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Sadly, The Virgin Spring was another that didn't get a restoration. |
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#172805 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Persona, The Seventh Seal, Autumn Sonata, Cries and Whispers, Wild Strawberries, and The Magician all look excellent as well. I don't know how they could look any better, unless they were UHD's I suppose.
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#172806 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Ditto. One of my favorite actresses. Ingrid Bergman, Barbara Stanwyck, Cate Blanchett, Meryl Streep, Deborah Kerr, Juliette, Bette Davis, Kate Hepburn, among others--I'll watch pretty much anything they do, and I know that their performances, at the very least, are going to be exceptional.
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Thanks given by: | javy (01-10-2018) |
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#172807 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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I would kill and rob for Barbara Stanwyck. I know she could talk me into it. |
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Thanks given by: | theater dreamer (01-10-2018) |
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#172808 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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For me, it was Cate's turns in Elizabeth that absolutely floored me. Elizabeth: The Golden Age is also quite good. The first entrant is a better film, overall, but she's so damned good in both of them, I'm willing to forgive some minor stumbles in the second movie. Brilliant casting decisions in both: the fantastic John Gielgud, Vincent Cassel, Richard Attenborough, Geoffrey Rush, Joseph Fiennes and Daniel Craig in the first, Rush, Clive Owen, Eddie Redmayne, Samantha Morton, Jordi Molla, Tom Hollander in the second. But make no mistake, they're all supporting roles to Blanchett. If you haven't seen them, you have to check them out, especially the first.
After that, I, too, saw her in The Aviator, and it was off to the races for me. She channeled Kate Hep, didn't she? And my DVR is filled to the brim with anything TCM shows with Barbara Stanwyck or Ingrid Bergman. I bet right now at least half of my used storage is one of their movies. If a gun were held to my head, and I were forced to pick between Ingrid and Barbara as my favorite actress, I'd demure, and just tell them to pull the trigger. ![]() Quote:
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#172809 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Blanchett was Hepburn, yes. Brilliant desicion on the Bergman - Stanwyck dilemma ![]() |
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Thanks given by: | theater dreamer (01-10-2018) |
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#172810 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Changing direction momentarily, quick question going back to the subject of books on film, as a prerequisite for critical assessment and writing. I've tracked down several books that I'm going to read based on the recommendations you've all made. Thank you guys again! The ones that are available to put on my Kindle will be downloaded, and I'll just order the rest in paperback or hard cover as I near completion on whatever I'm reading at a given time. Most of these will deal with prior works of critical assessment from the likes of Manny Farber, Andrew Sarris, Pauline Kael, etc. I'll also delve into the history of film, including the studio system. I've got some wonderful documentaries on the individual studios included with Gone With the Wind, and the Casablanca box set, to get me started on MGM and Warner Bros; these will whet my appetite.
What I'd really like to start out with, however, is a singular book about the technical aspects of how films are shot. I'm not referring to script writing, film production and editing, etc, but the actual bread-and-butter of how the camera is used to shoot movies. Something that will explain to a neophyte like me the difference between a tracking shot and a dolly shot, various techniques used in lighting, even delving into the minutia of how cameras capture picture and sound, both the old behemoths and the digital cameras. I'd also like to learn about film preservation and restoration. If I'm ever going to write about the films I see, I feel that, in order to do so intelligently, I need a firm base of knowledge about how movies are made. It's one thing to appreciate a movie purely as a work of art. But it's something different, altogether, to see what is appearing on the screen, and understand how a scene was shot. Critics like Roger Ebert would spend hours breaking down a single scene in a classic film. I want the vocabulary necessary to speak about the medium. Does that make sense? |
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#172811 |
Banned
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Continuing along the book subject, a couple of points/inquiries.
First, I was looking for something in my bedroom (where I rarely go as I sleep on the couch and fall asleep to the TV every night) and came across a Praeger Hilm Library book on Ingmar Bergman. I remember getting it about 25 or so years ago, but I never read it. I thought to myself that given it's the 100th anniversary. of his birth, what a beautiful coincidence. ![]() Second, I would love a book about cinematography. If it's aimed at people with little knowledge, it would be perfect. |
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#172813 | |
Power Member
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2011 02 24 Thu 09 08 Thu 2012 02 14 Tue 09 24 Mon 2013 02 24 Tue 10 01 Tue 2014 02 25 Tue 10 09 Thu 2015 03 10 Tue 10 06 Tue 2016 02 23 Tue 10 18 Tue 2017 02 28 Tue 10 17 Tue So it's almost definitely Tuesday, and most likely the end of February. 20th or 27th? |
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Thanks given by: | AaronJ (01-10-2018), Nightman04 (01-10-2018), NoirFan (01-10-2018), StarDestroyer52 (01-10-2018), SteelyTom (01-15-2018) |
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#172815 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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#172816 | |
Member
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#172817 |
Blu-ray Baron
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I always find it funny that people want/expect a whole bunch of studios to "wrestle" with license holders and release titles for their region-locked player, when the much simpler solution is for them to get an all-region player and not be limited by the market.
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#172818 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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#172819 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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Really opens up your wallet, too.
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I don't care how good it is, it's hard to justify $60 for a half-hour film. I'm used to paying $10-12 for two-hour films. Even feature-length Criterions are quite the mental adjustment. It's also the only Criterion I can recall ever seeing on Amazon at MSRP. |
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