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#78041 | ||
Banned
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Once Woody Allen started plagiarizing Fellini and Bergman films in the 80's, it's easy to see the connection between the crazy-relatives/wartime-boyhood 40's Rome of "Amarcord" and the crazy-relatives/wartime-boyhood 40's Long Island of "Radio Days". Quote:
Addiction, any addiction, becomes your religion. The drug is the god, the shooting up is the worship. It rewires your brain, so that your other priorities, which don't deliver the satisfaction, don't become prime priorities in your life or social circle anymore--You don't see why you should spend your money on anything else anymore. Most addicted Criterion buyers literally have gone beyond the ability do distinguish between watching a Criterion title to learn about some new life/mind-altering foreign classic of film literature sight-unseen that they'd never heard of before, and buying a Criterion title to learn about some new life/mind-altering foreign classic of film literature sight-unseen that they'd never heard of before. To Watch is to Buy, and to Buy is to Watch. They will both teach you, it promises, and both actions are the devotion. To conquer the addiction, any addiction, is, like the movie says, Trainspotting--Rewire your brain (or at least, in this case, the part of it that watches movies) back into the world again, step outside and bring the other priorities back into your experience again: - Can you go cold turkey?--Can you NOT buy Criterions for a month? Or is it just a fun little hobby you do to be social, and you can quit any time you want? - How do you feel when people suggest/tell you not to do it? Does it feel like they're "intruding" on your life, making personal judgments on your identity, or "telling you what to do" because they've got some stick up their hinder and "don't understand" how cool you've worked the hobby into your personal routine? Is it more comforting to stay social, snicker at the do-gooding detractors behind their backs, and have a sense of unity hanging out witht the cool underground/Internet social circle of the Folks Who Understand? If it was personal friends who tried to intervene, would you choose the hobby over the friends? - Would discovering a classic on Kino, or Cohen Collection, be as "meaningful" as the discovery of a rare movie on Criterion? Is it the movie you discovered, or the feeling that your "dealer" delivered the goods again? - Must they be Blu-ray, and proudly bought with your own money, from your One True loyal Amazon or Barnes & Noble source that makes them such a "personal" acquisition? If you wanted to see the movie, could you watch it on DVD? Is it about the movie, or the Blu-ray? - Is it about the buying? Would you watch it for free, if your local library had a DVD copy, for a seven day rental? Would you watch it streaming, for an entire $7.99 month of HuluPlus? It helps to start asking these questions early, while you still CAN answer them without defending them. Just because chocolate, or gambling, or mall-shopping, won't send you to the emergency room doesn't mean they don't start tinkering around upstairs once you start saying that it's, well, just part of my lifestyle, and just me! Last edited by EricJ; 07-22-2013 at 11:16 AM. |
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#78042 |
Blu-ray Prince
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#78043 | |
Banned
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I was accused of the most TERRIBLE crimes, to punish my credibility-- I was clearly "trolling" to be nasty. People wondered whether I "hated Criterion", and had some "personal grudge" against the company for my "attacking" private Criterion-fan behavior in its place. I must have been trying to "prevent" innocent fans from doing what they loved so dearly, like the Grinch on Mt. Crumpet. Folks stepped to say "Okay, who's in with me for the buying spree!...We know we love it!", just to enforce cool tribalism over the idea that individual behavior could be re-evaluated or changed, just because some stranger dared to breach the gates and say mean things about it...Oh, I'm sorry, about the PEOPLE who did it. Remember, the hobby and the identity must always go hand in hand. Search the backwaters of Internet, and you'll find marijuana legalizationists snickering at the world behind their backs, and posting clips from cheesy old 30's movies as if this was what mainstream people in 2013 thought or looked like. Look far enough, you might still find boards (if they haven't been shut down yet), where anorexic cases gather to exchange suicidal poetry, and tell each other "Don't let the world tell you what to do!" when they whine about their parents "forcing" them to get medical help. It's always easy to make a Pirate Club Treehouse when you want to think that a select group knows better than the mainstream. When you're building one past the age of ten, though, the question carries a little more social responsibility. Spending money on what you don't need, to the point that it reaches catastrophic consequences in your own life, isn't "cool" just because you can privately in-joke about it with other catastrophic spenders who've learned how to rationalize it off rather than make simple changes in their own mirror. Last edited by EricJ; 07-22-2013 at 12:14 PM. |
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#78045 |
Banned
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#78046 | |
Expert Member
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#78053 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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The significant difference is that I can simply take 25 or 50 DVDs to the store all at once instead off having to ship them individually to buyers and being hassled with emails about product quality, etc. I mean, I'm pretty anal about keeping my movies in good condition, and each and every one of my old DVDs and my current Blu-rays are in the same condition that they were when I purchased them, but it's nonetheless pleasant not to deal with eBay customers and such. I've financed most of the acquisition of my current Blu-ray collection (295 right now) by selling off my old collection of 600 or so DVDs. It's not just about money, although that's a big part of it. I do not like to hoard multiple copies of movies on DVD and Blu-ray, so I instantly get rid of any DVD that I've upgraded or plan to upgrade to Blu-ray. I don't like clutter. Aside from my movie collection and my CD collection, I'm a minimalist. I live in a large one-bedroom apartment, and I could easily fit all of my personal possessions into one of the smaller U-Haul trucks. I run several marathon and ultramarathon races each year, so I do not let anything in my life distract me from running or from meeting friends to go to a race. I don't have any sort of cable television service, so I wouldn't even own a television if not for Blu-rays and online movies. |
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#78055 | |
Moderator
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Bigger Than Life was a good psychological thriller. It was one of the most unique ones that I've seen because cortisol was an element that added to the madness. Design For Living was very average, in my opinion. I thought it would have been better than it was, but I was relatively disappointed. The Killing is probably the best on the list. It's Kubrick pre-2001 and it's also one of the best film-noirs that I've seen to date. It comes with The Killer's Kiss, so you get two films for the price of one! Ministry Of Fear was a neat little film-noir film. It's not the best that I've seen, but it was highly entertaining for the 80-90 minutes that it was on for. Robinson Crusoe On Mars is definitely one of those films that you either like or you don't. Judging by some of the sci-fi films in your collection, I'd say you'd really like it. I didn't necessarily mind it, as I found it generally unique and entertaining, but it wouldn't be something that I'd probably watch again, especially any time soon. |
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#78056 | |
Active Member
![]() Nov 2010
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With eBay you are much more likely to get a good price (I've consistently sold in-print Criterion BDs and DVDs on eBay for $20-$25 each), but it's more work. |
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#78057 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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I am, however, intrigued at movies that The Criterion Collection adopts as titles. If a previously unfamiliar movie is announced for a Criterion release, I send my feelers out and investigate. Letter Never Sent and Marketa Lazarova are two such movies that captured my attention this way, and I'm grateful that they did. I do admittedly prefer buying Criterions from the woman in the miniskirt who works in the Barnes & Noble media section down the street some of the time to buying movies online, but I've never really thought of that as a Criterion addiction problem. |
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#78058 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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#78059 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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![]() same for OOP movies, i would never get a 200$ criterion if there is a UK release with overall the same quality for 15$ |
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#78060 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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I'm not above paying a few more bucks than normal for a desired out-of-print Criterion (I paid $60 for Pierrot Le Fou and have no regrets whatsoever.), but the current asking prices for the Criterion Blu-ray of The Third Man are beyond my scope of motivation. Last edited by The Great Owl; 07-22-2013 at 02:42 PM. |
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