|
|
![]() |
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Best Blu-ray Movie Deals
|
Best Blu-ray Movie Deals, See All the Deals » |
Top deals |
New deals
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]() $84.99 4 hrs ago
| ![]() $45.00 1 day ago
| ![]() $14.97 5 hrs ago
| ![]() $74.99 | ![]() $82.99 | ![]() $17.49 3 hrs ago
| ![]() $27.95 23 hrs ago
| ![]() $22.95 1 day ago
| ![]() $70.00 | ![]() $27.99 1 day ago
| ![]() $101.99 | ![]() $33.99 4 hrs ago
|
![]() |
#68961 | |
Active Member
|
![]() Quote:
It was a matter of principal, not quality. No I'm not a sticker nut. |
|
![]() |
![]() |
#68963 | |
Active Member
|
![]() Quote:
Mine may have been repackaged which doesn't bother me as much as the damaged case and cover art. Haven't decided if I'll ask for a discount or exchange. |
|
![]() |
![]() |
#68965 |
Special Member
|
![]()
Here is what I told the fools.
"I received an reply saying Amazon would offer me 20% off my purchase since it was missing the sticker and re-wrapped. I've heard people getting up to 50% off from a movie forum. Since this is obviously a used copy and Amazon was listing as new I expect to get 50% off my purchase as well. Please advise." |
![]() |
![]() |
#68967 | |
Active Member
|
![]() Quote:
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
#68972 |
Special Member
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#68973 |
Blu-ray Prince
|
![]()
Jonathan Rosenbaum on the second best film of 1999:
"2. The Thin Red Line. I still haven’t read James Jones’s 1962 novel about World War II and therefore can’t gauge the degree to which Terrence Malick’s grasp of collective consciousness, as acute and as eccentric as Kubrick’s, is the product of adaptation or of invention. But Malick’s remarkable, at times visionary evocation of a collective hero–a group of soldiers and officers ruminating in offscreen monologues with essentially the same voice — is basically a reactionary throwback to lyrical-humanist depictions of World War I from the first third of this century, novels such as Three Soldiers (1921), The Enormous Room (1922), and Company K (1933) and films such as The Big Parade (1925) and All Quiet on the Western Front (1930). Malick’s most visible influence is F.W. Murnau’s Tabu (1930), a late silent picture that deals not with war but with “natural” innocence and “civilized” corruption in the South Seas. All this makes Malick’s beautiful and moving epic somewhat questionable as history — unless one can accept his “retreat” into a silent-movie sensibility as a step forward. This isn’t a position to be rejected out of hand: a few years ago historian Eric Hobsbawm argued in New Left Review that “after about 150 years of secular decline, barbarism has been on the increase for most of the 20th century, and there is no sign that this increase is at an end.” He wrote that “the First World War began the descent into barbarism” and that “civilization receded between the Treaty of Versailles and the fall of the bomb on Hiroshima.” With that as a given, taking a World War I-era view of World War II would be relatively civilized — a step backward into relative sanity. Whatever one concludes about the wisdom of Malick’s philosophical or aesthetic approach, the film’s first couple of hours offer a deeply stirring experience (during the final hour its power dissipates). Many other films this year gained from having a silent-movie syntax, including The Lovers on the Bridge, Besieged, and Winstanley, and there were a few moments in Eyes Wide Shut that gained as well. But The Thin Red Line is probably the one that buys into the ideological content of silent movies the most, for good and for ill." Rosenbaum's original review: http://www.jonathanrosenbaum.com/?p=6509 If anybody hasn't seen Murnau's Tabu, please do so, it's every bit as potent as Sunrise. There are few films (silent or sound) that compare in naive beauty. Last edited by Abdrewes; 04-19-2013 at 09:11 PM. |
![]() |
![]() |
#68976 |
Blu-ray Archduke
|
![]()
I just saw Terrence Malick's To the Wonder at a local theater. I loved the film. I was not bored at all, and I thought that the pacing of this film was quite refreshing.
I'm double-posting my rather haphazard first-impression (and non-spoiler) review from another thread, so here goes... To the Wonder eschews conventional narrative structure to present us with a work of fluid motion, where characters alternately drift closer and farther from one another as the roving camera catches brief, but insightful glimpses at facial expressions and mannerisms. This movie, like a symphony or a ballet, uses the fluidity and sound to depict specific feelings, instead of relying on traditional dialogue and explanatory interactions. Scattered fragments of dialogue and voiceover function like musical instruments all their own. My broad impression after this first viewing of To the Wonder is of "grace", whether it is the grace of God, the grace of nature, the gracefulness that all humans have within themselves, or the gracefulness of change, whether this change applies to a rising tide over the sand of a French coast, the manipulation of our natural world by way of man's construction, or falling in and out of love. Terrence Malick's films have always used the beauty of the wilderness surrounding human events to illustrate that mankind is simply another part of nature, but To the Wonder seems to settle on the more reassuring aspects of these observations. I have always admired Olga Kurylenko, but her wanderings through this movie give her a cinematic presence with which I cannot imagine one not falling in love. Like Anna Karina in Band of Outsiders or Audrey Tautou in Amélie, Kurylenko dances through this movie in with emotional openness that is equally effective through elation or through forlorn sorrow. Ben Affleck plays a central role as well, but his character drifts in and out of the camera's peripheral edges as if to avoid committing fully to any given emotion. Rachel McAdams commands attention with a subtle brilliance that combines fragile beauty with rugged resilience well on its way to a hardened emotional shell. Javier Bardem, in his role as a priest suffering with an indecision about faith, lumbers through scenes with a countenance that seems just as weathered as the poverty-stricken neighborhoods that he passes through during his everyday duties. Malick's camera flows ephemerally, like the water of a tranquil river, through the lives of these characters, and I have never seen a film succeed so well at examining the emotional intimacies of relationships without judging any of the involved parties. Well done, Terrence Malick, well done... Last edited by The Great Owl; 04-19-2013 at 09:55 PM. |
![]() |
![]() |
#68977 | |
Senior Member
|
![]() Quote:
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
#68978 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
|
![]() Quote:
People keep saying that Oblivion is a boring film, but I'm inclined to think that, if I was not bored at all during To the Wonder, I will find Oblivion quite engaging. |
|
![]() |
![]() |
#68980 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
|
![]() Quote:
Okay, maybe not quite that often. I am not sure where to rank To the Wonder on my list of Malick films, but it falls somewhere in the middle. Meaning, of course, that I consider it to be quite a masterpiece. Malick even makes a Sonic Drive-In look beautiful and majestic in this film. Geez... |
|
![]() |
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
||||
thread | Forum | Thread Starter | Replies | Last Post |
Criterion Collection | Wish Lists | Chushajo | 26 | 08-14-2025 12:45 PM |
Criterion Collection? | Newbie Discussion | ChitoAD | 68 | 01-02-2019 10:14 PM |
Criterion Collection Question. . . | Blu-ray Movies - North America | billypoe | 31 | 01-18-2009 02:52 PM |
The Criterion Collection goes Blu! | Blu-ray Technology and Future Technology | bferr1 | 164 | 05-10-2008 02:59 PM |
|
|