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Old 09-20-2013, 01:26 AM   #83601
blkhrt blkhrt is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ccg1978 View Post
What was your first Criterion? Mine was Benjamin Button....no comments please
I don't remember what my first DVD was, probably Peeping Tom, Bicycle Thieves, Hoop Dreams, or The Passion of Joan of Arc.

My first blus (all at the same time) were The Man Who Fell to Earth, M, and For All Mankind, if memory serves.
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Old 09-20-2013, 01:26 AM   #83602
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My first Criterion was 8 1/2.
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Old 09-20-2013, 01:31 AM   #83603
Edward J Grug III Edward J Grug III is offline
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First Criterions:

The Lady Vanishes
The 39 Steps
Night of the Hunter (Blind buy)
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Old 09-20-2013, 01:34 AM   #83604
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Hidden Fortress
And, what a great choice that was . An awesome, adventure movie with the great Toshiro Mifune...directed by Mr. Awesome himself. The hidden Fortress has been credited by George Lucas as being one main influences behind Star Wars. I would pay a couple of hundred right now to have a Blu-ray edition in my hands.
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Old 09-20-2013, 01:43 AM   #83605
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First DVD Criterion was The Royal Tenenbaums and First Blu-ray Criterion was The Royal Tenenbaums.

loool.
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Old 09-20-2013, 01:47 AM   #83606
Edward J Grug III Edward J Grug III is offline
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First DVD Criterion was The Royal Tenenbaums and First Blu-ray Criterion was The Royal Tenenbaums.

loool.
But have you ever seen it?
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Old 09-20-2013, 01:47 AM   #83607
The Great Owl The Great Owl is offline
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Fasten your seatbelts, because this is going to be a long-winded write-up...



My first exposure to Richard Linklater's 1991 film, Slacker, was during my college years, when I saw the iconic movie posters plastered on walls next to sidewalks around Atlanta advertising the arrival of the film to indie theaters in the area. Around that same time, I interned at a microbiology lab a few blocks away from campus in an area of the city that was, to say the least, quite diverse. My outdoor lunch breaks along the steps of that building provided nonstop people-watching opportunities, from business-casual office workers to eccentric record store shoppers to mentally-ill homeless people to any other sort of random personality one can imagine. There were the two grinning guys with dreadlocks and Rastafarian hats who walked down the street on most days greeting every single person with, "Word!" There was a panhandler who told me that he was a retired opera singer who had slept outside the night before and needed breakfast money. There was a middle-aged man who stopped his car in the middle of the road and proposed marriage to the co-worker sitting out on the steps with me, because he liked her shoes. During one eventful lunch break, when I was out on the steps by myself, a long-haired man carrying a lead pipe ambled down the street while repeatedly yelling, "This is how I f**king feel!", and hitting random objects and surfaces with the lead pipe after each repetition of the above sentence. During those glorious early 1990s years, I carried a JanSport backpack over one shoulder as I made my way around campus and to my intern job, endlessly amused, horrified, saddened, inspired, and ultimately grateful for the each and every encounter with random faces along the sidewalks. Such was life in the days when people looked at one another on the sidewalk instead of looking down at their smartphones, and when random encounters along the walk had a natural rhythm to them as each one segued into the next.

I will not go so far as to say that you had to be there to appreciate Richard Linklater's Slacker, but context does go a long way with this particular Criterion title. Slacker was released nationwide two months before Nirvana's 1991 album, Nevermind, hit the airwaves, so the ensuing grunge aesthetic had not yet swept college campuses and high schools. Slacker dropped from a time period a little earlier, when Vanilla Ice, Mariah Carey, Bon Jovi, and Bell Biv DeVoe ruled the Billboard charts while alternative bands like R.E.M., Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr., and Pixies pressed from inside the confines of their overlooked envelope in anticipation of a revolution that was about to break through. The scruffy rough-around-the-edges people that roam the Austin streets in Slacker are not grunge, and are, instead, just an assorted mixture of poor college kids, poorer graduate students, wayward 20-somethings, and even aged downtown residents who still have a unique spark of fascinating urgency.

Slacker is a film that is in love with people in general, and Linklater's camera tracks these wandering souls, jumping from one character to the next with the ease of big city tourist that hops from one bus or subway to another. Three guys, apparently college students, throw objects off a bridge in rebellion against the girl who jilted two of them. This scene may appear odd at first, but it ultimately makes perfect sense to those who remember their years as college students, when unlikely talismans and improvised rituals ruled the day. In the film's most stirring sequence, an elderly man with anarchist sentiments is initially held at gunpoint by a young man and then calmly takes the man for a walk while reminiscing about the Charles Whitman murders and yearning for the lively active protests by the likes of Guy Fawkes. A pretty graduate student lightly bickers with an apparent boyfriend before being greeted at a bookshelf by a JFK conspiracy enthusiast. The "Madonna pap smear" girl whose image appears on the Slacker poster art is, ironically, the most obtrusive and out-of-place character in the chain of scenes. Finally, a clean-cut student who walks quickly down the street with his backpack over one shoulder while politely listening to the musings of a UFO expert reminds me of myself as a bewildered college student all those years ago.

If you are looking for a conventional narrative in this film, I would advise you to search elsewhere. Slacker sweeps from one setting to another the city of Austin to showcase personalities instead of plot points. The film lacks any overall meaning or grand epiphany, although I am inclined to believe that it demonstrates how the way that we greet the people around us and behave around these people can gradually resonate through the day in an indirect sense to affect other people miles away from us whom we have never met. These random encounters have a rhythm to them, just as my own city street wanderings during my college years had a rhythm to them.

For me, Slacker represents an era more than anything else, and I will kindly give the film a 4.5 on a scale of five on account of nostalgic relevance. When it comes to video and audio presentation, one should not expect this Blu-ray to leap over tall buildings or fly past speeding bullets, but I believe that this is an excellent home edition of a crude 16mm film that was scrapped together with only a few thousand dollars, and I also believe that it exceeds the previous DVD presentation by a small notable margin. A handful of supplementary features that were present on the DVD edition have sadly been omitted, namely a picture gallery and an essay, but the vast majority of supplements that remain should please any new prospective fan of this wonderful time capsule of a movie.

Last edited by The Great Owl; 09-20-2013 at 04:31 AM.
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Old 09-20-2013, 02:15 AM   #83608
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Originally Posted by Edward J Grug III View Post
But have you ever seen it?
A couple times
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Old 09-20-2013, 02:16 AM   #83609
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ccg1978 View Post
What was your first Criterion? Mine was Benjamin Button....no comments please
The Blob.
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Old 09-20-2013, 02:20 AM   #83610
The Great Owl The Great Owl is offline
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First Criterion DVD: Seven Samurai

First Criterion Blu-ray: Le Cercle Rouge and Purple Noon (I bought both of them on the day I purchased my first Blu-ray player.)
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Old 09-20-2013, 02:30 AM   #83611
Brad1963 Brad1963 is online now
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ccg1978 View Post
What was your first Criterion? Mine was Benjamin Button....no comments please
Citizen Kane and 2001 on Laserdisc CLV versions.

The 400 Blows on DVD, first day Criterion started releasing DVD's

Chungking Express, The Third Man, The Man Who Fell to Earth
on Blu-ray, first day Criterion started releasing Blu-rays.
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Old 09-20-2013, 02:43 AM   #83612
brandon_260 brandon_260 is offline
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First Criterion DVDs were House and Repulsion, bought at the same time.

First Blu-Rays were Hunger and Fish Tank, also bought at the same time.
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Old 09-20-2013, 02:47 AM   #83613
SammyJankis SammyJankis is offline
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Originally Posted by Judex View Post
I have it, not read it yet though, got a few things I want to read first.

Theres a copy on eBay for $10 at the moment with no bids, might be worth a shot? click me
Ah, thanks. I think I might just bite the bullet on Amazon. I really want it.

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Old 09-20-2013, 03:09 AM   #83614
JJJ225 JJJ225 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ccg1978 View Post
What was your first Criterion? Mine was Benjamin Button....no comments please
DVD: The Life Aquatic (I THINK)
Blu Ray: The Third Man and Chungking Express
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Old 09-20-2013, 03:56 AM   #83615
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Pretty sure my first Criterion blu was Walkabout, followed shortly after by The Last Emperor and CCOBB.

Good times!
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Old 09-20-2013, 03:59 AM   #83616
Skorpius Skorpius is offline
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First Criterion was This Is Spinal Tap on DVD.
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Old 09-20-2013, 04:03 AM   #83617
Cocophone Cocophone is offline
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Based on Date Added in my collection on bluray.com started on November 2010 so most likely these were all bought at a 50% off sale at Barnes and Noble

The Thin Red Line
The Red Shoes
Paris, Texas
Pierrot me for
The Darjeeling Limited
The Man Who Fell to Earth
Monsoon Wedding
Charade
Vivre Sa Vie
Breathless

-----------------
"Why am I me and why not you? Why am I here and why not there? When did time begin and where does space end?" - Wings of Desire
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Old 09-20-2013, 04:11 AM   #83618
jlk5844 jlk5844 is offline
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First (and only, since sold) Criterion DVD: The Blob
First Blu-rays: Following and Rosemary's Baby
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Old 09-20-2013, 04:16 AM   #83619
Ausjdm Ausjdm is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ccg1978 View Post
What was your first Criterion? Mine was Benjamin Button....no comments please
First criterion purchase... Robocop! Drop it!!! Lol
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Old 09-20-2013, 04:20 AM   #83620
movieben1138 movieben1138 is offline
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I have no way of remembering what my first Criterion DVD was...I remember having Seven Samurai, Seventh Seal, Big Deal on Madonna Street, Hamlet, and Hidden Fortress all rather early on in my collecting.
On blu-ray, however, I know it was Seventh Seal. It was even before I had upgraded to a blu-ray player, but I found it at a used record store for $9.99 and knew I couldn't pass that up! (I also got Walkabout, Wages of Fear, and For All Mankind soon after at the same store.)

--Ben
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