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#22522 |
Power Member
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So, I haven't seen Herzog's "Nosferatu", how does this one rank? It seems to be actually really popular so I can't imagine it being all that bad. How is his interpretation of the story and of course how is Kinski in the role? Regardless, I'll likely buy it anyway, but I'm always interested in opinion.
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#22523 |
Banned
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I like fruit roll-ups, But not when they are soggy... I dip them in my cereal and hurry and eat them because it gets soggy quick. I no like it. I once dipped my nose in a bowl of cheese dip just to prove I could. Did you ever notice aids?
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#22524 |
Scorpion Releasing Insider
Aug 2012
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#22525 | |
Scorpion Releasing Insider
Aug 2012
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Without Warning was never part of TransWorld library nor ever on Home video here in the States. Its controlled by MGM via their ownership of the AIP/Filmways library |
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#22526 |
Banned
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Hi Walter, if it is controlled by MGM why hasnt ever been released by MGM or sub-licensed to anyone - why hasnt it gotten USA release on DVD or blu ray ?
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#22527 | |
Expert Member
![]() Jan 2012
Belgium
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you think it's a masterpiece, i do think it's a cinematic turd. taste is subjective but i guess it's hard to discuss the importance of a movie like ginger snaps. |
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#22528 |
Blu-ray Guru
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I watched Witchboard last night, and I was impressed by how this one looked. I had only seen it one time before, about a year ago on DVD, and I remember the colors being very flat and boring. I also remember it looking much brighter, which made the move fall flat. This blu-ray was definitely an upgrade. The darker look really added to the atmosphere.
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#22529 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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It's really no different than how slasher fans get intellectual pleasure out of recognizing the stable tropes and elements of that sub-genre and guessing how they are going to be used in a new film (who dies first, who will be the final girl etc.) Personally, I find fun in thinking about subtext after watching a movie, but I rarely am aware of it while I am watching - unless I am particularly looking for it, or it's delivered rather heavy-handed. |
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#22533 | |
Banned
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All narratives have subtext, which of course includes all movies. For some decoding the subtext of a movie just adds an extra level of enjoyment to the pleasure (i.e. emotional arousal) we normally get from watching. It's really no different than how slasher fans get intellectual pleasure out of recognizing the stable tropes and elements of that sub-genre and guessing how they are going to be used in a new film (who dies first, who will be the final girl etc.) Good post. This is completely true. I'm often asked to justify why I think certain films are important and why I feel that they convey deeper meanings/levels, but nobody here has justified why they like (admittedly) entertaining genre films like Phantasm, like Amityville. I can't apologise for backing horror films that engage the viewer with thematic depths and tell truths about the world we live in. Lik Movie-Brat and others have suggested, Ginger Snaps extends faar beyond jump scares, atmosphere and gore. It's really a film about a specific point in our lives and how such changes can indeed feel monstrous. I'm not just talking about the puberty metaphors and such, but the notion of the outcast, those who do not pertain to a particular group of individuals. The dangers and pleasures of sex, how it can be both empowering and destroy you. And that's just the tip of the ice berg. There are so many layers within Ginger Snaps that I don't find in many films, let alone horror films. Look at the suburbs in most films and horror films, they are always portrayed as utopias of which we should aspire to live in. They are always peaceful environments until something abject comes along and destroys it. From the frame it's made explicitly clear that there is NOTHING beautiful or pretty about the suburbs in which Ginger and Bridgette live. It's dim, dreary and uninspired. And most importantly, it's honest. This level of what I call 'truthful subversiveness' is something I appreciate in any film. The writing is also somewhat unique. I don't know many films that have characters saying the distinctive dialogue featured in Ginger Snaps. The film also ties into other subjects I am interested in such as psychoanalysis and gender roles. The latter of which Snaps explores explicitly. I have almost nothing to say about Phantasm other than I enjoyed the sci-fi/horror hybrid. |
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#22534 | |
Senior Member
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#22538 |
Senior Member
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#22539 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#22540 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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Anyways I want The People Under The Stairs, yeah I know Arrows done it but I'd rather have it as a scream factory release...Phantasm is better... |
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Tags |
horror, scream factory, shout factory |
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