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#133401 | |
Banned
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And yeah, ID4 is loads of fun and totally idiotic. ![]() |
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#133402 |
Moderator
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The third time's the charm for me with Fritz Lang's M.
The first time I watched it, I thought it was decent, but I never saw the major significance to the film. The second time I watched it in school and I was extremely tired so I was rather put off by it, while simultaneously finding some more redeeming qualities to it. Tonight was the third time I watched it and I absolutely loved it. Excellent from start to finish! |
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#133403 | |
Special Member
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#133404 | |
Special Member
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M is one of my favorite Criterion titles. Very few films make my skin crawl like when I hear the whistling. The real terror is what is implied throughout. |
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#133405 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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You're right about Cinefantastique-it was on a different level than the other magazines back then. I think Tim Lucas got his start there and Video Watchdog is a fine successor to It. |
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#133406 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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#133407 | ||
Blu-ray Samurai
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#133408 |
Blu-ray Guru
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TCM is having a "Up to" 40% off Criterion sale for those interested. Like The uninvited 16.99 Red River 31.99. etc
**EDIT** there's a few good deals, but some are still pretty high in price. Though there are a few eclipse sets at 28.00 Last edited by Banned User; 09-01-2015 at 04:41 PM. |
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#133411 |
Special Member
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I followed up Day for Night with watching Jules and Jim last night. It may be an unpopular opinion, but I cannot even put it in the same league as D4N or 400 Blows. I really did not enjoy the story and was most pleased with the ending when it was finally over. It seemed fitting for everyone.
I am going to view the supplements because I really want to know more about all the fuss over this film. So in my limited viewings of Truffaut: 1. 400 Blows 2. Day for Night Distant 3. Jules and Jim |
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#133412 | |
Power Member
Sep 2012
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Me, I like Truffaut all right. I'm not in love with him but I've enjoyed his films to varying degrees. Strangely enough, even though it's considered sexist by many viewers today, The Man Who Loved Women is one of my favorites of his. I can't even entirely defend the 'sexist' accusation either, and I wouldn't deny it's nowhere near his best, but I'm sure there are some hardcore fans of Truffaut out there that could. |
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#133413 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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It's a good film. I haven't seen it in a while but I remember getting a chuckle out of the pickup artist crashing his car to meet a woman.
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#133414 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Jules and Jim is an absolute masterpiece. Of course everyone is entitled to their opinions, but I'm convinced that there is a reason - something that is turning people off about this wonderful movie. One idea is that the opening narration is impossible to follow. Yes, it is "impossible," I said it. Maybe French viewers had a slightly easier time with it, but when you have to read subtitles and you don't know which one is Jules and which one is Jim yet, it is extremely difficult to catch all of the info that is given. ...and then there is Moreau's Catherine character who, it seems, just about everybody despises. I did, too, on my first viewing. Having the luxury of watching it on home video, I'd watch, then pause, then let it roll some more, then pause, until I understood what is being said at the beginning. Regarding Catherine, the second time I made more of an effort to understand the mens' attraction to her and also what her character might have been feeling. ...and (and I apologize because I'm sounding like a broken record on this thread,) the music just knocked me out the second time through after I hardly noticed it the first time. speaking of Truffaut and 'accessible,' this is probably one of his least accessible. but man, what a rewarding 2nd watch. I did a complete 180 on it and would probably say it is one of my all-time favorite films. |
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#133415 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Ebert pointed this out regarding Truffaut's female characters: "He has two kinds of women in his movies. There are the bright, pleasant, vapid little things, like the various girls in the life of his autobiographical character, Antoine Doinel. And then there are the obsessed, sometimes insane women whose neurotic or incomplete ideas about sexuality drive them in to fatal relationships with men." he later goes on to say... "Tormented by a sexuality that gives them little release, all of these women try to manipulate, possess and destroy the men in their lives. It is apparently a theme Truffaut finds fascinating, and you have to look very closely through his films to find a normally developed woman (the Jacqueline Bisset character in "Day for Night" comes close)." EDIT: he said this in his review of The Story of Adele H. The review was written in 1976. Fanny Ardant's character in Finally, Sunday certainly doesn't fall into this category, but that film came later. I can't remember much about Deneuve's character in The Last Metro. |
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#133416 | |
Special Member
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I just never could relate to any of the characters to develop an interest in where this was going. I will finish the supplements tonight and like I said previously hope to get a little more appreciation for the film. |
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#133418 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#133419 |
Blu-ray Guru
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It's been a while since I last saw Jules and Jim, but it's definitely my favorite film of Truffaut's (followed very closely by Day for Night). I wasn't able to connect with The 400 Blows, though I do need to watch it again as it's been some time. Shoot the Piano Player and The Soft Skin were pretty "meh" for me.
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#133420 | |
Blu-ray Duke
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But I find them both to be fairly dull and pedestrian compared to early new-wave films like Hiroshima Mon Amour and Vivre Sa Vie. |
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