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Old 03-27-2013, 02:16 AM   #31801
Lepidopterous Lepidopterous is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by KilloWertz View Post
I didn't like The Cabin in the Woods that much either. I blind bought it expecting it to be a sure thing and I ended up selling it.

We're two of the only people in the world that didn't like it very well, but oh well.
I guess so huh? I watched Julia's Eyes again recently and realized how much more I appreciate older characters over teenagers in horror films. The element of stupidity and cheese is only so necessary to craft effective horror.

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Uh oh. That's copyrighted by Diesel. If he was around more than once a week, I'd be worried.
Ohh his copyright only entitles him to the namedrop.
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Old 03-27-2013, 02:49 AM   #31802
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Default Catch-Up Post (COPYRIGHT WHINY BABY, FOUNDER OF THE MULTI-QUOTE BUTTON)

Quote:
Originally Posted by Al_The_Strange View Post
Next greatest movie seen in the cinema: Oz: The Great and Powerful

[Show spoiler]One key thing the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz proved is that movie magic and magic in movies go hand-in-hand. This might be a mild spoiler, but most of us know by now that the actual wizard of Oz was never a real wizard, but a con-artist who used machines and gimmicks to wow the inhabitants of Oz into submission. It's also an interestingly insightful reflection on filmmaking itself, with the filmmakers fulfilling the exact same role as the wizard; they use camera tricks, elaborate sets, costumes, and special effects to bring the fantasy to life before the audience, and trick us all into believing that Oz can be a real place with real people. Even though the film is incredibly fake-looking and laughably cheesy, it's become cemented as an endearing classic in American cinema; it's an impressive feat that this 70+ year old classic still captures audiences' imaginations.

Obviously, nothing can top the 1939 Wizard of Oz. The 2013 prequel, Oz: The Great and Powerful, follows into the modern trend of taking classic fairy tales and given them an epic-scale treatment (along the same lines as Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland and yesteryear's Snow White and the Huntsman). It is on that level that O:TGAP should be evaluated; it's a big, large-scale remix of the classic Wizard of Oz elements with a massive CGI spectacle.

The most critical of audiences probably won't be impressed, but I personally felt that this film is decently entertaining. It has action and peril, especially in the last act; the final battle in Emerald City offers a satisfying climax with plenty of spectacle, but without overdoing things that much. I was thrilled to see the witches fighting, and it was pretty cool. Even though CGI is dispensed liberally throughout the feature with mixed results, it is a visually striking experience at times. There is a lot of silly humor thrown about as well, which may come off as a hit or a miss. Overall, it is a whimsical adventure that made me smile at times, and kept my interest all the way through.

The film's most redeeming quality will be it story. The actual plot is somewhat derivative - it's pretty much the exact same formula as the 2010 Alice in Wonderland - and the story is predictable, especially if you know what happens in the classic Oz film. Still, long-time fans will geek out at all the Wizard of Oz references, and this film does a fine job of establishing the characters and concepts that would ultimately lead up to the original movie. The film has a number of one-dimensional side characters who could have benefited from more development. However, the wizard takes the spotlight throughout, and the film does a great job of establishing his character, showing his growth and development, and ultimately tying in the classic themes of magic, imagination, and belief with the story's pathos. It's not the same meta-theme that went into the old film, but this film uses it in a fashion that supports the story, and makes it just as interesting.

This film features pretty solid and distinctive photography. You can bet that the opening scenes are black-and-white, and rest is color, just like the original film. It even uses a smaller, square aspect ration, until the actual Oz scenes, where the screen expands magically. Some shots are pretty wild, a few shots swung pretty heavily side-to-side, and plenty of other shots reminded me a lot of the Peter Jackson Middle Earth films, thanks to the frequent sweeping and movements. Editing is not bad. Acting is generally satisfying: James Franco won't impress everyone, but I felt his portrayal was appropriately showy and boisterous, and fit the character very well. Mila Kunis is regarded as the odd one out, and I'll admit that she did seem out of place at first, but I enjoyed her performances in the second half. Rachel Weisz is as great as ever, and it's hard not to love Michelle Williams. Writing is not too bad. This production has fine and dandy sets, props, and costumes, which mostly match up well with the original Oz film. Special effects look great in some spots, not so great in others. Music has its moments too.

As expected from a Sam Raimi film, Oz: The Great and Powerful is a bright, colorful, humorous adventure with whimsey and zeal. It comes best recommended to non-discerning popcorn flick fans, families, and Wizard of Oz fans.


4/5 (Entertainment: Good | Story: Good | Film: Good)

Recommendation: Sure, why not?
My main draw to see this is Rachel Weisz.

Quote:
Originally Posted by jhiggy23 View Post
Kramer vs. Kramer

Film: 3 (out of 4)

Hoffman and Streep deserved their Oscar wins, as they were great. Although the film is a bit dated from a legal perspective, I think its themes are as important today as they were then. Is the film overrated? Sure, but it's also quite good. The fact that it won best picture and director over Apocalypse Now, however, is an utter travesty and only occurred due to AN being so misunderstood at the time (and somewhat today, as well).
I would still give this the Oscar over Apocalypse Now. Both are masterpieces and in my Top 50 too.

Quote:
Originally Posted by jvince View Post
Rejected (2000)
dir. Don Hertzfeldt

LOL. Saw this around the time YouTube came out. "I'M A BANANA!"

Quote:
Originally Posted by jvince View Post
The Bottom Line: Any other year, Head Over Heels would have easily won the Oscar. Too bad it had to go up against the likes of Adam and Dog and Paperman. Recommended for those who love romantic films with a touch of whimsy.

This one was lovely. I completely agree with your bottom line, though I have little experience with other Oscar-nominated shorts. Adam the Dog was a great origin story on "man's best friend" and metaphor for the persistent presence of God despite man's abandonment of Him.

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Originally Posted by SquidPuppet View Post
Wreck-It Ralph
[Show spoiler]
I popped this in the day before yesterday and it just wasnt working for me. I figured I was just having an off day or I was in the wrong mood, so I yanked it out with the notion of watching it the next day.

Last night I watched the whole movie.

I love all types of animated movies. I own 46 animated films on Bl-ray and have over a dozen on my wish list, waiting for price drops. I was kinda surprised when I counted them all.

While watching Wreck-It Ralph I did something I have never done before. Ever. I fast forwarded, many times. I didnt eject it because hey, its Disney animation, it'll get better. Right? Nope, not for me anyway.

Lots of super awesome crazy looking things, super brightly colored, moving very fast, making lots of wild noises. More, bigger, brighter crazy looking things, going even faster, making even louder noises.

Repeat. Repeat. Repeat. Repeat. Repeat. Repeat. Repeat. Repeat.

I recognised 99% of the video game characters and "got" the "jokes". Didnt seem to help.

Dunno. It felt empty. No heart.

John C. Reilly's voice work was excellent.

Jack McBrayer's voice work was annoying beyond belief. Which is weird, because I liked his voice work on Archer.


Film 2.5/5
PQ 5/5
AQ 5/5
Wow! Maybe now you know how I felt when How to Train Your Dragon came out. (for other reasons though)

Quote:
Originally Posted by SquidPuppet View Post
The Place Promised in Our Early Days
[Show spoiler]
Anime / 2004 / PG / DVD

Director: Makoto Shinkai

Man I love this guys style. The way he lets the camera linger. The way he moves it so very slowly. The way he uses lighting and shadow. His use of sound and silence. The way he tells his story. His heavy dependence on powerful emotion and theme. Everything.

He is the Aronofsky-Malick of Anime.

In an alternate universe, Japan is split in half. The south is occupied by the USA and the north by The Union (Soviet). Although there is a peace agreement in place, tension is high and it looks likely that war will break out.

Also, there is a mysterious and beautiful tower in the north. It is so tall you cant see the top. The Tower has something to do with an experiment/effort to connect and blend the six alternate worlds with the real world. So do the dreams of one particular young girl, the Grand Daughter of of the man who designed the tower. Her dreams may be a source of energy or fuel.

Meanwhile... a group of young Japanese rebels are building a plane and plot to use it to bomb the tower. Their goal is to reunify the country under Japanese rule, whatever the cost.

And, of course, there is a powerful love story among two of the protagonists.

Meaningful themes and dialogue. Unbelievably gorgeous visuals. Incredible sound editing and design. Emotional and thought provoking.

I strongly recommend this film as well as Makoto Shinkai's other visual and emotional feast, 5 Centimeters per Second


4.5/5
His new one is literally at the top of my watchlist. Can't wait to see it.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Al_The_Strange View Post
Awesome. Super Mario Bros, MK:Annihilation, and Street Fighter made it on my bottom 100 list. B&R made it at the bottom of my 100 guilty pleasures.

This type of marathon shouldn't be complete without such classics as The Room, Birdemic, Zaat, The Brain That Would Not Die, Dungeons and Dragons, Superman IV, Battlefield Earth, Mega Shark vs Giant Octpuss...well, heck, I could probably go on and on about bad movies.
Did anyone catch on that they are all game or comic-related films??

Pokemon: The Movie, Diesel.

Quote:
Originally Posted by SquidPuppet View Post
[/SPOILER]

Where/how did you view this?
Theaters. Curfew was my favorite.

Last edited by Lepidopterous; 03-27-2013 at 04:02 AM.
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Old 03-27-2013, 03:01 AM   #31803
Lepidopterous Lepidopterous is offline
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Default Missed a few... :o

Quote:
Originally Posted by Abdrewes View Post
I think Amour is a great film, But Hidden is his masterpiece.
I feel the opposite. Amour was phenomenal, especially after dissecting it.

Quote:
Originally Posted by iam1bearcat View Post
The Perks of Being A Wallflower - 3/5

what the f*ck was this?

[Show spoiler]i had no idea this was going to be so depressing. what a great way to spend a Sunday afternoon

i like how they deliberately made the film look cloudy and sh*t just like from the 90's, nice touch. not that i really wanted to see that again since i hate that "look" but it fit the film very well.

solid acting by the cast, especially the tall stringy dude who's name i cannot recall.

the main character, Charlie did okay. Paul Rudd was underutilized and didn't even come of as Paul Rudd so i wonder why they got such a well known actor for that role.

the story was waaaaaaaay badly paced. serious whiplash from the frantic mood changes. ah, just like teenagers i suppose

but seriously, wtf. a weird, quiet sad kid apparently had bad things happen to him, or someone he know. or both. or something. they don't tell us. and they have no build up to it or conclusion. just felt... weirdly tacked on. did not translate to film well at all imo.

like Method said, maybe i'm just too old to connect to this mopey, "woe is me" high school stuff anymore although KilloWertz enjoyed it and he's old than i am so who knows

some neat scenes and an at times touching ending with the graduation, but in the end this was barely passable and i almost turned it off numerous times. i thought this was going to be quirky, like the title was / is. i wasn't expecting such a bleak, whiny film. i guess i should have expected it since it contains teenagers but oh well
Yea I didn't like it either and still have to sell my copy. I stirred up a firestorm with the fanboys on the film's main thread.


Footnote: Almost Game of Thrones weekend

Last edited by Lepidopterous; 03-27-2013 at 03:07 AM.
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Old 03-27-2013, 03:17 AM   #31804
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Originally Posted by DjMethod View Post
What did you think of the ending? I loved it.

This was a Diesel one-and-done for me though.
Quote:
Originally Posted by KilloWertz View Post
Uh oh. That's copyrighted by Diesel. If he was around more than once a week, I'd be worried.
Quote:
Originally Posted by DjMethod View Post
Ohh his copyright only entitles him to the namedrop.



Is the theft of my favorite movies list format copyright not enough?!

[Show spoiler]
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Old 03-27-2013, 03:47 AM   #31805
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Originally Posted by Diesel View Post



Is the theft of my favorite movies list format copyright not enough?!

[Show spoiler]
Don't forget "the catch-up post."

[Show spoiler]
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Old 03-27-2013, 03:54 AM   #31806
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Originally Posted by DjMethod View Post
Don't forget "the catch-up post."

[Show spoiler]
Blast it!

Will you at least leave me my name?


[Show spoiler]
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Old 03-27-2013, 04:01 AM   #31807
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Originally Posted by DjMethod View Post
Honestly, I didn't care for this my first time around. My opinion of it might improve though because I was very tired at the time.
I found it much less satisfying the second time around.
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Old 03-27-2013, 04:03 AM   #31808
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Originally Posted by Diesel View Post
Blast it!

Will you at least leave me my name?


[Show spoiler]
Yes master

[Show spoiler]Renamed.
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Old 03-27-2013, 04:04 AM   #31809
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Originally Posted by DjMethod View Post
I feel the opposite. Amour was phenomenal, especially after dissecting it.
so you think Hidden is a great film and Amour is his masterpiece? Okay, fair enough.
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Old 03-27-2013, 04:04 AM   #31810
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Abdrewes View Post
I found it much less satisfying the second time around.
Was that the emoticon you intended to use? lol

I've only seen it once...

Quote:
Originally Posted by Abdrewes View Post
so you think Hidden is a great film and Amour is his masterpiece? Okay, fair enough.
Yes sir I do.

Cache is great but the entire plot is a McGuffin and a metaphor for his internal struggle. I can't help but feel duped.

Last edited by Lepidopterous; 03-27-2013 at 04:06 AM.
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Old 03-27-2013, 04:06 AM   #31811
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By the way DJ, I wouldn't mind buying or trading for it. My little sister's been wanting to see it after having read the book.
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Old 03-27-2013, 04:10 AM   #31812
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Originally Posted by Abdrewes View Post
By the way DJ, I wouldn't mind buying or trading for it. My little sister's been wanting to see it after having read the book.
Sure thing. The slip is pristine too, if you care about that. PM me and we can negotiate a price to buy it for... "your sister".
[Show spoiler] jk

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Old 03-27-2013, 08:42 AM   #31813
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Default Amour, explained (DO NOT READ BEFORE SEEING THE FILM)

As I have mentioned before, to me, Amour is by far the best film of 2012. So I wanted to outline some of what I got out of the film. The experience of a film can never be entirely expressed through words, but the interpretations it elicits can. Here is my own take on the film.

The Most Honest Film About Love Ever Made
[Show spoiler]

Amour is a 2012 film written and directed by Michael Haneke, a director known for unapologetic filmmaking. The film itself is almost a series of independent events spliced together. Similar to how the episodic nature of Zero Dark Thirty (another 2012 film) represents its taking place over several years, the editing in Amour also gives us a sense of passing time.

The music is very sparse (par for a Haneke film). The intention here is to amplify their seclusion from life outside the apartment, while also offering the audience an unbiased display of events on-screen. The sounds of strings would only induce more emotion than necessary. It also shifts more emotional weight on the few times music is played. Haneke insists on simplicity and objectivity. His films tend to be dry as a result, but no less rewarding. Equating his audience to observers is a gesture of respect and it widens the range of substance that can be taken from the film.

Despite his passive "take from it what you will" approach, what I find overt about Haneke's style is the lingering. But I appreciate this as the director’s way of communicating a sense of purpose to the audience, so as to tell us "HEY! This means something. Open your eyes!". Otherwise, shorter-edited scenes of the dishwashing or flower-cutting would be easily dismissed as trivial tasks. The lingering allows us to soak in the meaning.

A solid example of this is the serial on-screen exhibition of the paintings. After the sequence, I began to notice those as well as other paintings hanging around the house throughout the film. Consequently, I believe one intention is to get us to actually look at them during the remainder of the film. I am convinced of this because it got me to notice two additional elements: A large sketch of a pigeon in the living room that is centered on when Eva comes to visit, and the painting behind Georges in his last scene that I will touch on later. There are a few central impacts of the paintings, however. One is to offer a sort of tranquil refractory period following a dramatic and harrowing scene, allowing the film to breathe and the viewer to recover. Another point is the story that the paintings tell in sequence. The landscapes get increasingly more desolate until the final painting, which returns to a more lively setting. There is also the presence of a couple that are notably absent in the middle paintings, but then reappear at the final one. It goes back to the role of paintings as a mode of reflection—an idea that parallels Haneke's style of filmmaking which demands that the viewer extract the meaning from the frame.

The vacuuming scene immediately following the scene where Georges stops playing the piano is quite powerful. As a pianist myself, there are times I get so overwhelmed with reflection that I inadvertently stop playing. There is an emotional barrier that can arise between the piano and the player and I think it got too thick for Georges here. The maid vacuuming under the piano emphasizes his abandonment of the instrument from that point onward. The piano goes from being an expressive instrument to a piece of furniture that is dusted off every so often. It is also worth noting that the seat is left outside of our frame of view.

Another use of Haneke's lingering device is when we are left watching Alexandre, Anne's former student, wait for her in the living room. After glancing back at her piano, the pianist turns back around to reminisce on the past—to a time when she was his piano instructor teaching him the foundation of what he has become today. He dwells on these thoughts for a long moment before she arrives unexpectedly crippled. The jarring contrast between her former youthful appearance in his thoughts and her current physical state shocked and saddened him, which he could not refrain from communicating to her in the letter he sent with his CD. The piano is a symbol of Anne's perishing youth, which is why each of her loved ones sinks into meditation in front of the instrument at some point in the film.

Pigeons are widely known to be a symbol of peace. When the pigeon first appears in the apartment, it is met with animosity. This represents Georges's unrest. Its presence then persists through the sketch displayed in the living room, which was perhaps drawn afterwards by Georges to expel his guilt on canvas. This lingering presence is also an indirect tool to get us to think about the window that Georges repeatedly has to close due to the bird's entry, the significance of which I will touch on later. When the pigeon appeared for the second time and Georges went to close the window, we may initially be led to believe that he is going to kill or smother it with the blanket, because this takes place just after Georges smothered his own wife with a pillow. Yet just as we prepare for this possibility, he cradles the pigeon like a child. This represents Georges's acceptance of Anne's departure. The moment also serves to demonstrate that Georges is indeed a tender man, and his decision to personally put an end to Anne’s suffering was out of love. This is why it is after Anne's death when the pigeon appears—to reaffirm that Georges' character has evolved over the course of his wife's deterioration to be patient with life's fragility, and make peace with death.

Their daughter Eva's alienation is made evident through body language (her back is often turned to us) and where her mind is at. She talks business and real estate to her ailing mother and vents her personal matters to her father before even bringing up Anne's operation. Her periodic visits only serve to disturb her father because instead of reliable help, she only brings criticisms.

There is a connection someone drew between Georges's "Why should I imagine that?" response (to Anne's "Imagine if we were here, in our beds, and someone broke in") and his incapacity to cope with imagination throughout the film. Him at the piano, his dream, stopping the tape—they all seem to point toward an internal coping mechanism as Georges is being drowned in emotional distress. This suffocation is felt when Georges's smoke break at the window is interrupted by Anne's call for help. It is only then that we realize that it was not truly even a break at all, but his waiting for her to finish.

There are a few stories that Georges tells Anne in the film from his childhood. The first describes an experience where his grandmother gave him money to see a movie. In describing the movie to his neighbor, his feelings came back almost more powerfully than during the film itself. Haneke is describing his own movies and precisely what he tries to give his audience. I think he believes that Georges's reaction to the film is the greatest accomplishment a film can achieve. This story also demonstrates the emotional weight of recollection on Georges and the distress it causes him. It can be argued that it is this emotional weight and distress that led to his radical actions at the end. The other story is told to Anne before her death. In writing to his mother from camp, drawing flowers meant he liked his stay and drawing stars meant he didn't. This builds a subtle connection to the flowers (which are asters, or "stars") he trims for her death bed. Georges's aesthetic arrangement of the flowers around Anne is an expression of love and the privacy of this enshrinement is foreshadowed by Georges's unpleasant funeral experience earlier in the film. He goes on to finish his childhood story with his contracting diphtheria and being isolated from his mother behind a window, which is telling Anne that he knows what it feels like to be sick and helpless. This also embodies the helplessness of watching a loved one suffer (being in the shoes of his mother).

The resolution is expertly handled. It is not an abrupt cliff like in The White Ribbon, but instead addresses each character's resolution with a touch of ambiguity. Anne is (I would argue) visibly at peace just before her death. Her acceptance begins from the scene where she explicitly introduces to Georges the idea that she does not want to go on. This can also be implied with her counting on him to support her wish to avoid medical intervention. It is further demonstrated by her suicidal attempt to jump out of the window sill and by her refusal to drink water as a signal that her mind had not changed. These ideas coupled with Georges's promise to keep her at home, living and taking care of her for a long period of time, and increased isolation from the outside world (even groceries are brought by neighbors) are what ultimately drove Georges to end her life. As most of us would probably have our entire lives flash before our eyes in a downward-spiraling plane, Anne's nosedive was much slower than that. She embraced her life's end while reminiscing through their old photo album. She takes advantage of the fact that seeing the end does not have to be over "in a flash" in her case, but can be savored in a beautiful moment with the one she loves. Georges eventually finds his place right beside her. Eva is left with exactly what she asked for—alienated and alone in an empty piece of real estate. The final shot represents a stark contrast to the opening scene. We are again set at the vantage point of the piano, but instead of a large audience observing music, we see a single individual sitting in silence. It is also an extension of the vacuuming scene, in which the piano was partly cut from the frame. Now the entire object is off camera, leaving only the weight of its absence.

The cause of Georges death is definitely up in the air. However, it does appear to be a suicide because of the letter he writes preceding his departure. The portrait over his bed (where he wakes up to leave with Anne) is of a dried-up lake. This, along with the empty water bottle and cup at his bedside, can symbolize dehydration, a possible cause of death. It is more probable, however, that his implied dehydration (along with the cigarette-filled ashtray) served to demonstrate his distress and affected mental state, before he jumps to his death through the same window where Anne attempted to take her own life. Haneke directs our attention to a window in the opening scene (as the investigator asks "Did anyone open this window?" to which they answer "no") but it is the window in Anne's room, which Georges could not have reached with the doors taped shut. Instead, Haneke uses this dialogue to get us to think about the window as a possible route of suicide for Georges. In effect, it is a clue that leads us to realize that the window that the pigeon entered is also already open when the firemen break through the door, just as it is open during the final sequence when Georges leaves with Anne. The window, just like the one in his story, represents the barrier/gateway keeping Georges from his loved one. After Anne's death, Georges remained inextricably linked to her. His refusal to leave the house, his apparent dehydration, and the window where he chooses to take his life all relate back to Anne's inner struggle.

The scenes of feeding, bathing, carrying, speech therapy, etc. are meant to display before us a life that we refuse to acknowledge. For example, I happen to drive by a hospice every single day and have never once stopped to think that there are older folks living out the rest of their lives in there. Similarly, the entirety of Amour takes place within one couple's living quarters. It adds significance behind those closed doors that we like to remain outside of. And it is easy for this important perspective to be lost on us. Everything shown in the film are things that happen—so those that complain that it is there simply to shock us are sorely mistaken. Couples and families are tested in unforgiving ways. Yes, Anne's case is extreme, but the film outwardly acknowledges this (she is the 5%). These unpleasant things are very real, yet sadly most of us are so displaced from this reality which is right among us. Nobody wants to think about getting old. Haneke knows this and forces us to face this inevitability head on. The five seconds it takes to consider such a reality is far too inconvenient to think about while I am young. This is surely one of the main points of the film.

It reminds me of a French documentary short I viewed as an extra on Criterion's DVD release of Eyes Without a Face. The film basically walks us through the meat-preparation process, from the livestock to the dinner plate. To be honest, it was hard to endure but I found it to be an important watch, particularly for those who eat meat. Just as that film sheds light on where our food comes from, Amour sheds light on where we are all headed (although we do not choose to get old).

I think each viewer will relate to this on their own personal level. As for me, my grandfather was half-paralyzed and confined to a bed for the last twenty years of his life due to a series of strokes. He progressively worsened almost identically to how Anne did in the film. And while I am not sure how I would align with Georges's ultimate course of action, the film does not attempt to argue the ethics, but rather that it fits his character in his circumstance. He presumably stayed with her in that apartment all day and night, helplessly watching the woman he loved all his life gradually wither away. Although it had its beautiful moments, like the table-side charm or getting her new wheelchair, it was equally as dark for him when she would repeatedly yell "mal... mal... mal..." (pain) and often stayed up at night. It drove him to do a terrible thing out of love and gave a poetic turn to the couple's story. The act shifted the focus immediately to him, and in removing her from the picture, actually demonstrated how much she was a part of him.

"...Until death do us part."

In a more thematic sense, the film is an exploration of love. The dynamic between Georges and Anne is not an affectionate one, but their love and respect for one another transcends any kind of physical intimacy. A universal aspect of love is the wish to grow old together, and it is easy to overlook what this truly entails. This film provides the weight of such a promise and in effect, no other film may be more suitable to carry the title "Amour".


For these reasons, I believe Amour is the most honest film about love ever made. It is as much a love story as any other, only it is about the end of the story. A testament to what love truly encompasses—the sharing of not just happiness, but despair as well. The film can be difficult to watch, but it also has both wit and endearing moments captured in the range of its emotionally riveting performances. As for Haneke's poetic intricacy, I rarely witness such meticulous depth applied to a film. Even ordinary acts such as washing dishes, vacuuming, and cutting flowers take on tremendous meaning. It is debatable to determine which the film has more of: the love it was made with or the love it exudes. It is a masterpiece and a must-see, even if only for its wisdom.

Last edited by Lepidopterous; 10-18-2017 at 11:12 PM.
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Old 03-27-2013, 01:17 PM   #31814
jvince jvince is offline
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'Verse (2010)
dir. Tony Comley
The Good: Nice minimalist animation. Excellent voiceover narration. Well-written poetry.

The Bad: Feels lacking.

The Bottom Line: An original and admirable take on the origin of life.

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Old 03-27-2013, 02:05 PM   #31815
legendarymatt92 legendarymatt92 is offline
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United Kingdom The Devil's Rejects (dir. Rob Zombie, 2005)

"The nastiest, most savage and brutal movie you could ever want to see."

With such hyperbole, it's easy to see why The Devil's Rejects commands a place on some people's "Most Disturbing Films" list, and why others choose to not see it at all. Written and directed by musician turned film-maker Rob Zombie, better known for his reboot of the Halloween series, it's apparently "cruel, sadistic and disturbing."

But...it's not.

Concerning the story of a family of serial killers, dubbed "The Devil's Rejects", it explores their rampage of violence as they try to escape the equally insane sheriff and the long arm of the law.

For me, it's very nearly a masterpiece of cinema. Zombie has such an amazing control over incredible stylistic choices that it's not easy, at this point, to simply write him off as a wannabe director; he obviously has enough filmic knowledge and intelligence to craft an experience as good as this, no matter how "sick" or "twisted" it is. It's certainly depraved to an extent; it never lives up to the hyperbole surrounding it, but it definitely has elements that are uncomfortable to watch, which isn't a bad thing.

It might be strange to argue that it's more of a deeply black comedy than an all-out horror, but, in my mind, it is; there are moments of intense comedy, pitched against heinous crimes and murders, to form some sort of uneasy alliance between the opposing emotions. Through this, all characters are pretty unidentifiable but likeable at the same time: you're positioned to feel sickened at the crimes the Firefly Family commit, but they're so often portrayed as normal, everyday people (the ice cream sequence is a prime example of this) that it's hard to not like some aspects of their personalities.

It's certainly a strange blend of emotions, and could be discussed all day, but Zombie's The Devil's Rejects contains some charm amongst it's "sadistic" violence. It's an amazing horror film, pushing the boundaries of what's acceptable, and it, importantly, draws on the emotional responses of the audience to bring their own feelings to what's happening on screen.

9/10
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Old 03-27-2013, 04:55 PM   #31816
hoch hoch is offline
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So "the shooter" turns out to be a misnomer, and he was kicked off of Seal Team Six for bragging about the bin Laden raid at local bars. Ouch.
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Old 03-27-2013, 07:19 PM   #31817
Abdrewes Abdrewes is offline
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Regrettably, Just watched Admission, I'm dreading the thought of writing something about it. It went from unfunny but well meaning to abysmal.
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Old 03-27-2013, 09:49 PM   #31818
Foggy Foggy is offline
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Just a little bit on Trance, Danny Boyle's latest. The film is visual stunning and a lot of fun to watch, with good acting and a good story. Sadly the film is very hollow, with very very little subtext under the basic story (there's some, but it feels very underdeveloped) and the big twist is a little predictable. It's a solid 7/10.
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Old 03-27-2013, 10:10 PM   #31819
Abdrewes Abdrewes is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Foggy View Post
Just a little bit on Trance, Danny Boyle's latest. The film is visual stunning and a lot of fun to watch, with good acting and a good story. Sadly the film is very hollow, with very very little subtext under the basic story (there's some, but it feels very underdeveloped) and the big twist is a little predictable. It's a solid 7/10.
Oh no you don't. The last 7/10 you gave I was very indifferent to (Warm Bodies). I hope this is at least better than Trainspotting, Shallow Grave, Slumdog and 127 Hours.
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Old 03-27-2013, 10:15 PM   #31820
Lepidopterous Lepidopterous is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Abdrewes View Post
I hope this is at least better than Trainspotting, Shallow Grave, Slumdog and 127 Hours.
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