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#33441 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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![]() Lol...And how is Triangle similar to The Cell? ![]() |
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#33442 | ||
Blu-ray Prince
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![]() Last edited by Al_The_Strange; 07-23-2013 at 02:01 AM. |
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#33443 |
Blu-ray Knight
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The Cell is kinda unique. I can't think of one film that's has the same mix of genres. The closest would be Inception, but he has probably seen that already.
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#33444 |
Blu-ray Prince
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Jvince,
Come on now, if I have seen The Cell several times now, you know I've seen the other two. I actually write about how differently the subconscious is explored in The Cell vs. Inception. I hope I can finish the write up today after my tests. The Fall is spectacular too (Netflixed it two years ago), but I felt the extravagance wasn't as deftly integrated as it was in The Cell. I have yet to see my Sony BD, I hear it is an absolute stunner. |
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#33445 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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stuffing = no embedded artistic input from outside the boat Last edited by surfdude12; 07-23-2013 at 03:31 PM. |
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#33446 | ||
Blu-ray Knight
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[Show spoiler] seemed to have a consistent set of rules. Made sense to me . ![]() Quote:
[Show spoiler]
Last edited by surfdude12; 07-23-2013 at 03:34 PM. |
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#33447 |
Blu-ray Knight
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![]() ![]() Only God Forgives (2013) dir. Nicolas Winding Refn The Good: Visually arresting camera work by Larry Smith that strongly evokes Stanley Kubrick's obsessively symmetrical compositions as well as the grit, grime, and bright neon lights of Gaspar Noé's works. Stylistically, it's like the 2001 of revenge flicks. You most likely won't see a more beautiful film this year. Incredible musical score by Cliff Martinez, who's fast becoming one of my favorite composers working today. His music paired with Smith's mesmerizing photography forms one of the most awe-inspiringly spectacular audiovisual displays commited to film. Kristin Scott Thomas delivers a tour-de-force perormance worthy of accolades. Intense, ominous atmosphere. Glouriously excessive gore and violence. Fascinating from start to end. A number of unforgettable moments, particularly the fight scene between Julian (Gosling) and the cop (played by Vithaya Pansringarm), the dinner scene, and the torture scene. Memorable one-liners: "Take it off!!!" "If the tables were turned, your brother would have found your killer and brought me his head on a f*cking platter!" |
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#33450 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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http://www.tcm.com/this-month/articl...n-Samurai.html |
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#33451 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Here is the plot summary of The Hidden Fortress:
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#33452 |
Blu-ray Prince
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The Conjuring
Note: a version of this review was originally published for the UTEP Prospector on July 22, 2012. Though not without its share of effective moments, James Wan's follow up to 2011's unexpected smash hit, Insidious, is more of the same—nimble storytelling neutered by haphazard visual construction. The Conjuring lays much of its backstory deftly in the first few minutes. We are introduced to its subjects Ed (Patrick Wilson) and Lorraine Warren (Vera Farmiga)—two prominent Rhode Island demonologists, and the young upper middle-class Perron family. They soon discover that malevolent spirits inhabit their new home. As is par for the course, it is only a matter of time before they contract Ed and Lorraine's high tech (for the 1970's) Poltergeist crew to clean the place out, until of course the inevitable sequel hits theaters in two years. Economic set up, engaging performances, and unassuming tone aside, The Conjuring is yet another James Wan frustration. He clearly knows how crowd-pleasing horror films should feel, but he hasn't much of an idea how to construct them. I'll grant that the film is a significant step up from Insidious, but his sensibilities are too frenetic to envelop me in a threatening atmosphere. Which is not to say freneticism an horror do not mix, the films of Alan Parker (Angel Heart), Ken Russell (Altered States, The Devils), and Nobuhiko Obayashi (House) have something to say about that. The key distinction, however, is that those films had memorable compositions and a tight grip on furious montage. The Conjuring unfortunately sports rough camera work, choppy editing, and a washed out color palate. The desaturated sepia tone is meant to add a layer of authenticity to this film claiming to be based on a true story, but it in turn becomes a layer of deceptive artifice. Amidst the drab look, cinematographer Joseph Bisham manages to orchestrate a few shots of momentary interest. Chief among them is a graceful Steadicam take capturing the Perron family moving into their spacious spacious American Foursquare abode. The camera glides from the driveway, under a couch two movers are hauling in through the front door, darts across the hallway into the back porch where one of the girls is mounting a back porch. It's awesome, yes, but when adjoined with the rest of them film, it strikes as an empty flourish. When sequences are stitched together, the results are singularly tensionless. There is a key scene early on when things start to go bump in the night. Patron Roger Perron (Ron Livingston sporting a wig) hears noises coming from the hallway past the door. There is a brief moment collecting his paranoia as he gazes in the direction of the door, then all tension dissipates. The subsequent shot is a revealing perpendicular shot from the perspective of the hallway. It reveals too much, leaves nothing to the imagination. We are given too omniscient a vantage point to identify or cower along with these characters. In complete candor, when it comes to the genre, I prefer a slow, brooding atmosphere captured by languorous takes with slow push-ins. The Conjuring is the antithesis to that. It favors loud jump scares, "fridge scares" and false scares for effect. Some of the false scares are actually quite clever in and of themselves. We think we know exactly where the threat will appear, where the "boo" will come from, then it comes a beat later from an unexpected angle. The first time I had been misdirected, I welcomed the surprise with a full grin on my face, but by the tenth time, I wanted to throw something at the screen. There is repetition, then there is lazy and uninspired. Just as eye rolling is the over-cranked sound mix. Not only are the sound effects piercingly loud—door slams and screams are amplified by a factor of five at least—, they are coupled with an overbearing score. The blasting, generic soundtrack, tries to compensate for the ineffective staging by queuing us when to be scared. It's cheap and it constitutes one of the key ills of modern horror. What we need are talented visual storytellers, not filmmakers that eschew genuine suspense for noise. My audience, on the other hand, was fully engaged. They met each scare with jeers, jumps, and self-deprecating laughter. I felt like the lone fan sitting in the front row watching his favorite professional sports team receive a beating at an away game. So I will raise this applicable quote by the venerable Jonathan Rosenbaum, critic of the Chicago Reader, "I give ratings, descriptions, and evaluations of movies in the hope that readers will use them selectively and critically, weighing their biases against mine." For all considering purchasing a ticket I think the deciding factor is whether you like your horror slow and atmospheric or fast paced and brimming with incident. ![]() ![]() Last edited by Abdrewes; 07-23-2013 at 05:16 PM. |
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#33453 | |
Blu-ray Duke
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The Fall has great storytelling and cinematography.
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Personally, I dont categorize either as horror. I dont feel like the intent of either one is to scare the audience, rather to make them uncomfortable and to think. To me they are psycho-thrillers, not scary. Last edited by SquidPuppet; 07-23-2013 at 05:27 PM. |
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#33454 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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In short, I agree, they're not scary per se, just atmospheric, enigmatic, and psychological. ![]() |
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#33455 | |
Blu-ray Duke
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#33456 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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[Show spoiler] I should really watch House of the Devil, I know a lot of people love it and The Innkeepers, but the two shorts I have watched from Ti West (VHS and ABCs of Death) are pretty bad. |
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#33458 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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You should definitely check out both of West's films if you like old-style horror; The House of the Devil is one of the most insidious and engrossing horrors I've ever seen, whilst The Innkeepers is just great, tense fun.
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#33459 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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Mr. Blonde 2/4 is mixed, I definitely could have talked about the great performances a bit more. |
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