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Comments
After waiting so long to watch this,i was very disappointed in it.
It had the feel more of a TV movie than an actual film.
Pierce was excellent in it,and proves he could have played Bond 2-3 more films,but overall i'm glad I never took the plunge and bought this before watching it.
Shame.
Pierce is one of the film's few saving graces. A pretty chaotic plot doesn't help matters either.
I meant the emotional intimacy. It was a bit difficult for me to watch
The 'intimacy' which I could really connect to came at the end, after Oliver had left. The loss suffered by Elio
Yes, I agree. The relationship in Phantom Thread was unpleasant for sure. It's just that I've encountered that kind of manipulation myself (although not to such a degree) and have also observed it among family members. So I could relate.
I completely agree on your last point as well: How we experience film is very dependent on our own point of view, our own personal experiences, and who we are.
Wasn t it just two or three guys here who ranted about it for months?
A Quiet Passion (Terence Davies)
Dunkirk (Christopher Nolan)
After the Storm (Hirokazu Kore-eda)
Ladybird (Greta Gerwig)
Nocturama (Bertrand Bonello)
Phantom Thread (Paul Thomas Anderson)
Good Time (Ben and Josh Safdie)
Call Me By Your Name (Luca Guadagnino)
The Death of Louis XIV (Albert Serra)
King of Jazz (John Murray Anderson; actually released in 1930 but restored and re-released in 2017)
Indeed! And probably the best thing that Twilight guy has done. His Noo Yawk accent was excellent and he must have had fun playing such an utter scumbag.
I saw Good Time on the big screen last September - really good film. Very, very intense and Robert Pattinson delivered a career defining performance.
Truffaut. Charles Aznavour as the pianist. I didn't care for this much myself, a classic though it may be.
The Diary Of A Teenager Girl (2015)
I wonder if people were freaking out about the age difference between characters in this movie. Probably not much - hey, only 20 years, and the girl was 15 (played by an actress into her 20s. (I've been rolling my eyes pretty hard over all the wringing of hands over the age difference of several years in Call Me By Your Name, which some people somehow find "shocking.")
The movie was... okay.
A Matter of Life and Death (1946)
And speaking of ages, did a roughly mid-30s David Niven really pass for a 27 year-old when this movie came out? Would pass for a 50 year old nowadays. He plays a guy who was supposed to die, but somehow doesn't, and then falls in love in record time and refuses to go with a heavenly escort, appeals, and gets a heavenly trial to decide if he is to die as planned or gets to live. Sort of silly, but for a lot of it quite nice and fun, though at worst moments also somewhat boring and pompous.
Teorema (1968)
Pier Paolo Pasolini's peculiar film in which Terence Stamp's mysterious Visitor seduces the whole household, then leaves them, and everyone goes off the rails. Sort of interesting in a way, but I can't say I enjoyed watching it.
Stalker (1979)
Andrei Tarkovsky's film is contemplative, melancholy, and kinda fascinating in its strangeness. Requires patience, but I liked it.
Felony (2013)
Written, directed and stars Joel Edgerton. Also Tom Wilkinson. I like both, so that was enough to get me to watch. Interestingly presented moral dilemmas and conflicts and how lies influence people who go along with them.
The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner (1962)
Not bad, but I was a bit bored.
Il Deserto Rosso - Red Desert (1964)
Michelangelo Antonioni's film starring the lovely Monica Vitti. His first colour film, and I loved how he used colour here. Fascinating visually and sound-wise.
James White (2015)
The cast, which I wasn't familiar with, apart from Cynthia Nixon who played the title character's mother, was good. The movie was depressing, yet didn't touch me (despite having lost my mother to cancer). I would, however, be interested to see whatever else Josh Mond might direct.
Roma città aperta - Rome, Open City (1945)
Roberto Rossellini's drama, set in Rome under the Nazi occupation. I liked this.
I hadn't read the book beforehand, and think most viewers hadn't, and a lot of them still enjoyed the scene. Reading the book after seeing the movie didn't change my opinion of the scene in the movie at all, and it might not have changed yours, either - even if you had read the book beforehand. (Listening to the audio book changed my view of the book in general, but that's another issue.) I thought the movie itself provides all the information one needs for the scene (as it should). I think it's simply just that you weren't that invested, like you said. And I get that part. (Whatever the movie or the scene, everyone isn't.)
Yes, I know, I just don't actually remember it.
Thank you, that was beautifully explained, and I think I get what you mean.
What really made the story pull me in was that it felt so real and genuine, and every touch and kiss thoroughly earned, unlike most love stories of any kind, where everything seems too easy, too quick, too choreographed, and therefore fake. What I saw was an exceptionally good love story, which I absolutely bought as real. (No, I don't mean like that, just that it was exceptionally well done - regarding writing, directing and acting - plus the chemistry between the actors worked wonders.)
Btw, regarding loss, I felt worse for Oliver, because
Yes, there's just no getting around that. Discussion is good, and different opinions are interesting, but I never get why people fight over different experiences and views over any piece of art. It's like being upset that everyone isn't the same person and that people actually have different life experiences.
I think the only other film of his I've seen is Solaris, ages ago. I need a re-watch of that at some point, and also to see more of his work.
But I also have like a few hundred films that I need to watch or re-watch. A loooong list that just keeps getting longer instead of shorter the more I watch. I've accepted it's sort of hopeless (similar situation with music), but it's also fun, I just watch as much as I can, of different kinds of stuff.
Agreed. Stalker is also one of my absolute favourite films. Visually unmatched, thematically challenging.
As for A Matter of Life and Death, I always like David Niven, possibly one of my favourite actors. Though I like him better in less serious roles like The Pink Panther or Le cerveau. This one is good, though it can drag at certain points.
Roma, città aperta is not only an excellent film but a benchmark in Italian cinema. Coming out just after WW2, it was the first neorealist film giving birth to a string of the world’s finest films, like Ladri di biciclette and Rocco e i suoi fratelli.
Basically just an Oscar bait version of a Richard Curtis film. Decent enough.
6/10
Lugosi at his most satanic!
No, not at all. On the contrary. As explained above, it's the context of the scene in combination with the graphic use of fruits. The type of fruit didn't bother me really.
It's a good point you make about Oliver. I had never thought about that. Your comment made me realize that, of the two characters, I related more to Elio than Oliver. I saw the film from Elio's perspective primarily, with Oliver as an outside catalyst. Looking at it from his perspective gives a whole new light to it.
Ultimately I can't disagree with anything you've said. I agree that it was a very well done love story and I can appreciate how it could resonate with many. Bold film making certainly. Perhaps that's what it is? Maybe it was too bold for me? Irrespective, this discussion has helped me to understand and question my views on the film, and has been quite 'fruit'ful (pun intended). Cathartic even. I may actually revisit it again and see if I can view it in a more wholesome light.
John Wick - Man loses his wife and the dog she gave him after his death (pretty convenient timing by her after she fell into a coma) and he then loses his mind and goes on a revenge spree. A bit much over the top in my humble opinion. To much of the same flipping roll in all hand to hand combat scenes. Poor movie.
November man - Pierce Brosnan back in job he is bets suited for government hitman no 00 this time but just as lethal. A nice and decent spy/assassin movie that entertains, it even has a former Bond woman in the lead. The chemistry between Brosnan and her is good. I would not mind a sequel or two.
Annihilation - a nice scifi movie that is far more cerebral than actioner, I must read the original books by Jeff Vandemeer perhaps to get insight what they tried to deliver. Not a bad movie and looking at Mrs Portman is never a waste of time.
That was a surprisingly good film. A small scale spy thriller, set almost entirely in one location. I'm not saying that would work for Bond, but The Numbers Station pulled it off.
True would not work for 007 but was nonetheless a good littel movie, for me RONIN is always the 007 movie that got away, that would have made a great 007 actioner.
Ronin is even better. EON have been influenced by a number of different films over the years, but why couldn't they have taken influence from Ronin?
Just my two cents of course.
Nice review! I'm planning on buying The Man Who Haunted Himself the next time I'm doing a bit of Amazon shopping. Do hope I'll have a similar experience watching this one!
One of the things I really admire about the film is the Tunnel Fight. Shows them all working together very well.
A fave - would love a blu-ray of this film. Awesome.
Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid, classic Peckinpah. Have it on DVD, but I must get it in blu ray. James Coburn is terrific in it!
I believe there are several cuts of the film?