I am just mulling over the possibility that you may be the only combined Columbus/Tottenham fan in the world.Will not miss a chance to plug my favorite Tottenham in film moment.
I am just mulling over the possibility that you may be the only combined Columbus/Tottenham fan in the world.Will not miss a chance to plug my favorite Tottenham in film moment.
I am just mulling over the possibility that you may be the only combined Columbus/Tottenham fan in the world.
There are a few of us here. Decent local Spurs supporters group ... I ASSUME there is some overlap with the CBJ though I can't speak to it specifically.
My favorite personal Spurs fandom anecdote is that I was once at a bar and started chatting with a fellow next to me. English gent. We got to talking about soccer and after a bit I posed this questions, "I'm a Buffalo Bills and New York Mets fan, what club do I root for?"
Without hesitation (and with a bit of disgust), "Oh you're Spurs."
I'd like to think the pain has made me stronger. Seasons like this I'm unsure.
I didn't think it was rosy at all, I was actually pretty bummed out through most of it. And I didn't need scenes with white people making racist comments to highlight this family's struggle, there was more than enough going on within the family unit to make me feel for them.
As for BP rankings, I have this ahead of Nomadland and Judas, both of which were big disappointments for me.
Frankly, the fact that it centers on a Korean-American family, in the American Deep South, is about the only interesting part about the movie. In fact, it is the key aspect that the movie is promoted on, so it is only fair to point out, or even criticize, the way race relations is portrayed in the movie. Otherwise, the movie is just another tale on the struggle for the American Dream that is interchangeable with the many, many on the same subject.
It's a fair criticism, I just don't think it was necessary to highlight the difficulties this family was facing. And the "white people in the Deep South being racist to minorities/immigrants" trope has been done to death and is an element that would've also been interchangeable with many other films on the same subject.
Speaking of VHS, I'd never seen Victory until yesterday but I have very clear memories of the video box sitting on the shelf at the video store in my youth. For whatever reason that's a visual that has stuck in my mind forever. I even went to double check and it's almost exactly how I remembered it.
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The Passion of Joan of Arc [La Passion de Jeanne d'Arc] (1928) directed by Carl Theodor Dreyer
Based on original transcripts, this silent film classic documents the interrogation, humiliation, and execution of Joan of Arc (Renée Jeanne Falconetti).
That is fair. We will have to agree to disagree on this one. Ultimately, I just find the story boring.
Who plays Florentino Perez in the Super League adaptation?
Red Moon Tide (2021) Directed by Lois Patino 8B
Red Moon Tide represents exactly the kind of cinema by which I am most enthralled. Red Moon Tide is a monster movie/ghost story/witch's tale told almost exclusively in absolutely amazing images. The story has the haunting feel of an old folk tale with the sea and the moon representing the monsters and a mother who is also a witch mourning for her son. Foolishly he has gone to sea in search of the monsters and he has not reeturned. There is virtually no dialogue which is replaced by a scattering of voice-overs presented by the various characters who appear almost frozen in time. These brief voice-overs help to heighten the atmosphere provided by the (literally) entrancing images. As should more often be the case in cinema, the emphasis is on image, mood, the kind of things that you can feel or sense but not necessarily put into words. The images are often surprising, disorienting, occasionally abstract; they are sometimes dark, even hard to make out until, snap, you do.
There are so far only seven reviews of Red Moon Tide on Rotten Tomatoes, all highly positive, and the following expressions come up among them: "transfixtion is contagious"; "ineffable dread"; "almost supernatural purity"; "the symbol becomes its own essence and purpose"; "operating at the fine art end of the cinema scale"; and "the more the film moves toward the esoteric, the more interesting its images become." In other words, not exactly standard critical reactions to a new film. Some people might call this movie experimental cinema, but what's the experiment? Whatever one calls it, Red Moon Tide is just flat out one beautifully realized film.
Later Sidenote: I wonder if this was the sort of thing Terrence Malick was trying for but wasn't able to pull off. I'd love to know his reaction to Red Moon Tide.
subtitles
MUBI
Best of 2021 so far
1. Red Moon Tide, Patino, Spain
2. Identifying Features, Valadez, Mexico
3. Manor House, Puiu, Romania
4. The Dig, Stone, UK
Make sure there is no backlighting in the room when you watch it; make it as dark as possible. For clarity of image.VERY intrigued.
I love Forrest Gump and this has great reviews at RT, so I'll definitely add it to my list. Thanks for the recommendation!Little Big Man (1970) directed by Arthur Penn
I love Forrest Gump and this has great reviews at RT, so I'll definitely add it to my list. Thanks for the recommendation!
Nomadland (2020). B+
First off, the (very) good: This is a really beautiful film, both aesthetically and thematically. The cinematography is of course a standout, and I feel the need to give special mention to the original score -- it's very lyrical in melody, which fills the space extremely effectively, especially since the movie itself is not especially dialogue-heavy. Great stuff.
McDormand is exceptional, and the amateurs hold their own as well. Swankie's monologue in particular is a captivating standout. Nomadland is a very engrossing and worthwhile film, and it very much captures the goal of "transporting you into another world" that cinema so often tries to achieve.
Now, the bone to pick, and it's a big one. It completely glosses over the physical challenges of the gig labor lifestyle that the nomads must utilize in order to make money. I can almost forgive Zhao for the downright pleasant depiction of working at an Amazon factory, even though their deplorable conditions weren't even a secret even when the movie was being made, because I'm sure Amazon wouldn't let their brand be used if they came off negative in even the slightest. Tough, but oh well, that's the biz.
Less forgivable is the complete absence of these challenges everywhere else. Linda May and Swankie both broke ribs serving as campground hosts. But every depiction of McDormand's Fern working is, again, very agreeable. Now, am I asking to see these injuries happen? No, that would almost give off the sense of manufactured drama and would break the spell. But is it asking too much for the characters to at least allude to these occurrences (e.g. Linda May offering some words of caution when she's showing Fern the ropes of hosting)? I don't think so.
Zhao can always have her cake and eat it too by saying "hey this is a work of fiction," but when you've got real people playing versions of themselves, and you're telling their story, you're doing them a disservice by not making a stronger attempt at showing a fuller picture. If anything, illuminating those sacrifices would further emphasize the intangible aspects of the beauty of the chosen lifestyle, and IMO is the main thing holding back the film from being truly great.