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Recommend me a movie for tonight.

Posted: Sat Sep 29, 2007 1:11 am
by Eating Noddemix
Check out Le Samourai by Jean-Pierre Melville.

I'm sure The Wire is just as compulsively watchable, and I look forward to seeing that in its entirety (all in one go some weekend--hopefully soon), but Le Samourai rules too, and it's a bit more off the beaten path for a lot of viewers. Melville made vivid, highly stylized crime films with sparse dialogue. They look fucking fabulous (see Le Cercle Rouge for one of the best examples of this), and his writing is good too. He dealt a lot with morality, often depicting very dignified and intelligent criminals, and police with varying degrees of intergrity. Melville didn't even consider himself an artist but I'll be damned if his movies don't smack of greatness. Some well-known trivia: He was a Frenchman obsessed with america, who wore a stetson hat and drove American cars almost exclusively. He took his surname from Herman Melville and was a very stylish director who had his characters' outfits made from only the best fabrics. Melville was Alain Delon's favorite collaborater (they made at least a few movies together), and he played the philosopher guy in Godard's Breathless, the guy who says his ultimate goal is to become immortal and then to die. He once said he felt very fortunate to have been alive during WWII and his film about the French Resistance, the recently re-released Army of Shadows, is serious as cancer in its depiction of the time he lived though, fighting underground in occupied France. Lastly, Melville's early film Bob le Falmbeur inspired the original Ocean's 11 (and several other "robbery flicks" at the time). Ocean's 11 was then of course remade a little while back and spawned a couple, presumably just as cheesy sequels.

He's a hard guy not to like the more you learn about him:

Image


Who could resist a chic, mod-y crime movie?

Recommend me a movie for tonight.

Posted: Sat Sep 29, 2007 11:23 am
by jason smith_Archive
Inland Empire is out on DVD, although I would only recommend it if you're a hardcore Lynch fan... The 2nd DVD has a ton of bonus footage, including a cooking lesson by David Lynch on how to prepare Quinoa-- which seems pointless, but is actually a pretty useful thing to teach someone.

Recommend me a movie for tonight.

Posted: Sat Sep 29, 2007 11:29 am
by sphincter_Archive
Zatoichi or Seven Samurai or perhaps one of the Babycart/Lone Wolf and Cub movies.

Recommend me a movie for tonight.

Posted: Sat Sep 29, 2007 11:36 am
by Steve V_Archive
Eating Noddemix wrote:Check out Le Samourai by Jean-Pierre Melville.

I'm sure The Wire is just as compulsively watchable, and I look forward to seeing that in its entirety (all in one go some weekend--hopefully soon), but Le Samourai rules too, and it's a bit more off the beaten path for a lot of viewers. Melville made vivid, highly stylized crime films with sparse dialogue. They look fucking fabulous (see Le Cercle Rouge for one of the best examples of this), and his writing is good too. He dealt a lot with morality, often depicting very dignified and intelligent criminals, and police with varying degrees of intergrity. Melville didn't even consider himself an artist but I'll be damned if his movies don't smack of greatness. Some well-known trivia: He was a Frenchman obsessed with america, who wore a stetson hat and drove American cars almost exclusively. He took his surname from Herman Melville and was a very stylish director who had his characters' outfits made from only the best fabrics. Melville was Alain Delon's favorite collaborater (they made at least a few movies together), and he played the philosopher guy in Godard's Breathless, the guy who says his ultimate goal is to become immortal and then to die. He once said he felt very fortunate to have been alive during WWII and his film about the French Resistance, the recently re-released Army of Shadows, is serious as cancer in its depiction of the time he lived though, fighting underground in occupied France. Lastly, Melville's early film Bob le Falmbeur inspired the original Ocean's 11 (and several other "robbery flicks" at the time). Ocean's 11 was then of course remade a little while back and spawned a couple, presumably just as cheesy sequels.

He's a hard guy not to like the more you learn about him:

Image


Who could resist a chic, mod-y crime movie?


Not me.

Recommend me a movie for tonight.

Posted: Sat Sep 29, 2007 11:40 am
by Charlie D_Archive
Eating Noddemix wrote:Check out Le Samourai by Jean-Pierre Melville.
Who could resist a chic, mod-y crime movie?

I think we have a winner, that'll be tonight. Last night, my roommate wound up talking me into Last King of Scotland. It was good, but fuck if it couldn't drag at some points. I declare that it's my pick, tonight.

Recommend me a movie for tonight.

Posted: Sat Sep 29, 2007 11:44 am
by sphincter_Archive
Steve V. wrote:
Eating Noddemix wrote:Check out Le Samourai by Jean-Pierre Melville.

I'm sure The Wire is just as compulsively watchable, and I look forward to seeing that in its entirety (all in one go some weekend--hopefully soon), but Le Samourai rules too, and it's a bit more off the beaten path for a lot of viewers. Melville made vivid, highly stylized crime films with sparse dialogue. They look fucking fabulous (see Le Cercle Rouge for one of the best examples of this), and his writing is good too. He dealt a lot with morality, often depicting very dignified and intelligent criminals, and police with varying degrees of intergrity. Melville didn't even consider himself an artist but I'll be damned if his movies don't smack of greatness. Some well-known trivia: He was a Frenchman obsessed with america, who wore a stetson hat and drove American cars almost exclusively. He took his surname from Herman Melville and was a very stylish director who had his characters' outfits made from only the best fabrics. Melville was Alain Delon's favorite collaborater (they made at least a few movies together), and he played the philosopher guy in Godard's Breathless, the guy who says his ultimate goal is to become immortal and then to die. He once said he felt very fortunate to have been alive during WWII and his film about the French Resistance, the recently re-released Army of Shadows, is serious as cancer in its depiction of the time he lived though, fighting underground in occupied France. Lastly, Melville's early film Bob le Falmbeur inspired the original Ocean's 11 (and several other "robbery flicks" at the time). Ocean's 11 was then of course remade a little while back and spawned a couple, presumably just as cheesy sequels.

He's a hard guy not to like the more you learn about him:

Image


Who could resist a chic, mod-y crime movie?


Not me.


Yeah but sometimes I actually enjoy having fun instead.

Recommend me a movie for tonight.

Posted: Sat Sep 29, 2007 12:04 pm
by joesepi_Archive
The Reflecting Skin




or...





The Jerk

Recommend me a movie for tonight.

Posted: Sat Sep 29, 2007 12:37 pm
by night_tools_Archive
j_harvey wrote:Instead of a movie start watching Season 1 of The Wire on DVD.


Last night me and my girlfriend wanted to watch a movie, but damned if we couldn't find anything in my DVD collection, or on my crappy on-demand service that we felt like watching, so we decided to watch 'Oz' from the beginning. Actually we only managed the first episode last night, but the violence and butt-sex marathon continues tonight (on the tele).


(We watched Zatoichi last week. It's so great!)

Recommend me a movie for tonight.

Posted: Sat Sep 29, 2007 12:42 pm
by andyman_Archive
On good TV shows: The Black Donnellys ain't half bad. It got cancelled after one season, so instead of dragging that shit out (i'm pretty sure) they wrapped it up by the last episode.

Recommend me a movie for tonight.

Posted: Sat Sep 29, 2007 1:32 pm
by j_harvey_Archive
night_tools wrote:
j_harvey wrote:Instead of a movie start watching Season 1 of The Wire on DVD.


Last night me and my girlfriend wanted to watch a movie, but damned if we couldn't find anything in my DVD collection, or on my crappy on-demand service that we felt like watching, so we decided to watch 'Oz' from the beginning. Actually we only managed the first episode last night, but the violence and butt-sex marathon continues tonight (on the tele).


(We watched Zatoichi last week. It's so great!)


Oz was a good show but The Wire is the best show on TV. When you are done with Oz start watching The Wire. The first three seasons are all available on DVD. It makes every other cop show look like The Hardy Boys.