Pitch me a movie
Posted: Sun Jul 22, 2007 2:51 pm
How about a film about Jesus. There aren't enough films about Jesus, not enough good ones anyway.
sphincter wrote:How about a film about Jesus. There aren't enough films about Jesus, not enough good ones anyway.
fantasmatical thorr wrote:Hey, what about a flick about a bunch of 20-40 yr olds who spend all day at their shitty temp jobs/recording studios and slack off on the prf.
It could be like one of those films where there's 5 scenarios and no-one has realised their connection yet. OMG. they know each other in real life too but have kept their internet obssession a secret!
The soundtrack must be from the '80s, witty like Clerks and deep like Slackers.
People will compare it to that film from that book by Nick Hornby with dickface in it. The PRF will be annoyed. Bad Comrade will be played by King of Queens. Itchy by his on-screen wife. I haven't thought any further.
That was completely off the top of my head.
NerblyBear wrote:I've always thought that a cool idea for a movie would be to have twenty or thirty people speak into a camera for about five minutes each. During each five-minute segment, the person would describe his version of a controversial even which has taken place in the public sphere. This could be anything from an administration starting a war to the debate on abortion to a big trial such as O.J. Simpson's.
The key would be to spread out the various sorts of people who would give their versions of the event. So you would have both rich and poor people, both black and white, both gay and straight, religious and atheist, etc. Instead of coloring our perception of what people have to say, as the mass media does, this avenue would allow normal people to display their own personalities without the pressure to adhere to canned public standards of speech or propriety.
The interest would lie in trying to deduce from the person's assessment his general character traits, and in trying to read between the lines, looking past the literal narrative he is giving and discovering what his words unintentionally say about him. And, to take it to a more abstract level, this will in turn lead to the discovery of what his perspective says about the social milieu in which he was raised. Almost everyone has something to teach you if you listen closely enough.
It would be like walking all around America and getting a bite-sized version of it.
Marsupialized wrote:
Are you sure you are in the right office?
Flaneur wrote:It's called Mall, and it consists of a series of uninterrupted shots, 10 minutes each, from a stationary camera set up somewhere in a busy shopping mall. First 10 minutes: Tokyo. Second 10 minutes: Australia. Third 10 minutes: a bazaar in Morocco. Fourth 10 minutes: Mall of America. Fifth 10 minutes: somewhere in India. You get the idea. Maybe no sound, just silence. Maybe it's an Imax movie. Or maybe it's a 24-hour cable channel.
JDanger wrote:I don't mean this as a joke, I seriously think this would work if it was done right.
Sometime in the future Big Business starts to develop a race of Robots to serve mankind, you know, to facilitate the everyday tasks. Naturally, during programming, something goes drastically wrong. Somehow the programming software got interfaced with an "oldies" radio transmission and the only words the robots can speak are the lyrics to the two refrains in Men At Work's 1982 superhit "Down Under". Worse yet, they are savage, murderous Robots. And it gets really gory. Like they violently stab, and smash skulls, there's blood everywhere, all the while with their emotionless robot faces that are sing-speaking:
"We come from a land down under.
Where women glow and men plunder?
Can't you hear, can't you hear the thunder?
You better run, you better take cover."
By the thousands, they chant this lofty melody while hunting down the entire human race.
Imagine from a distance, this sound, cacophonous and terrifying, getting louder and louder as they march the hillside towards the last survivors.