Re: Suggest a movie!
I love my Ray, but really old doowop is the very definition of my shit.
I have a tendency to fix your typos.
You are not logged in. Please login or register.
I love my Ray, but really old doowop is the very definition of my shit.
Mayhew,
Trey and I are the codgers who are vocal about incorporating more classic cinema in there. Y'know, when we're not complaining about kids being on our lawns.
I still wanna do Citizen Kane, because as is well known to me, Brian hates it. It's sad, really.
Wow....ok. You're entitled not to like the story but in my mind no one can fuck with its level of craftsmanship and its impact on cinema.
Right?
He really, really hates it. I can't get him to come around. Maybe you guys can.
Right?
He really, really hates it. I can't get him to come around. Maybe you guys can.
I'm sort of baffled by HATE for Citizen Kane. I can understand indifference, but hate?
Brian, I demand you come and defend your position.
Hate? Like active dislike? Not like "eh, that's overrated" or whatever, but hate?
How can you hate something that's, like, objectively good?
He doesn't think it's the best movie ever, I give him shit and say he hates it.
I really thought I had piled on enough sarcasm there. Huh.
HI really thought I had piled on enough sarcasm there. Huh.
Welcome to my world.
As I think we've seen demonstrated conclusively over and over again, on this forum sarcasm just doesn't work.
Also … dude, it's Brian. I'd believe anything.
Ugh, I bet 80% of the people that like Citizen Kane like it because it's Citizen Kane. Can any of you explain why it is so amazing to you without saying "it's a classic!!!!"? I find it slow, boring, and random, and have seen it over five times in college with different teachers perspectives each time and I never once completely enjoyed it.
...I suppose I should really get around to watching that one, one day eh?
*sigh*
Yes, I don't nearly hate Citizen Kane as much as Teague was attempting to joke about.
It's a classic, yes, and it's really excellent craftsmanship, yes. But greatest movie ever? Part of it is a rebellion against the whole notion of "greatest" anything. Every movie sets out to do it's own particular thing in it's own particular way. How can you measure Citizen Kane against Star Wars? It's like mangoes to grapefruits.
I much prefer the "perfect movie" criteria: A movie sets out to accomplish something and it either succeeds or it doesn't. That's a much more valid yardstick to measure movies by, in my opinion. And under that criteria, Citizen Kane is certainly a perfect movie.
Part of peoples' exaltation of it is how revolutionary it was. But my problem with that idea is which revolution do you then hoist above the rest? Is Citizen Kane more revolutionary than Metropolis? Or Pulp Fiction? The Matrix? Avatar? Which revolution of cinema is the most revolutionary? It's important to consider all works of art in the context of the time they were made and declaring any single movie "the greatest ever" automatically removes that consideration.
Also, I find it hard to swallow that Citizen Kane was the greatest movie ever made when Orson Welles didn't even consider it his strongest movie.
Also … dude, it's Brian. I'd believe anything.
And what the hell is that supposed to mean?
Also, as for doing the big classics like that as commentaries, I'm of a dual mind about it.
On the one hand, as Trey says, if it gets you youngin's to watch a movie you should watch that you might not have otherwise watched, then score.
On the other hand, I would be hesitant to do a commentary about a movie that has already been subject to exhaustive discussion and analysis. If we're going to talk about a movie, I'd like to think we could say something new about it, and I doubt that's possible with some of the giants of the cinema Hall of Fame.
I love Orson Welles, but Citizen Kane does nothing for me beyond the early newspaper scenes and the aside about catching a glimpse of a girl decades before.
But I love genre films, and it's a pure drama character assassination of a real person. The only way to get further away from films I'm interested in is to go to, say, a heartbreaking tale of a teenage girl rebelling against her mom.
My suggestions:
-Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
-There Will Be Blood
Why those two? I don't know. But I think they would be a refreshing change from the regular additions to your library.
Brian, thanks for clarifying. I actually love the STORY (you total ASSHOLES) of CItizen Kane and think it just happens to be masterfully told. The Hearst/Kane story really fascinates me to know end and I love the narrative structure.
Last edited by Eddie (2010-05-24 17:43:44)
Yeah, see, the SOTRY of it doesn't do much for me. It's fine and all, I just don't see how it's the greatest SOTRY of all time.
Now the STORY, on the other hand, I will grant you, is pretty great.
I dare you, sir, I dare you, to name a single motion picture with a more finely crafted, more sublimely executed SOTRY.
Cause you can't.
I prefer a SOTRY with a fringe on top.
I prefer films with ALOT of SOTRY.
I like SOTRY, but if there's too much it just gets grating and annoying.
Powered by PunBB, supported by Informer Technologies, Inc.
Currently installed 9 official extensions. Copyright © 2003–2009 PunBB.