Sonic Youth Gossip

Sonic Youth Gossip (http://www.sonicyouth.com/gossip/index.php)
-   Non-Sonics (http://www.sonicyouth.com/gossip/forumdisplay.php?f=5)
-   -   >>the last movie you watched (http://www.sonicyouth.com/gossip/showthread.php?t=9589)

Rob Instigator 12.13.2013 02:08 PM

My favorite part of The Hobbit was when Bilbo went balls deep on Bridget the Midget

Rob Instigator 12.13.2013 02:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by !@#$%!
i remember elisabeth shue was super hot but otherwise i thought that movie was shit. i didn't see it at the movies though, but still. shitty third-rate male fantasies.


I thought it was a good movie. It is not the subject matter I normally give a fuck about, cuz who gives a shit about drunks/druggies and the problems they bring on themselves, but it was an interesting study of two people stuck in shit, one seeking to end it, and one seeking to have/provide company while the other ends it. My friends who love that movie the most are the heavy drunks though....
Drunks love movies where drunks get to act out and no one stops them.

!@#$%! 12.13.2013 02:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rob Instigator
it was an interesting study


right, but that's my whole point-- it's not a study but a fantasy. it's not realism or neorealism or psychologically "true" in any other way than accurately reflecting a male fantasy. which is the same as (for example) death race 2000, which i like a lot, but death race 2000 doesn't pretend to be anything else.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rob Instigator
Drunks love movies where drunks get to act out and no one stops them.


i'm sure they also love movies where drunks never suffer from whiskey dick! ha ha ha!

Rob Instigator 12.13.2013 03:26 PM

whiskey dick!!!! too funny.

ALIEN ANAL 12.24.2013 12:21 AM

I watched 'The spectacular now' last night. What a great movie.

evollove 12.24.2013 11:26 AM

Has anyone found anything good at the Internet Archive Database?

https://archive.org/details/movies

Just watched Invasion of the Bee Girls, which was a delight.

https://archive.org/details/InvasionOfTheBeeGirls

EVOLghost 01.02.2014 03:23 AM

 

Toilet & Bowels 01.02.2014 06:44 AM

Watched Foxfire on NYE, really enjoyed it. Watched first half of Tales of Earthsea last night, pleasant if slightly detached and dull.

tw2113 01.02.2014 10:36 AM

Silver Lining Playbook
Titanic
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind

EVOLghost 01.04.2014 11:37 AM

the latest of the paranormal activities.


Anyways...I had more fun eating my skittles.

Genteel Death 01.05.2014 09:37 AM

 

Rob Instigator 01.07.2014 11:27 AM


Moonrise Kingdom.

!@#$%! 01.07.2014 04:20 PM

if you love yourselves a good silent movie definitely watch this

 

tesla69 01.08.2014 09:03 AM

Seconds directed by John Frankenheimer.

A very strange film and I think heavily influenced by sandoz in a good way - before tripping became a cliche

STOMP THOSE GRAPES!

evollove 01.08.2014 12:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tesla69
Seconds directed by John Frankenheimer.

A very strange film and I think heavily influenced by sandoz in a good way - before tripping became a cliche

STOMP THOSE GRAPES!


Funny. There was bit on TCM last night about this rare video store. Anyway, one day a guy walks in looking for a copy of Seconds. Shows his ID to the clerk. It's Frankenheimer himself! Apparently he didn't have a copy and had trouble finding one.

Nefeli 01.09.2014 03:37 AM

Godard's Mascilin Feminin
American Hustle

Toilet & Bowels 01.09.2014 05:31 AM

American Hustle[/quote]

Any good?

Nefeli 01.09.2014 07:14 AM

acting and styling pretty great; story ok. overall enjoyable.

demonrail666 01.09.2014 08:28 AM

 


Accattone

evollove 01.09.2014 08:28 PM

Ah, Oscar season. It's raining DVD screeners.

Unfortunately, the only two I've seen:

1- Out of the Furnace. Mostly sucked. Can't watch Christian Bale anymore. He's always ACTING, y'know? Always giving such a PERFORMANCE. Casey Affleck is so much more interesting by doing so much less.

2- Lone Survivor- It begins with "Based on a True Story" and ends with footage of the real soldiers who battled it out with the Taliban in Afghanistan (and lost). What's inbetween is horrendous bullshit. "Hollywood" in the worst sense of the term. Deeply insulting to the real men and their loved ones. No has ever died in battle in slow-mo backed by a dramatic symphony. Acting was mostly good, but the actors were betrayed by a shallow, opportunistic director/liar out to make some propaganda.

Today and tomorrow: BLUE JASMINE and WOLF OF WALL STREET. C'mon Woody and Marty. Don't let me down.

And yes, I'll get around to Blacanieve. Swear.

Nefeli 01.10.2014 05:04 AM

12 years a slave.

such movies make my heart ache.

MellySingsDoom 01.10.2014 06:48 AM

 

MellySingsDoom 01.10.2014 09:06 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nefeli
12 years a slave.

such movies make my heart ache.


Just watching this now: http://player.bfi.org.uk/player/watc...default/search

Am definitely interested in seeing this film.

MellySingsDoom 01.10.2014 07:32 PM

 

MellySingsDoom 01.10.2014 07:33 PM

 

MellySingsDoom 01.10.2014 07:34 PM

 

MellySingsDoom 01.11.2014 07:22 PM

 

MellySingsDoom 01.12.2014 06:56 PM

 

stu666 01.13.2014 03:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nefeli
12 years a slave.

such movies make my heart ache.


this

Rob Instigator 01.13.2014 04:10 PM

 


"We belong dead." - The Monster

Toilet & Bowels 01.13.2014 05:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by stu666
this


ditto. grueling.

!@#$%! 01.13.2014 05:23 PM

i watched volume one of "american avant-garde film" (or something like that) and it was the most boring thing ever.

i realized that 99% of the time "avant-garde film" means: white people making a bunch of random shapes on the screen by a variety of methods to the tune of some sort of chaotic sountrack (with the inclusion of unfamiliar "ethnic" tracks).

now i'm not opposed to experimentation but come on! please make something that i can care about without the use of psychedelic "wow, look at those colors, maaaan" drugs. experimentation doesn't have to mean "random shapes moving to the sound of music."

maybe i'm being unduly harsh, but it was all unwatchable, and the modern music video has improved so much over those early pioneers as to render them irrelevant. it's not like watching fritz lang or buster keaton and saying "wow, this still works a century later."

i'd rather watch hbo series, sorry.

eta: along these lines, i find "born into brothels" to be much more truly avant-garde. putting cameras in the hands of kids = innovation.

demonrail666 01.13.2014 06:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by !@#$%!
i watched volume one of "american avant-garde film" (or something like that) and it was the most boring thing ever.

i realized that 99% of the time "avant-garde film" means: white people making a bunch of random shapes on the screen by a variety of methods to the tune of some sort of chaotic sountrack (with the inclusion of unfamiliar "ethnic" tracks).

now i'm not opposed to experimentation but come on! please make something that i can care about without the use of psychedelic "wow, look at those colors, maaaan" drugs. experimentation doesn't have to mean "random shapes moving to the sound of music."

maybe i'm being unduly harsh, but it was all unwatchable, and the modern music video has improved so much over those early pioneers as to render them irrelevant. it's not like watching fritz lang or buster keaton and saying "wow, this still works a century later."

i'd rather watch hbo series, sorry.

eta: along these lines, i find "born into brothels" to be much more truly avant-garde. putting cameras in the hands of kids = innovation.


What were some of the films?

!@#$%! 01.13.2014 06:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by demonrail666
What were some of the films?


shit, i just sent it back. all i remember was that it was in part paid for some andy warhol foundation. lemme pull up some info…



http://www.filmpreservation.org/dvds...ant-garde-film

i got disc 1:

This disc includes the following short films: "Film No. 3: Interwoven," "Notes on the Circus," "Here I Am," "Fake Fruit Factory," "Odds & Ends," "Eyewash," "Peyote Queen," "7362," "Aleph," "Note to Pati," "By Night with Torch and Spear," "The Riddle of Lumen" and "The End."

they were all very boring to me. no maya deren or kuchar brothers or kenneth anger. lots of home films shown in negative, lots of dancing colors and shit like that. shaky cameras, etc. even promising titles like "peyote queen" were disappoints. the only one with a narrative was "the end" but it was like a bad short story written by a continental philosophy student who liked to ramble too much. oh, there was one documentary of sorts that showed special ed children playing with blocks and stuff. just looking. but i've seen kindergartens and nursing homes and special ed people, and it's not like this was "7 up" or anything. so it was all boring. fuck, i sound mean. i don't mean to be mean. but i had much higher expectations. maybe i was in the wrong frame of mind.

!@#$%! 01.13.2014 07:10 PM

oh i found the link to the names. not all of them were in that disc:

Bruce Baillie, Here I Am (1962)
Wallace Berman, Aleph (1956–66?)
Stan Brakhage, The Riddle of Lumen (1972)
Robert Breer, Eyewash (1959)
Shirley Clarke, Bridges-Go-Round (1958)
Joseph Cornell, By Night with Torch and Spear (1940s?)
Storm De Hirsch, Peyote Queen (1965)
Hollis Frampton, (nostalgia) (1971)
Larry Gottheim, Fog Line (1970)
Ken Jacobs, Little Stabs at Happiness (1959–63)
Lawrence Jordan, Hamfat Asar (1965)
George Kuchar, I, An Actress (1977)
Owen Land, New Improved Institutional Quality: In the Environment of Liquids and Nasals a Parasitic Vowel Sometimes Develops (1976)
Standish Lawder, Necrology (1969–70)
Saul Levine, Note to Pati (1969)
Christopher Maclaine, The End (1953)
Jonas Mekas, Notes on the Circus (1966)
Marie Menken, Go! Go! Go! (1962-64)
Robert Nelson & William T. Wiley, The Off-Handed Jape...& How to Pull It Off (1967)
Pat O'Neill, 7362 (1967)
Ron Rice, Chumlum (1964)
Paul Sharits, Bad Burns (1982)
Jane Conger Belson Shimane, Odds & Ends (1959)
Harry Smith, Film No. 3: Interwoven (1947–49)
Chick Strand, Fake Fruit Factory (1986)
Andy Warhol, Mario Banana (No. 1) (1964)

---

now i remember that fruit factory which is another "documentary" was there too. i mean is just a camera on some people making fake fruits with some sort of clay. maybe he thought because they were mexican they were instantly interesting. i mean it was just workers doing their work. fucking edison did that in 1895 and he didn't exoticize brown people.

uncle lobster's notes on the circus was another thing: a circus. in fast forward. with a soundtrack.

uncle lobster is no jack smith.

also, no su friedrich? fuckem.

oh, btw, i realize there was a film by joseph cornell there and yes there was one thing that looked pretty good (probably his) but at that point i was tired of dancing colors.

there was also some footage of upside down factory workers with a track by john zorn and while i enjoyed the zorn music i went to wash dishes.

MellySingsDoom 01.13.2014 07:22 PM

 

demonrail666 01.13.2014 08:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by !@#$%!
oh i found the link to the names. not all of them were in that disc:

Bruce Baillie, Here I Am (1962)
Wallace Berman, Aleph (1956–66?)
Stan Brakhage, The Riddle of Lumen (1972)
Robert Breer, Eyewash (1959)
Shirley Clarke, Bridges-Go-Round (1958)
Joseph Cornell, By Night with Torch and Spear (1940s?)
Storm De Hirsch, Peyote Queen (1965)
Hollis Frampton, (nostalgia) (1971)
Larry Gottheim, Fog Line (1970)
Ken Jacobs, Little Stabs at Happiness (1959–63)
Lawrence Jordan, Hamfat Asar (1965)
George Kuchar, I, An Actress (1977)
Owen Land, New Improved Institutional Quality: In the Environment of Liquids and Nasals a Parasitic Vowel Sometimes Develops (1976)
Standish Lawder, Necrology (1969–70)
Saul Levine, Note to Pati (1969)
Christopher Maclaine, The End (1953)
Jonas Mekas, Notes on the Circus (1966)
Marie Menken, Go! Go! Go! (1962-64)
Robert Nelson & William T. Wiley, The Off-Handed Jape...& How to Pull It Off (1967)
Pat O'Neill, 7362 (1967)
Ron Rice, Chumlum (1964)
Paul Sharits, Bad Burns (1982)
Jane Conger Belson Shimane, Odds & Ends (1959)
Harry Smith, Film No. 3: Interwoven (1947–49)
Chick Strand, Fake Fruit Factory (1986)
Andy Warhol, Mario Banana (No. 1) (1964)

---

now i remember that fruit factory which is another "documentary" was there too. i mean is just a camera on some people making fake fruits with some sort of clay. maybe he thought because they were mexican they were instantly interesting. i mean it was just workers doing their work. fucking edison did that in 1895 and he didn't exoticize brown people.

uncle lobster's notes on the circus was another thing: a circus. in fast forward. with a soundtrack.

uncle lobster is no jack smith.

also, no su friedrich? fuckem.

oh, btw, i realize there was a film by joseph cornell there and yes there was one thing that looked pretty good (probably his) but at that point i was tired of dancing colors.

there was also some footage of upside down factory workers with a track by john zorn and while i enjoyed the zorn music i went to wash dishes.


Wow! There's some of my fave films ever on that list. Little Stabs at Happiness, Aleph, Chumlum!!!!! I don't know what to say. You like Anger and Jack Smith but you didn't like Chumlum???? That just doesn't compute. :)

demonrail666 01.13.2014 09:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MellySingsDoom
 


I watched that again recently. I liked it as ever but it is a real mess of a film. Totally all over the place.

MellySingsDoom 01.13.2014 09:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by demonrail666
I watched that again recently. I liked it as ever but it is a real mess of a film. Totally all over the place.


Know what you mean - Argento's script isn't exactly a linear effort here, is it? Still, it's a pretty good giallo effort by him nonetheless. I thought Tony Musante's encounter with the gruff and grumpy artist was pretty entertaining. And as for Suzy Kendall....:o:cool:

!@#$%! 01.13.2014 09:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by demonrail666
Wow! There's some of my fave films ever on that list. Little Stabs at Happiness, Aleph, Chumlum!!!!! I don't know what to say. You like Anger and Jack Smith but you didn't like Chumlum???? That just doesn't compute. :)


of the 3 movies you mention only aleph was on this disc.

which one was that? shapes jumping?

ha ha ha-- i'm a fucking philistine, that's what. i'd rather watch the khaleesi in her furry bikini. but no, seriously. im sick and tired of "avant-garde = jumping colors with music." and that includes brakhage too. ha! ha ha ha!


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:12 PM.

Powered by vBulletin Version 3.5.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
All content ©2006 Sonic Youth