The Damned - (1969) - Film
Seen: Tuesday, July 1, 2008
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"The Damned is to the WWII genre what a chiffon-clad drag queen brandishing satin scarves is to an audience of racecar drivers."
Sandra - (1965) - Film
Seen: Wednesday, July 2, 2008
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Not many reviews are out there on this one. But who ever thought TV Guide could provide a better context and outline of the film than the jargon-happy film buff? Anyway, it'd be silly for me to try to describe it better myself, it's just not fresh in my head anymore. So we'll rely on TV Guide for now...
Close-Up - (1990) - DVD
Seen: Saturday, July 5, 2008
"It was very hard to pretend to be someone else, but I liked it."
The first signifier of artificiality, or at least an acknowledgment that what you're about to see has been consciously edited and framed, is the movie's credit sequence. For Kiarostami's Close-Up, the credit sequence doesn't begin until more than 15-minutes into the film, giving us an added layer of ambiguity--is this documentary or fiction? Both, is the short answer. Our primary subject before Kiarostami's camera is a man accused of impersonating a film director, and he's on trial before his peers and family humbly owning up to the fact that he led strangers to believe he was someone he was not.
The story is structured so that we toggle between the present (the time leading up to his trial and the trial itself) and the past (talking to strangers, gaining their trust from false premises), and while initially we don't know who Kiarostami (who is speaking off camera) and the journalist with him are talking about, it very quickly becomes clear. The man on trial is the "star" of the film and the one we root for--despite his impersonation, despite the fact that we don't truly know who he is. His persona unravels, but still the man is so blatantly honest about why he impersonated the filmmaker: to be in a position of authority.
Also, on visuals, American Beauty gets credit for making a billowing plastic shopping bag look pretty, but it's got nothing on the magnificence of Kiarostami's tin can tinkering down the street, or the streaks of an airplane's vapor trail across the sky.
The Incredible Hulk - (2008) - Film
Seen: Saturday, July 5, 2008
Hancock - (2008) - Film
Seen: Sunday, July 6, 2008
Iron Man - (2008) - Film
Seen: Sunday, July 6, 2008
Three! Big! Summer! Movies!
In order of preference:
1. Iron Man
2. Hancock
3. The Incredible Hulk--wait. No, to put Hulk on a list of "preferences" implies I preferred this movie at all. More than the poorly blocked scenes with empty, un-visualized space that amassed to gaping holes, a visual analogous to the silent, dead air of radio; more than the contrivance known as the conflict between Sgt. Ross and his daughter; more than the anticlimactic battle scene to prove the filmmakers are proficient in animation software--more than all of these things, what an unfair undermining of Liv Tyler as Betty, Sgt. Ross's daughter.
She has no valuable dialogue, is a void of personality and intellect, and finally becomes just another damsel in distress. Only worse, she is framed with nearly pornographic shots of her mouth glazed in soft pink lip gloss. Gah! Not helping the cause. And you can't blame Liv, who isn't a bad actress. After all, she's only as good as the lines that were never written for her.
Little Children - (2006) - DVD
Seen: Tuesday, July 8, 2008
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Zodiac - (2007) - DVD
Seen: Wednesday, July 9, 2008
For me, this is the scariest damn movie I've seen in a long, long time. I couldn't watch it alone. My boyfriend who was quietly studying in the room next door was summoned to the living room to calm my nerves. I'm still having horrific flashbacks of the old man emerging from his cellar, in what appears to be thin air from screen left as Jake Gyllenhaal runs out his front door. (shivers)
Being There - (1979) - DVD
Seen: Sunday, July 13, 2008
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The Hoax - (2006) - DVD
Seen: Saturday, July 19, 2008
Here's one I missed upon its release that I had high expectations for, but by the second half of the film as our main man, Clifford Irving (Richard Gere) descends into a weird psychological blackout, The Hoax lost me. Most of the reviews of the movie mention the shocking level of ambition and lack of inhibition in Irving's character, and surely it is the most compelling aspect of the story. But somehow it fell flat. Maybe it was the emphasis on his love affairs? His personal friendships and marriage? The puzzle pieces never fit together for me, and I was irritated with its glossiness and formulaic structure, if you'll indulge such disdainful generalities...
The Dark Knight - (2008) - Film
Seen: Monday, July 21, 2008
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Citizen Kane - (1941) - Film
Seen: Wednesday, July 23, 2008
Can't see Orson Welles' Citizen Kane too many times! I saw it on my 29th...
Transformers - (2007) - DVD
Seen: Sunday, July 27, 2008
Listen, I didn't see Transformers in the summer of 2007 when it was released, so finally, perhaps in the spirit and momentum of the summer blockbusters that preceded it in this queue, perhaps that explains why I suddenly found myself tamped down with boredom from this lifeless monstrosity. I mean, what the fuck? The Autobots' comedy yuk-it-up outside Shia LaBeouf's house? I'm just getting mad now...
Coming Home - (1978) - DVD
Seen: Monday, July 28, 2008
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