Yankee
Winger
I saw it at Omniplex. But, like most non-studio movies, they're there for maybe a week then straight onto streaming.Is it at the cinema or streaming somewhere?
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I saw it at Omniplex. But, like most non-studio movies, they're there for maybe a week then straight onto streaming.Is it at the cinema or streaming somewhere?
Had this on my watch list for over Xmas.One Battle After Another - Decent enough watch, but all I thought about at the end of it was, what is everyone raving on about? Have I missed something, a hidden message, divine enlightenment? It's a 7/10 in my book, as I probably wouldn't rewatch it, one and done film.
The Third Man (1949)
Joseph Cotten arrives in Vienna to find that his friend has been the victim of a traffic accident. He isn’t convinced by the official verdict, though.
Carol Reed directs this visual masterpiece with such flair that it’s rightly heralded as a stonewall classic. The Dutch angles, sharp use of lighting and shadows, and locations, create a moody, atmospheric film dripping with personality.
The story itself isn’t anything special, but some of the dialogue is sharp, and the acting is uniformly excellent. Cotten is solid, as are Trevor Howard and Bernard Lee. The problem is that Orson Welles absolutely owns the screen when he’s on it. He turns steady dialogue into something special, and acts with the entirety of his face and voice. You simply cannot take your eyes off him.
Loved it. There are several memorable scenes that really make this a genre standout.
9/10
The locations are stunning. I think that it’s a film that wouldn’t have the same impact in colour.I've done the full works in Vienna: The Third Man tour (including the sewer), The Third Man Museum, and the saw film itself (probably for the 100th time) at a cinema that shows it every day.
Amazing thing is, all this goes on, and 99% of people in Vienna haven't a clue the film even exists. It flopped in Austria, and is only kept alive there thanks to a few Austrian anglophiles.
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A true 9/10 marra. Have you seen Orson Welles in A Touch Of Evil alongside Charlton Heston? Another 9/10 fillum.The Third Man (1949)
Joseph Cotten arrives in Vienna to find that his friend has been the victim of a traffic accident. He isn’t convinced by the official verdict, though.
Carol Reed directs this visual masterpiece with such flair that it’s rightly heralded as a stonewall classic. The Dutch angles, sharp use of lighting and shadows, and locations, create a moody, atmospheric film dripping with personality.
The story itself isn’t anything special, but some of the dialogue is sharp, and the acting is uniformly excellent. Cotten is solid, as are Trevor Howard and Bernard Lee. The problem is that Orson Welles absolutely owns the screen when he’s on it. He turns steady dialogue into something special, and acts with the entirety of his face and voice. You simply cannot take your eyes off him.
Loved it. There are several memorable scenes that really make this a genre standout.
9/10
I’ve got that in the cabinet really to fire up! The Eureka disc. Every time I see Welles I understand that little bit more why he’s so revered.A true 9/10 marra. Have you seen Orson Welles in A Touch Of Evil alongside Charlton Heston? Another 9/10 fillum.
A true 9/10 marra. Have you seen Orson Welles in A Touch Of Evil alongside Charlton Heston? Another 9/10 fillum.
The problem is that Orson Welles absolutely owns the screen when he’s on it. He turns steady dialogue into something special, and acts with the entirety of his face and voice. You simply cannot take your eyes off him.
I’ve got The Magnificent Ambersons to watch, but part of me doesn’t actually want to watch it, because it’s not his intended film.That famous three-and-a-half-minute opening shot: starts with a bomb, ends with an explosion - no cuts in between.
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After Citizen Kane, everything he did was either butchered by the studios or cobbled together on a shoestring. There would have been a whole other history of cinema if people had just let him do his thing.
Peter Bogdanovich is great on the film in general and Orson Welles in particular. Welles called it 'the greatest star part ever written. They talk about you for an hour, then you appear.'
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I’ve got The Magnificent Ambersons to watch, but part of me doesn’t actually want to watch it, because it’s not his intended film.
I don’t think I could get past the fact that it’s not the genuine footage.It's still a wonderful film.
Not sure how I feel about this, though.
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I don’t think I could get past the fact that it’s not the genuine footage.
I find the whole ‘lost film’ thing slightly tantalising and majorly annoying. Just the vague possibility of the footage being in Brazil is intriguing. Yet it’s probably lost, so the lack of closure feels cruel. It’s the same with stuff like London After Midnight and Hats Off.
It brings hope to the possibility that somehow, somewhere, nitrate stock might have survived!Metropolis may be the last great restoration. The first DVD version had intertitles explaining the missing scenes. Then they found a near-complete version in Argentina in 2008, and now we can see it almost as intended.
Offside is a lovely film.Henri-Georges Clouzot's Inferno (2009) 7/10
Inspired by the conversation with @Doogie Hauser about lost films, I finally got around to watching this documentary about a ground-breaking film started by Clouzot in 1964, but abandoned after three months. It promised to be quite something, but the production was beset with huge problems and then Clouzot had a non-fatal heart attack. The documentary was conceived when the director got stuck in a lift with Clouzot's widow, and she revealed the existence of dozens of cans of film from the project.
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Solaris (1972) 9/10
Still an incredible film, but I enjoyed it less in HD. The shortcomings of some of the sets detract from Tarkovsky's vision. The outdoor scenes, however, are stunning.
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Offside (2006) 9/10
Earlier film by Jafar Panahi, who made my favourite film of this year, It Was Just An Accident. This one was filmed in during an Iranian World Cup qualifier, and features the attempts of female football fans to get into the ground, even though it was against the law for women to attend. A truly great football film.
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