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great post. | |
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there are tons of classic films i haven't seen. i worked my way through about half of the sight & sound top 250 list in the 2nd half of 2017, and i'm planning to take another run at it starting in september or october.
the most commonly seen films that i've never watched myself would probably include:
goodfellas godfather 1+2 jaws et forrest gump toy story 1 + 3 harry potter films
[Edited 8/4/18 6:35am] | |
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damosuzuki said:
great post. I understand the realistic texture of Texas Chainsaw as an influence and the restlessness brutal energy stabs between washes of meditative calm. But Texas Chainsaw is filled with comic like camera angles and dynamic action blocking. ALIEN actually hamstrings its potential dramatic appeal by not using conventionally expressive camera angles and editing. I think Scott whether by accident or not stumbled into an Altman like documentary way of the camera being observational, and the general tone being observational rather than instigating. It’s almost a scientific view of what happened. And there’s nothing like “Get away form her you bitch” that is designed to pump the spotlight on the hero and get the audience cheering. I think that’s why there is a big divide on younger viewers who watch this and prefer the sequel. It doesn’t go for pop appeal. It’s more like National Geographic. I’ll admit it uses pop tropes like the James Bond device of a countdown at the end to a big explosion of the elaborate set, but it presents them in this distant emotionless way that I love. My art book: http://www.lulu.com/spotl...ecomicskid
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The lion king | |
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Titanic Harry Potter movies
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The newer movies use CGI to have the Alien bust out. Not the same feeling and it defiantly loses something | |
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Sorry, people! Bolded for easy scanning of response to question.
I started out with something totally informal that would fit in a single Tweet, then I started to branch out. — Six Movies I Haven’t Watched, And Why There was a time perhaps 15 to 20 years ago where I was voraciously attacking the book 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die as if the title were to be taken literally. Strangely enough I did end up getting a brain tumor shortly thereafter, so perhaps despite my extremely good fortune of fully recovering beyond my wildest imagination, I perhaps somehow knew more than I realized. This book long ago lost is cover like some archetypal buried in some university art class, has highlighter smearing most of its 1,000 pages, and presently is being held together at its weathered binding with clear, heavy packing tape. I haven’t opened the book for years until right now. I would guess that I have so far seen about 75% of the more than one thousand films listed here (that “1001” is just a marketing guideline) before I moved on to some other nonsense. I love movies, but I’m much more of a generalist than a specialist. I was probably getting too close to knowing stuff, so I moved on from this intensity. Over the past several years I’ve kept telling myself to go back to this resource for more checkmarks because today it’s probably at more like 90%, but so far I have not. There is also some really fine writing here that often puts to shame those professionals writing reviews for publication deadlines that must always consider their audience less they risk losing their jobs. How often, for example, do you see critics admitting to mistakes or digging into something so well that they not only uncover things about the movie but about themselves? It happens. Just not as often as it could. The book certainly has its flaws — some of them perhaps huge. It’s far too limiting for starters. If I remember correctly, there are like 3 movies from Akira Kurosawa, one of the greatest filmmakers ever. Come to think of it, all of Asian cinema is far too brief. I don’t know exactly, but perhaps worldwide there has been some half million feature-length films made. Even attempting the impossible task of trying to represent the most essential 1 percent to all of humanity (from the massively successful to the barely known, with the idea that only perhaps something like 1 out of every 100 movies making a theatrical release is a masterpiece or something like it) you would still probably need at least 5 or 10,000 movies here. Not that everyone needs to be a massive film buff at all, just that we need more space to be able to pick out what level currently suits us from among the ever-widening pillars that make us all feel a little proud for having been there and done that. To see something that has carved out our names on the inside of our reflex gasp that hurls us off helplessly into deeper and wider, from Animal House (if we so prefer) to Persona (if we so prefer). But it’s still the best, most objective source I’ve yet found. I can’t easily label it. In other words, it is not a book containing a lot of my movies, then a bunch of others bought and paid for by aliens who know nothing of this earth. It’s a real mishmash. Closer to the voyage life presents us, from teetering toddler to the impossible shores of objectivity that attempt a diversity that can at times perhaps separate us from ego just long enough to uncover something new about ourselves. I’m going to go through this book that I probably haven’t opened in nearly a decade and choose the six most obvious misses I still haven’t seen, trying to skip at least some of the more obscure stuff that might only be of interest to a jackass like me who has seen a few thousand films. (Six is the number that just naturally happened as I randomly flipped through this massive book. I was shooting for five, but I wasn’t yet close enough to the end.) 1. Babes In Arms (1939) - A Busby Berkeley musical I haven’t seen? Sounds great. Can’t wait. 2. Avatar (2009)- Last I heard this was the biggest box office smash ever. This total still doesn’t include my 5 or 10 bucks. James Cameron is a great filmmaker. The first two Terminator films, The Abyss, Aliens, Titanic are all great mainstream cinema that me. I just haven’t felt the need yet to take his next step. I don’t feel the same passion anymore to see a lot of big commercial things. Though I have nothing against it, and would likely enjoy the hell out of it. It also doesn’t help that for years it got the Disney treatment. You could buy it and rent the physical object, but if you wanted to see it otherwise it was mostly on commercial television. I don’t want to see it edited with 37 commercial breaks. Last I checked you could actually rent the stream, so maybe soon!? 3. Gunfight at the OK Corral (1957) - I see things now when I see things. Some misses no doubt would label me a fool. Others weird. Others pretentious. I hopefully don’t care anymore. 4. Alphaville (France, 1965) - A low-budget science fiction film by Jean-Luc Godard. Sounds like it would be either bizarrely magnificent or a deeply earnest attempt at reinventing the nature of a thing such that when plugged in seems caught between a laughable flop and something more profound than even its creator knew. 5. A Brighter Summer Day (Taiwan, 1991) - I suppose I don’t want to be too disappointed. This is the same filmmaker, Edward Yang, that made Yi Yi: A One and a Two, one of my favorite films ever (also immortalized in this book that’s now losing some of its pages). 6. The Usual Suspects (1995) - I saw it, but not really. I wasted way more energy trying to stay awake than to possibly understand all the twists and turns. I couldn’t tell you one thing about this plot, or much of anything about how it made me feel . All I know is that like Shawshank Redemption it seems to be colored in more of a masculine hue. As you can hopefully tell, although I adore escapism — after all, it’s a big part of the human condition — I’m still probably more natively (biased-ly) comforted and coherent with a picture that’s bartering in a type of figurative existentialism that could potentially set the hair on fire of someone looking to see all their flaws and fancies and good fortunes expertly marched before the tribunal. This energizes me. At times leaving a theater can be like a benediction. Of course all films, all of life, really have a bit of both. The Wizard of Oz can potentially work on you at age 5 just as expertly as that childhood fever dream you remembered at 40. Going one step further: perhaps one of the of most challenging films ever made, Mulholland Drive, by David Lynch, is something akin to the extremely grownup version of this very same childlike Never-world that freewill will always render hopeless. While The Wizard of Oz just might scare the literal kid out of you. Mulholland on the other hand leads down a more figurative analysis of bowel movements as categorized by astrophysicists who don’t mind entertaining the continual embarrassment of not yet understanding most things. == [Edited 8/4/18 17:11pm] | |
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www.filmsfilmsfilms.co.uk - The internet's best movie site! | |
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[Edited 8/5/18 3:08am] www.filmsfilmsfilms.co.uk - The internet's best movie site! | |
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of all the Jaws sequels it was the best | |
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It’s A Wonderful Life - I forget to watch it every year. Goonies - It’s a dick flick. The Way We Were - People talk about it enough. The Ring - Too scared. (When the bitch came out of the well I turned off my TV. And I’m never going back.) Bond films - Too many to go back to, but I’ve seen all of Daniel’s James. What? | |
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damosuzuki said: there are tons of classic films i haven't seen. i worked my way through about half of the sight & sound top 250 list in the 2nd half of 2017, and i'm planning to take another run at it starting in september or october.
the most commonly seen films that i've never watched myself would probably include:
goodfellas godfather 1+2 jaws et forrest gump toy story 1 + 3 harry potter films
[Edited 8/4/18 6:35am] I wouldn’t rush out to see the Harry Potter films | |
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it's coming up soon! tomorrow, potentially, depending on what the day brings. | |
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I just watched The Poseidon Adventure (1972) forgot about that one. Dang women did a lot of screaming in movies back then. Time keeps on slipping into the future...
This moment is all there is... | |
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www.filmsfilmsfilms.co.uk - The internet's best movie site! | |
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I have never seen...
Any Star Wars movies Any Super Hero movies Any Harry Potter Movies Any Lord of the Ring movies
And, many more that I just don't have any interest in watching. | |
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Time keeps on slipping into the future...
This moment is all there is... | |
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Golden Swallow You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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www.filmsfilmsfilms.co.uk - The internet's best movie site! | |
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I watched a lot of martial arts flicks when I was going to school. They used to come on Saturday afternoons on Kung Fu Theater after Soul Train went off. I haven't seen many made before the 1970s and that one is from the 1960s. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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Time keeps on slipping into the future...
This moment is all there is... | |
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By St. Boogar and all the saints at the backside door of Purgatory! | |
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nope You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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MickyDolenz said:
nope I only heard about because it made a classic movies top 10 list, and I got an opportunity to see and thought it was very good. Thought I'd throw it out there since you mentioned pre 60s martial arts movies. I had one. Time keeps on slipping into the future...
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I usually don't enjoy watching films, so I even haven't seen these: - Schindler's List - any James Bond film - La La Land - Atonement - Godfather - Jaws etc. full lips, freckles, and upturned nose | |
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any of the Saw movies. But I don't watch horror so that list is long anyway. Time keeps on slipping into the future...
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The Bodyguard...Avatar...Schindler's List..Whiplash...The Butler...The Color Purple...Gone With The Wind,,(too damn long), | |
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I still haven't watched Black Panther. I haven't watched any super hero movies since the Batman movie with Michael Keaton, which I believe was in the early 90's? [Edited 8/24/18 21:09pm] "It's not nice to fuck with K.B.! All you haters will see!" - Kitbradley
"The only true wisdom is knowing you know nothing." - Socrates | |
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