I totally agree with this. | |
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All that and still not listening to anyone on why they may enjoy. Just telling people on the fansite they liked it because they are uber fans. I thoroughly enjoy such authority. Time keeps on slipping into the future...
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People who enjoy the thing like what it is does and says by whatever degree. What needs to be told? We are watching 2 Miami brothers overseas using wit, whim, and tactile skills to roll through high society, not unscathed, as they are looked down upon and subsequently exploited in the process. There is no backing band for them--they didn't want a gang. Mary Sharon was just another mark and Christopher T. thought he would have his fun while he was at it and got caught up in the game while the heiress Mary S. explored her womanhood. That is the plot. There is the black and white film nostalgia anchored in the 80s. There are camp expressions and slick wadrobe. It's a humorous, light piece of work--a farce, it's been said--that is a fan vehicle, to boot, for the visually impressed and certain music fans. It is simple charming thing that makes a great film for us. Simple enough! I cosign if people want to label it as simple. The movie is really no big deal--Christoper Tracy dies at the end and you're not going to see him again, except in your dreams. > The critics, however, hang around to snuff UTCM enthusiasm on every such thread and throw shade on this small gem. Why is this? To sharpen a nebulous divide in taste? To shame appreciation of the thing we enjoy? > Wherever one lands on the good/bad divide on the UTCM discussion, I am impressed with the loving care by which folks devise their own hot-tub-time-machine dream takes for every scene; these yearning expositions of what would have made the film a better experience for them. > Alas, there is little way to improve the UTCM experience. Drinks, perhaps? I do feel that the conversations heighten the profile of the movie in some ironic way. I predict that the conversation on this Prince vehicle will persist.
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I think an UTCM release with all the seen/unseen deleted scenes and such would make me happ-ier
But UTCM I just feel like steel represents Uptown/Paisley Park, "Prince" culture abounds for those of us who partied uptown and played in Paisley Park
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I'm gonna go ahead and say that as much as I hate this movie, I would be really interested to see it in color. The stills I've seen bring a lushness to it that may have at least kept me from being bored watching it, similar to Purple Rain actually. Odd that the decision to make it B&W was aimed at capturing a "timeless" element when, had it been in color, that aspect of this thing would have been far more pronounced and tons more interesting. | |
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OldFriends4Sale said:
I think an UTCM release with all the seen/unseen deleted scenes and such would make me happ-ier
But UTCM I just feel like steel represents Uptown/Paisley Park, "Prince" culture abounds for those of us who partied uptown and played in Paisley Park
To me PR is simplistic, it's stripped to the barest in persona to being practically every man (person) to some degree who ends up winning everyone's (in the movie) respect in the end by being humble. Yes it hit all the right markers without any clutter or anything problematic in the way. I've said it before UTCM has an actual personality, the overall story is simple, it's been done a thousand times, but the characters do have some dimensions and are problematic which is I guess where Prince needed help working out how to instantaneously make these flawed people likeable to a wider range of peoples biases. Time keeps on slipping into the future...
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And yet you are absolutely obsessed with the movie. You've posted reams about it, enough to write your own screenplay, on many threads. How you dislike, hate, and yes even DESPISE the movie, and why why WHY. I'm curious, were you even born in 1986? [Edited 6/23/20 1:19am] "if you can't clap on the one, then don't clap at all" | |
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Yes, the simplicity is what made it work, but it was all the Prince/Vanity 6/Time culture that filled and colored it that made it so wonderful.
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We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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[Edited 6/23/20 15:44pm] | |
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Guess my sentence wasn't clear. You are the one that keeps telling us WHY you despise the movie, repeatedly. WHY you dislike it in great detail, any wardrobe accessory is suspect etc, etc. It's overkill. I stopped taking this rant seriously pages ago. You seem to love hating the movie. Carry on. "if you can't clap on the one, then don't clap at all" | |
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So I remember being 16 and going to the (almost empty) cinema to watch UTCM. I knew it wasn't going to be Purple Rain 2 as I had read the reviews in magazines (we had those before the Internet existed).
And yet... I simply did not know what to make of it. It looked good and had the music but it felt hollow and tonally was inconsistent. It just isn't a good movie. But it is a very interesting curio from an artist at his zenith. In subsequent years I reconciled with it by seeing it more like a long form video (remember those) that in the late 90s /early 00s would be a straight to DVD release. Similar to Kate Bush Red Shoes. Watched through that "lens" it becomes strangely more entertaining. [Edited 6/24/20 11:42am] 'I loved him then, I love him now and will love him eternally. He's with our son now.' Mayte 21st April 2016 = the saddest quote I have ever read! RIP Prince and thanks for everything. | |
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herb4 said:
Typing via phone is an utter pain in the tush. Anyway, that's where I agrre he needed help turning what looks like a complete ahole into someone of redeeming character. Like him slapping Appolonia after she uses her last dime to buy him a gift, if he did it twice or hadn't had a scene where we all saw he had the reflex to but caught and corrected himself, he'd of been a complete unredeemable ahole there too, like folks still complaining about the dumpster scene. There definitely needs to be a bridge that clears up aholey behavior. A broke guy looking like him, being that openly arrogant about it, cuckolding powerful men's wives and conning their daughters for money ain't to be liked on the spot. I get the immediate turnoff by others. It really didn't bother me at all at the time which plays into it. I believe that's why the movie is criticed harsher than necessary because it screws with a lot of peoples sensibilities right off the bat and never has a moment to win those people over. How many people could really put themselves into that character as opposed to The Kid who was young, has dreams and ambitions, overcoming obstacles? Was PR really a better made movie or just more generally relatable? Time keeps on slipping into the future...
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Purple Rain is believable and down to earth.UTCM is really just a pretentious vanity film. | |
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SoulAlive said: Purple Rain is believable and down to earth.UTCM is really just a pretentious vanity film. Of course it was believeable who hasn't been young and wanted something so badly? Nobody. Harder to gain redemption through love on screen, not a simple straightforward story even though we've seen it before. I'll never deny he needed different eyes to help relay it to a wider audience. But I still stand that certain uneasiness give it harsher criticism than it deserves. Time keeps on slipping into the future...
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OldFriends4Sale said:
Yes, the simplicity is what made it work, but it was all the Prince/Vanity 6/Time culture that filled and colored it that made it so wonderful.
I'm not denying the whole culture thing worked but I think the fact the average person who didn't even know they existed could relate to the core of the story and that's what sprngboarded it to the top. Time keeps on slipping into the future...
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[Edited 6/25/20 14:28pm] | |
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UTCM is so much more humorous than Purple Rain. Silly, creative characters! Christopher T. showed us all what a hard-working, enterprising fella' he was, playing at the piano lounge evenings through nights, all inbetween humpin' under the sheets with his undercover clientele. Those musicians have some kind of pull on the ladies. Tricky all the while running his games on the gambling addicts. They're an interesting, "exotic" pair of scamps, where you just want to see where their escapades lead them.
> At any rate, to not like viewing those characters, says what? >
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herb4 said:
[Edited 6/25/20 14:28pm] The struggles of fathers and sons, sons desires and fears of becoming like their fathers. Pretty simple and universal. I have no desire to get bit, I'm feeling I touched a nerve. A bit ironic though in this thread. I'll leave it alone, I just needed to say how easy it really is. I to this day enjoy UTCM, even more than PR for a lot of reasons I don't need to quantify them or have them quantified for me. And just imagining it in color i get a little excited. That is all. Time keeps on slipping into the future...
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Under The Cherry Moon has a great soundtrack. Never liked the film, sorry to the people who love it don't kill me | |
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"Right" on time with yer opinions...
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I'm about to go live on this guy's facebook streaming show to defend / explain Prince's first two movies. My art book: http://www.lulu.com/spotl...ecomicskid
VIDEO WORK: http://sharadkantpatel.com MUSIC: https://soundcloud.com/ufoclub1977 | |
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I love how you think. That could have been, in the hands of a capable filmmaker, remarkable. As I read it, I could immediately picture everything you were writing. I Love U, But I Don't Trust U Anymore... | |
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Miles Davis discusses Prince Prince has a, has James Brown ...his father took him 2 C James Brown, when he was young, he got on stage and danced with him, he has that and Jimi Hendrix and Marvin Gaye, ... that's 4 things, James brown Jimi Hendrix Marvin Gaye and he combines all that all the time that's what he is, His concept on the stage is like Charlie Chaplin, if you look at him you'll see, U know? you can tell ... but Prince's concept is James Brown and Jimi Hendrix and Charlie Chaplin and can't you mess with that ...
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p 94 chapter 7 Possessed: the Rise & Fall of Prince Back in France, the shooting of Under the shooting of Under the Cherry Moon limped to a close On the set in Nice, Prince seemed conflicted about Christopher Tracy, the character he had created for himself to play in the film. This charismatic, sexy, and somewhat snide piano player was hardly a sympathetic figure, and Prince's plan all along had been for Tracy to die at the end of the film, representing his own symbolic transcendence of these character flaws. But Warner Bros. preferring (as film studios invariably do) a happy ending, pshed him to conclude with Tracy reforming and heading off into the sunset with lover interest Mary (Scott-Thomas). The alternative ending was shot, and publicist Howard Bloom, viewing a cut of the film where Tracy survives, found himself believing in the character's redemptive journey. "Warner Bros. insisted on him getting the girl at the end, and it really worked," Bloom remembered. "This little asshole character that was so hard to identify with, you bonded with by the end." But Prince favored the original ending. In the final cut, Tracy died (the victim of an assassination) with the result, in Bloom's view, that any meaning in the film was also destroyed. | |
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