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Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 03, 2018 10:38 pm
by inmate
remember the night is so fucking good
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 03, 2018 11:03 pm
by Patchouli Jim
You know who'd love this thread? My mom. And she's pretty cool really.
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 03, 2018 11:10 pm
by carlagain
i wanna go to la fémis do you think that can happen for me
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Tue Dec 04, 2018 5:01 am
by Plainsong
What are your Laughton rankings so far mystery meat?
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Tue Dec 04, 2018 5:05 pm
by mystery meat
top shelf
advise & consent
hobson's choice
the old dark house
the sign of the cross
ruggles of red gap
really good
the big clock
the private life of king henry viii
mutiny on the bounty
the hunchback of notre dame
witness for the prosecution
meh
the canterville ghost
the barretts of wimpole street
the paradine case
barely remember and need to revisit
spartacus
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Tue Dec 04, 2018 5:25 pm
by Fr. Blanc
I’m gonna be underwater in here but I’d like to at least read and learn. Up next in my 1940-1980 project is Journey to Italy, which I think falls in the purview of the OP
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Tue Dec 04, 2018 5:30 pm
by mystery meat
it definitely does, that's one of my fav movies. bergman's and rossellini's relationship is so fascinating but don't ever read Donald Spoto's Bergman bio it sucks. stoked to hear your thoughts.
no worries about feeling underwater, this thread is a welcoming space for anyone remotely interested in this stuff.
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 10, 2018 12:31 pm
by mystery meat
THE MAJOR AND THE MINOR | Paramount | Billy Wilder | Ginger Rogers / Ray Milland | 1942
fuck no. can't do it. i'm not one of these people who retroactively cries foul at Maurice Chevalier singing Thank Heaven for Little Girls at the beginning of Gigi, but Ginger Rogers playing 12-year-old Sue-Sue with lollipop in hand is really icky and unwatchable. this isn't hindsight knows best so much as the early 40s over-frothed wartime movies consistently force some really naive constructions of interpersonal human relationships and anyone who has ever innocently liked this movie is too repressed for their own good, and if you assess it in the larger framework of Billy Wilder being one of the most misogynist and disillusioned dudes in filmmaking history (who would later call this 'the first American movie about pedophilia') then it's even grosser. and if you block all that stuff out and discipline your brain to engage with this movie on the most innocent and naive face-value terms, it's still pretty lame and goddamn i just wasn't in the mood for the kind of 'jokes' that function as studio propaganda ala that Veronica Lake gag. Wilder's Love in the Afternoon is a lot more substantive and honest and emphatically sordid in dealing with age disparities in Hollywood star couplings and it's an endlessly more fascinating viewing.
stay tuned tomorrow i'm gonna write-up this underrated 1954 Richard Quine noir in conjunction with the recently rewatched Double Indemnity to get at why Fred MacMurray is the equal of Dick Powell for switching between family comedy dweeb-dope and the best kind of noir bitterness cinema has to offer.
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 10, 2018 12:43 pm
by palmer eldritch
that movie sounds insane
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 10, 2018 12:44 pm
by Thrustin Jeroux
a lot of these movies are too old to be good
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 10, 2018 12:50 pm
by alaska
wow post as hell
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 10, 2018 12:52 pm
by Thrustin Jeroux
mystery meat wrote:A MODERN MUSKETEER | Douglas Fairbanks | Allan Dwan | 1917
this is a movie to watch for Fairbanks doing cool cartwheels and handsprings and furniture-jumping stunts. he's this midwestern dude whose mom did nothing but read Three Musketeers while pregnant and so he's basically D'Artagnan reincarnated. like most silent movies, there's a love triangle pitting dashing Fairbanks against some materialistic stuffed shirt in pursuit of a woman with minimal agency, and it gets more
when an outlaw Indian chief has designs on her too. it's a lot of the ingredients of rugged pioneer silent cinema -- dumb and problematic but also kinetic and pictorially gorgeous -- though not quite top-tier Fairbanks, or top-tier Dwan for that matter. but it's certainly better than Dwan's 1939 Three Musketeers starring Don Ameche and the Ritz Brothers, which is an abomination. also apparently Victor Fleming assisted on cinematography for this picture, that's the kinda trivia i live for.
like this one? just way too old
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 10, 2018 1:03 pm
by mystery meat
i'm cursed to lead the life cinematic
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 10, 2018 1:05 pm
by landspeedrecord
you should watch some pre-code movies, stakeout. pre-code films are fucking wild
I'm not going to act like the major and the minor's politics are radical or progressive, but I think its egregiousness is fairly overstated here. it's a totally unremarkable lubitsch riff. the films wilder was writing before this one (ninotchka + ball of fire in particular) feature much more interesting characters and transcend their conceits. the best part of it is the title (and the dry martini line, which people tend to get a kick out of)
anyways, watch sylvia scarlett instead!
george cukor, 1936. the first pairing of cary grant (who uses a terrible cockney accent) & katharine hepburn, who spends almost the entire film pretending to be a young boy. it was a huge box office failure at the time, but its slippery gender politics have made it a classic of early queer cinema
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 10, 2018 1:06 pm
by Thrustin Jeroux
they made movies this year
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 10, 2018 1:06 pm
by Thrustin Jeroux
i've watched literally every pre-code movie ever made. i worshipped at the altar of william a. wellman. but now? too old. those movies.
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 10, 2018 1:14 pm
by mystery meat
you were just in love the Wild Bill mystique but then withdrew when u realized he directed shit like Blood Alley, The Great Man's Lady, and Stingaree
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 10, 2018 1:16 pm
by mystery meat
i liked the dry martini line better in that one simpsons ep
i like Sylvia Scarlett but is it too precious for its own good? is the open-air theater-troupe hyperdrive whimsy too much? YOU be the judge!
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 10, 2018 1:17 pm
by Thrustin Jeroux
can't trust old movies or old movie boys...better to stick to new movies.
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 10, 2018 1:25 pm
by mystery meat
i watch new movies but they’re banned from being discussed in this thread
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 10, 2018 1:26 pm
by Thrustin Jeroux
do you wanna watch spiderman into the spiderverse with me
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 10, 2018 1:28 pm
by mystery meat
yeah that looks sick, also im a spideyhead from way back
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 10, 2018 1:29 pm
by Thrustin Jeroux
we can crush a couple of mcchickos
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 10, 2018 1:32 pm
by mystery meat
idk what that is
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 10, 2018 1:33 pm
by mystery meat
hey nathan wrote:and Youre Never Too Young
Taurog on tap!
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 10, 2018 1:34 pm
by Thrustin Jeroux
mccheekies with cheesies
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 10, 2018 1:35 pm
by mystery meat
i'll just be tackling one of these
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Mon Dec 10, 2018 1:37 pm
by palmer eldritch
natural and artificial, the two great flavors
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Sat Dec 15, 2018 6:10 pm
by Plainsong
Watched DeMille's Cleopatra last night and it floored me.
Re: mystery meat's movieverse
Posted:
Sat Dec 15, 2018 6:34 pm
by mystery meat
DeMille is so underrated. he got sideswiped by auteurism somehow. one of the all-time giants and pioneering craftsmen and unbeatable at what he did etc