Savannah Film Festival Update

Nov 03, 2005 01:13

Movies Watched (Between Oct. 27 and Nov. 2, 2005)
Le Croisment (The Crossing) (Brad Jayne, 2004) [13 min. short -- SFF]
Crumb (Terry Zwigoff, 1994)
Double Indemnity (Billy Wilder, 1944)
The Graduate (Mike Nichols, 1967) *
Grand Illusion (Jean Renoir, 1937) *
The Great Ecstasy of Woodcarver Steiner (Werner Herzog, 1974)
How Much Wood Would a ( Read more... )

Leave a comment

Comments 11

cajun_voodoo November 4 2005, 00:02:17 UTC
i love the graduate. last week on TCM they showed alfred hitchcock films from like 8 at night to 1:30 in the morning for 5 nights. All 39 films (i thought it was great!). Do you like any of his films?

Reply


whycantiforget November 4 2005, 02:21:51 UTC
If you've never seen it, I'd suggest watching M by Fritz Lang. It was made in 1931, I think, and it was the shit.

Reply


whycantiforget November 4 2005, 02:23:37 UTC
Oh and by the way, do you have any idea how I can get ahold of this film, Le Mepris, before Monday? I have a paper due on Monday and I can't find this movie anywhere. We were given one week to write this paper and there's only one copy in the library so it's pretty much a fight to the death over it.

Reply


Replies, Replies life_boy November 4 2005, 05:08:24 UTC
cajunvoodoo: "Do you like any of [Hitchcock's] films?"

Yes. I haven't seen all 37 of them; I think I've seen 12. Rope (1948) and Strangers on a Train (1951) are probably my two favorites (for now). I don't have cable but TCM almost makes me want to throw down for it. I was looking through their schedule today and there are all kinds of good things on there -- even some films I can't get ahold of very easily like Sunrise, The Magnificent Ambersons, or The Conformist. When me and Betsy spend time in Tupelo over the holidays, I will probably be filling up blank VHS tapes with lots of goodies to take home.

whycantiforget: "...I'd suggest watching M by Fritz Lang."

I actually watched it for my first time last week. It is very good. I think I prefer Metropolis but they are both great pieces of work. The story was very well-told and some of the shots were simply incredible. The last few scenes were more moving than I was expecting.

whycantiwait: "...do you have any idea how I can get ahold of this film, Le Mepris, before ( ... )

Reply

Re: Replies, Replies whycantiforget November 5 2005, 16:00:56 UTC
Thanks, I'll find it by hook or by crook. If not I'll figure it out somehow. Le Mepris was the first film we watched in class which was back in early September, how someone is supposed to remember a film they watched three months ago well enough to write a paper on it is beyond me but hey what're you gonna do?

I saw Le Mepris and Bande a Part and I'm supposed to write a two page paper on how Godard "situates his cinema, in the two Godard films we've seen, to the past history of the cinema and in particular to the work of Fritz Lang, especially M." Zuh? Any idea what he can possibly mean because everyone I've read that to has agree with me that that sentence makes absolutely no sense.

From what I've seen, I'm not much of a Godard fan either. What are the three films of his that you have seen? Opinion, thoughts, etc?

Reply

Re: Replies, Replies life_boy November 6 2005, 18:50:47 UTC
Well, at least you have seen the film. It sounded as if he just through the paper out there. I would definately want to rewatch it before writing anything on it, but in a pinch you can bullshit something.

...write a two page paper on how Godard "situates his cinema, in the two Godard films we've seen, to the past history of the cinema and in particular to the work of Fritz Lang, especially M."

That sentance is kind of silly - which is fitting for a paper on Godard. I've seen Breathless (1959), Band of Outsiders (1964) and My Life to Live (1962). Not having seen Le Mepris I don't have much room to think in terms of that paper topic. Godard's cinema is alwasy incredibly self-conscious; he will often be making little connections to other movies (ex: in My Life to Live Ana goes to the theater and watches Carl Dryer's The Passion of Joan of Arc; the Bogart movie poster on the wall in Breathless) and is often consciously moving against ways people are used to seeing the action of films take place. I don't remember anything ( ... )

Reply

Re: Replies, Replies whycantiforget November 7 2005, 03:52:16 UTC
Luckily someone else in my class was able to give me a copy of Le Mepris and I'm almost done with the paper. Everything I've written is bullshit that I don't believe but whatever, at least I'm handing it in. There's only one copy of the movie in the library and I put a hold out on it awhile ago but whoever had it before me decided to be an inconsiderate prick and never got around to turning it back in ( ... )

Reply


life_boy November 4 2005, 05:13:45 UTC
Good luck, by the way. I hope you find it.

On an interesting sidenote, Fritz Lang has a minor acting role in Contempt.

Reply


Leave a comment

Up