There's a website http://www.kids-in-mind.com that gives you movie ratings to see if it's safe to have your kids watch. It breaks it down on sex & nudity, violence & gore, and profanity. If you want to know more it will tell you all the scenes that are bad in the movie so you can decide.
Actually, it's not the BBC that estimates this - that percentage comes from the US Department of Veteran Affairs. In addition to the book mentioned in the article, there's also a documentary on the same subject being released later this month: The Invisible War, by the makers of This Film Is Not Yet Rated.
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Kids-In-Mind does exactly this with a 0-10 system and I've used it numerous times when thinking about which movies to watch with people who I know are uncomfortable with too much sex or violence.
Highly recommended.
It's from a movie Shaolin Soccer (2001). If you like martial arts movies, you'll love this. Absolutely hilarious and enjoyable to watch.
I'd also recommend Kung Fu Hustle (2004) by the same people.
NTA. I mean, I'm not surprised the other parents got angry, but it sounds like you are raising your daughter to be a leader who will stand up for herself and others. UNION.
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The achilles heel scene in Hostel yeah, that stuck with me too.
I'd say for pure gore, I was effected by Martyrs, the original French movie. There's a few scenes that compare to Hostel but I felt in the end Martyrs had a reason behind it. It'll all in the ending.
You're god damn right it did, there were fifteen movies before Freddy vs Jason came out.
https://letterboxd.com/mook/list/viewing-order-for-freddy-vs-jason/
They then expanded the universe further (via comic books) to include Ash, of Evil Dead fame:
The content of this film is apparently beyond category.
Here's another gem from their "Finding Dory" write-up:
"SUBSTANCE USE - An octopus drinks a pot of cold coffee from the pot."
Nope, desktop! Here's what the screen looks like when opening a random movie
As you can see, no pictures. Sometimes there's a trailer but that's it.
Here's the same page on letterboxd
Much more attractive visually, mainly because of the image.
Seven hells, that moment when Gendry warhammered those two goldcloaks had me at full attention. Although it's a quite a jump to go from Braavosi actor to guarding the capital, ser Camello. I found it bizarre that they couldn't find some other less recognizable supporting actor for that quick part.
Tinfoil edit: after losing his cushy acting job due to the death of the lead Cersei role, he crossed the Narrow Sea with Danaerys' fleet, having been enlisted by Varys to infiltrate the Goldcloaks, sending back whispers from the capital.
http://www.kids-in-mind.com/f/frozen.htm Frozen
>SEX/NUDITY 1
>Two women wear long gowns that reveal bare arms and shoulders. A woman wears a long gown with a slit that reveals one leg to the top of the thigh.
Going into this pretty much blind I was not expecting Okja to be a high-energy quirky comedy. Tilda Swinton is electric. The movie hits you over the head with its overall message like a wrecking ball. But despite that there is a lot to love about Okja.
I left a review on my letterboxd which you can read here: https://letterboxd.com/krusiv/film/okja/
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The Assassin's Creed director, cinematographer and lead actor and actress have just come from Macbeth which was insanely good.
Furthermore, the plot that they've released looks promising: > Lynch discovers he is a descendant of the secret Assassins society through unlocked genetic memories that allow him to relive the adventures of his ancestor, Aguilar, in 15th Century Spain. After gaining incredible knowledge and skills he’s poised to take on the oppressive Knights Templar in the present day.
They're ignoring the existing video game story and taking the basic elements such as the animus, templars, assassins, hidden blade etc.
In summary, the best directed screen adaptation of Macbeth's director is adapting a popular video game, alongside the cinematography of True Detective one of the most visually stunning TV shows of all time with award-winning actors (1 oscar winner and 1 oscar nominee).. if this film fails it's going to be the screenwriters and I'll be incredible surprised.
Swearing?! Wash your mouth out with soap!
Good starter pack. My mom (who definitely had moments like this) use to browse this site before letting me see any movie in theatres.
This Is Spinal Tap was a parody of touring rock bands and their lifestyle, it invented the mockumentary genre and could be considered an event that led to Modern Family & The Office.
Just shows that the whole "mindfuck" term (which I hate anyway), which seems to place more 'convoluted' or 'challenging' cinema (i.e. anything with a plot twist) above generic cinema, is such a pedestrian term at heart. None of the films listed are that complicated, and the true "mindfucks" -- Last Year at Marienbad, Meshes of the Afternoon, many Lynch staples, many other Resnais films, lots of avant garde shorts (here is a fantastic list) -- are ignored in place of contemporary films with minor twists. Any formal complexity is completely dismissed as 'pretentious' or a 'gimmick' or whatever. This list is just an array of popular films with complicated plots (Revolver? Really?); it's a shame /r/movies in general hates to engage with films that are, in fact, more difficult to understand and interpret.
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Terminator 2: Judgment Day.
Somehow went nearly 22 years of my life without seeing this action-packed masterpiece. The Terminator impressed me, but Judgment Day took it to a whole new level. Some of the best action I've ever seen, out of this world special effects (considering this was made in '91), imaginative, fresh writing with sympathetic characters and surprisingly excellent humor, and fucking Schwarzy killed it. That man was made for the role of the Terminator.
5 stars.
I wrote a more in depth review on letterboxd here if you're interested.
The list of Edgar's Favourite 1000 Films that's mentioned in the video.
I have barely made a dent.
Also the bit where Edgar corrects the release year reminds me of a similar situation in a film course I took at college (UK) where my teacher and I disagreed about the year The Wicker Man was released and she double-checked and admitted I had it right. Was a cool but nerdy moment.
(And then everyone stood up and clapped /s)
The Guest is a great movie but the soundtrack is even beyond that. It was compiled by Zombi and you can credit it with discovering the guys who made the soundtrack for Stranger Things, they appeared on 2 tracks of The Guest and all the tracks are that kind of sound. Not the first synthwave soundtrack but one of the best.
in the brilliant show Review it ends 3 episodes into Season 3. It's a fitting ending, just comes abruptly after season 1 & 2 having 9 & 10 episodes respectively.
This is from mubi.com
What sets Kane apart:
>It was produced, co-written, directed, and starred a man who was all of 25 years old.
>Nobody in the film had ever been in a film before.
>It has more effects shots than Star Wars-see the Ebert commentary on that.
>Great performances by actors playing characters twice their own age.
>Welles plays a man in his 20s, 40s, and 60s.
>The movement of the camera was radical and rarely seen in any film, especially Hollywood.
>Deep focus photography-everything in the the frame is in focus-this requires massive amounts of lighting.
>You can see the ceilings in Citizen Kane. Before, and usually after, Kane, you never see a ceiling in a movie, because there are no ceilings on sets-that is where the lights and microphones go. Welles hid the microphones with false ceilings made of cloth.
>Welles’ camera angles- obtuse or ‘dutch’ angles, camera in the floor, check and check.
>The star of the film is not seen for almost the first 20 minutes of the film.
>The movie begins with faux newsreel footage.
>No credits before the movies starts.
>Just a simple title “Citizen Kane, by Orson Welles”
>Possibly the first film in which its story is pieced together out of order-something that Pulp Fiction was lauded for some 5 decades later.
I think Kane is one of the films that needs to be watched again with commentary after the initial viewing.
As far as related films. I would check out the Scarlet Empress (1934). The visuals are quite unique for the time period and the style is somewhat similar to Kane. They both deal with power politics and the complexity of character in their own way.
In case you still needed definitive proof that /r/movies actually does change their opinions on movies over time here you go: Star Wars: The Force Awakens was #141 on last years list and this year the top comment for it has only 16 upvotes and it is also one of the top results if you sort by controversial
Really not trying to be snobby, but you can look at /r/movies top 1000 and see the recency bias outright: https://letterboxd.com/chrimas15/list/reddit-top-1000-2018/
I'm sorry but there's no way someone can ever reasonably convince me the lego movie is the 101st best movie and Mean Girls is in the top 250. Also the top ten is the biggest reddit circlejerk lol
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There is no better movie review site for parents. It's just too easy to forget severe scenes and such in movies when you haven't seen them in a while. It's especially useful for movies you haven't seen yet.
For example, I went to see How to Train Your Dragon with my kids (including a 3 year old) and knew from the review that there was only one scene I had to be careful of. When that one came up, I distracted her with M & M s
Well at least the trailer is out now. Looks pretty good.
Edit: Ah, they took the page down again. It was put up early.
Edit2: Someone put it on youtube.
It's certainly a major trend, but I'd argue the current mainstream Horror equivalent of the 80s slashers are the Blumhouse-style jump scare ghost movies. Teens love them, and they make tons of money relative to their cost, and it's what people looking for a quick buck try to get in on.
I do think the last decade of 'slow burn' psychological adult-oriented Horror is how we're going to look back at this era, though, in the larger history of Horror aesthetics.
Oh, and I, too, love this kind of Horror film. My Letterboxd rankings might have some films in the subgenre you might have missed?
First and foremost, Eden Lake.
Then Martyrs, Under the Skin, Annihilation, Teorema, Cache, Funny Games, Amour, The Holy Mountain, Enter the Void, Love, I Stand Alone, Angst, It Comes at Night, Requiem for a Dream, Blue Velvet, We Need to Talk About Kevin, You Were Never Really Here, Dancer in the Dark, Dogville, Nymphomaniac, The Sacrifice (Tarkovsky), The Virgin Spring, Through a Glass Darkly, Shame (both McQueen and Bergman), Cries and Whispers, A Clockwork Orange, Eyes Wide Shut, Only God Forgives, The Neon Demon, The Eyes of My Mother, Kids, Happiness, The Vanishing, Satyricon, The Night Porter, A Tale of Two Sisters, Goodnight Mommy, W.R.: Mysteries of the Organism, Felt, Anomalisa, Queen of Earth, ... I'm missing a ton, but those are the first that come to mind.
See also this Letterboxd list.
I can rent a movie on iTunes and begin streaming it right after I press purchase. The screen caps I got was from their movie trailer website. If you compare the World of Warcraft trailer on Youtube to the one on iTunes, it's a noticeable difference, even with the color.
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I loved Submarine (2011), it's directed by Richard Ayoade.
>15-year-old deep-thinking Welsh schoolboy, Oliver Tate struggles to initiate and maintain a relationship with Jordana, his devilish, dark-haired classmate at their Swansea high school. As his parents' marriage begins to fall apart, similar problems arise in his relationship with Jordana.
OP is referencing the 1974 James Bond movie The Man with the Golden Gun where these islands were used as the remote base for the bad guy called Francisco Scaramanga, who is played by a younger Christopher Lee. Who most people know him as the actor that played Saruman in the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy of movies.
I think it benefits from a true story about the Enfield Poltergeist, I was first scarred by that story with Ghostwatch so I loved the story coming back in Conjuring 2.
Here's a pretty large list that someone compiled a couple years ago. It has anything from 'The Sound of Music' to 'Indiana Jones' to 'Letters From Iwo Jima' and 'Inglourious Basterds.'
https://letterboxd.com/meadford/list/wwii-movies-to-watch-in-chronological-order/
Secondary mirror in case the youtube ones go down. Use those first as this is an ftp server
Optionally, just watch it at http://trailers.apple.com/trailers/paramount/startrekintodarkness/, where it can also be downloaded. Mov format though and requires quicktime unless you have qtalternative.
very nice.
>Technology has no boundaries.
>
>Bobbi Johnson is a young literary sensation facing her difficult second novel. Already dealing with a crazed stalker and her junkie ex-boyfriend, Bobbi is convinced by her publisher to use new smart editing software and finds herself going head-to-head with an artificial intelligence determined to write her book for her.
Good site for film diaries and expanding your tastes, but the community is terrible. Everyone thinks they're comedians and each page is stuffed with power users and shitty one-liners. If they allowed gifs like Goodreads there would be plenty of that too.
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Identity is a great movie and all takes place at a road side motel.
The Innkeepers if you want more usual spooks
If you're quitting on all Tom Cruise films you're gonna miss out on some classics.
I've found over time that when I dislike an actor, I just end up delaying when I see some good films. There's no basis for one actor being consistently bad or good.
I dislike Jeremy Renner so much, I hate his face and how he speaks, but I loved Wind River so if I wrote that off, I'd be lesser for it.
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I made a list of period Horror films in chronological order, if you're looking for some ideas. There's probably a hundred older gothic Victorian and Samurai ghost films that aren't on there, but it's not a bad place to start.
>A single mother and her slacker sister find an unexpected way to turn their lives around in the off-beat dramatic comedy. In order to raise the tuition to send her young son to private school the mom starts an unusual business – a biohazard removal/crime scene clean-up service.
I really like using Letterboxd, but I agree that finding good reviewers is tough, since so many users seem to treat the platform like an extension of Tumblr. Here are some suggestions:
I listen to the Filmspotting podcast, so I follow both hosts Adam Kempenaar and Josh Larson. I also follow Peter Labuza, a film critic and scholar who often watches and writes about more obscure films, which I appreciate. I also follow some of the more popular reviewers. David Ehrlich is a film critic at Indiewire and his reviews (often taken from full reviews on Indiewire) are very good. I also follow users SilentDawn and Josh Lewis, both of whom review a lot of films and write thoughtful reviews.
I'm not opposed to some shameless self-promotion, so if you'd like to follow me, here's my account: https://letterboxd.com/PeterGavaris/
There was a real no wave film scene, it's just decidedly punk in its distribution and production methods so you'll have to scramble a bit to find and watch these - actually it looks like a lot of these are on youtube. I think this list is a pretty good sampler:
https://mubi.com/lists/cinema-of-transgression
You Killed Me First, Death Valley 69, and Submit to Me I remember as all being emblematic of the style. Raw Nerves is a little different in tone but also worth watching. Interestingly enough, Kathryn Bigelow, director of some arguably very non punk movies, started out tangential to this scene. If you want to go deeper the book 'Deathtripping: Cinema of Transgression' is pretty good.
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That 1st Vacation poster is really a masterpiece level spoof, and I'm not even sure of what. Maybe the original Star Wars poster, or maybe that one just resembles an earlier trope I'm unaware of.
EDIT: So I went googling, and it seems like it's not a spoof of a particular poster, but the work of the same artist who established the style, turned up to 11 for comic purposes. Very effective!
Salts now works with your new API key.
Oh boy, I'm into old Hong Kong movies that barely exist anymore and you've just summarized like 50% of those movies.
For non-Hong Kong I would say
For Hong Kong though, if you can ever find the movie Yes, Madam! (1985) you HAVE to watch it. This is basically your thread right there. Mind-blowing fights and action, the rest is just a big WTF. Watch with an open mind and yes, the audio is of dubious quality.
If you like what you see, feel free to drop by again, I got a loooooong list of movies like this.
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God Bless America, directed by Bobcat Goldthwait, same as World's Greatest Dad.
>Taking out the trash, one jerk at a time.
>
>Fed up with the cruelty and stupidity of American culture, an unlikely duo goes on a killing spree, killing reality TV stars, bigots and others they find repugnant in this black comedy.
Sorta yea. Plex meta manager can create custom collections and auto updates them daily based on parameters you want. Personally, i use trakt.tv top watched weekly and i call it 'trending' in plex collection. https://trakt.tv/shows/watched/weekly theres one for movies too. I have like the top 20 things show up.
for The Endless, watch Resolution first!
I also want to add Timecrimes to the suggestions with those movies, I loved Triangle & Coherence.
The documentary series The Story of Film: An Odyssey was the first I heard of the amount of female writers in the early days of Hollywood. The highest paid scriptwriter from 1915-1930 was Frances Marion.
For anyone on Letterboxd, you can keep track of how many you've seen in a somewhat easier format than scrolling the entire thing here.
For the record, I'm at 22%.
I had the same problem, this is what I did to solve it.
(Make sure Delay Release Dates by a day is turned off in settings.)
-First I changed my timezone (it was not set) on trakt.tv (https://trakt.tv/settings#datetime)
-(still on trakt.tv) Then I added GoT to my collection.
-Then I did a Force Sync Trakt Activities from tools> Trakt Sync Tools.
-Open Seren/My shows/Collection/Game Of Thrones/season 8/
The first episode showed up.
Hope this helps
His Letterboxd review, for anyone who cares:
https://letterboxd.com/ralfmakesmovies/film/ant-man-and-the-wasp/
I'm not gonna judge since I haven't seen the movie yet, but at least his reasons for disliking the movie are actual criticisms, and not whatever his TLJ review was.
It varies from project to project.
More often than not yes, we get to watch the whole movie (and do so hundreds of times over) long before it's in theaters. Though it's not unheard of for a film to still be in post-production and missing music, VFX, etc. and the distributor is still figuring out how they want to market it.
Hell, sometimes what we're working with is an early rough cut or just a bunch of unedited dailies. This happens a lot with indies that haven't yet found a distributor: we create a sort of mock-trailer with the rough cut that shows a potential distributor how the film could be presented to the public once it's finished.
Does this ruin the movies for us? Not at all. I like to think that cutting a trailer means being a good film student. So if it's a film that you can really sink your teeth into, it's an absolute pleasure to watch it over and over and dissect its themes, the characters, and so on.
We recently did the trailer for a film like this, Blue Ruin and I'd gladly watch that film 100 more times.
A Thai film called Blissfully Yours doesn't have its opening credits until 40 minutes in.
But I heard that there's a Chinese movie that just premiered at Cannes this week called Long Days Journey Into Night (borrows Eugene O'Neill's title, not an adaptation) that doesn't drop its title card until 70 minutes in, and then there's a 50 minute long shot that's in 3D. Also heard that the single shot is pretty much the only thing that makes it worthwhile. Edit: I take that back, I misinterpreted initial reactions.
If you don't mind subs then I Saw The Devil is a great one, your main character kind of has the traits you're looking for but acting them out in revenge.
As for English, I suggest Prisoners, good guy but how far would you go for your child.
Haha damn it man I'm really disappointed that this isn't a discussion of Peter Jackson's Bad Taste but yes, just try to be patient with your friends. Try to remember what some of your 'gateway' films were and recommend them to your friends. At some point, something will probably click. I think there is more or less a movie out there for everyone that will make them go 'oh wow movies can be more than I thought.' Unfortunately plenty of people don't end up ever seeing 'their' movie.
I'm very excited to see this and Jeremy Saulnier's Hold The Dark. I guess they're both coming soon since it seems like they've been screened to critics. Jacob Knight from Birth Movies Death has reviewed both on letterboxd already:
>Evans tries his hand at something non-Silat related, producing a left field slow burn that feels like John Huston adapted a lost Clive Barker story. Suitably gnarly, Evans’ penchant and flair for extreme violence and gore is present and accounted for, especially during the third act, where it takes over right when the somewhat obvious themes of religious hypocrisy and fascism threaten to beat you into submission. Dan Stevens continues to own a genuinely strange screen presence, while Michael Sheen is all brogue and brimstone. Glad Netflix is giving guys like Evans and Saulnier a ton of cash to make movies no studio would probably touch (even if I’d rather see their widescreen visions in an auditorium rather than my living room).
https://letterboxd.com/jacobknight/film/apostle-2018/
>A hyper-portentous neo Hemingway riff where darkness creeps in on those left at the edges of human civilization; law, order, and family meaning different things when social morality is stripped from the equation. Contains an austere patience that hasn’t been present in Saulnier’s other pictures, which renders his trademark graphic violence all the more shocking (a set piece that practically remakes Kubrick’s FULL METAL JACKET sniper sequence with a heavy-caliber machine gun in a barn is 10 of the tensest, bloodiest minutes you’ll see all year). Yet there’s also an oddly spiritual undercurrent, where codes and belief systems are allowed to take the place of established order, colliding and clashing and causing chaos in the wilderness. Don’t make me choose which of his films is my favorite, because I just can’t (though it may be this one).
https://letterboxd.com/jacobknight/film/hold-the-dark/
get hype
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Seinfeld: The Contest, the group sees who can go the longest without masturbating.
>George's mother throws her back out when she falls down after catching him doing "you know." When George says he'll never do it again, Jerry challenges him to a contest of self-denial, when he accepts, Elaine and Kramer want in on the action, or rather the lack of it.
https://mubi.com/films/the-red-balloon
Could have been inspired by this. I'm pretty sure there are other similar videos, the concept doesn't seem to be that unique..
This is a great idea.
I'll be compiling all of the personality/celebrity top ten profiles and making a list out of them like this one.
It will be ready later in the day.
Are they philosophical? I thought you were looking for the likes of Waking Life or The Mindscape of Alan Moore
Prisoners
>When Keller Dover's daughter and her friend go missing, he takes matters into his own hands as the police pursue multiple leads and the pressure mounts. But just how far will this desperate father go to protect his family?
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I don’t think he hated horror films. The issue for him was that so many horror films are subpar. As much as I love Silent Night, Deadly Night...come on...its not a good movie.
Here’s what a quick google search illustrates about horror films he enjoyed. Some are classics, some are just fun...but I think it indicates he didn’t blindly hate horror.
https://letterboxd.com/31nitesofhorror/list/horror-films-that-roger-ebert-liked/
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The female character in that movie actually has a test named after her that is given to other movies, the "Mako Mori test", similar to the Bechdel test, which a surprising ammount of movies fail and it doesn't sound like they would upon first hearing the rules:
>The Bechdel Test, sometimes called the Mo Movie Measure or Bechdel Rule is a simple test which names the following three criteria: (1) it has to have at least two women in it, who (2) who talk to each other, about (3) something besides a man.
>The Mako Mori test is passed if the movie has a) at least one female character b) who gets her own narrative arc c) that is not about supporting a man’s story.
Here's a directory of films that have passed both tests:
https://letterboxd.com/waltgoggins/list/the-mako-mori-test/year/2018/
and also the Bechdel test site:
Not sure why this is not getting more love, the teaser trailer was one of the most upvoted links in the last few months. I think this movie looks amazing and is going to be a big hit for Pixar once again, at least critically.
Apple has the US trailer here: http://trailers.apple.com/trailers/disney/insideout/ More or less the same, but they replace soccer with hockey in the day dream sequence.
My most desired releases would be:
Pastoral: To Die in the Country
Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill!
The Brown Bunny
Trouble Every Day
Helter Skelter
Son of the White Mare
In a Glass Cage
Killer of Sheep
Bush Mama
The Spook Who Sat by the Door
Mikey and Nicky
Girlfriends
Born in Flames
It was always ironic. The point is that Doe sanctimoniously views himself as some external arbiter, condemning others while harboring his own greater sins, as if two wrongs somehow make a right.
I go into my interpretation in greater detail here if you're interested.
There is a website that does exactly this, if people would bother to use the google: http://www.kids-in-mind.com/
However, shitty parents are always going to be shitty parents and not bother to research this kind of stuff then blame their mistake on other people.
Rawhead Rex is a fun monster horror movie from the 80s and filmed in Ireland.
Also, Murder Party is by the director of Blue Ruin and Green Room but I never find anyone who's see it as well.
Oh I forgot, the gang made reference to all this Emmy & award stuff in the episode The Gang Tries Desperately to Win an Award
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If you do try, use this link for how to get a 60 day free trial.
And try this link for what's available on Shudder
Had plans to see a movie with a friend this Friday and we just changed our theater because one of these is in our area. I'll be the hero this sub needs.
Edit: Hey friends, so I'm probably not going to go to the theater tonight once I heard they were releasing the trailer online! Here it is! Better quality than I could have provided and about 12 hours earlier than I would have been able to post it! If I end up at the movies anyway, I'll bootleg one for you guys <3
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Tree of Life. I watched it once and cried. Was fearful of the movie's potential, and my own hype. Avoided watching the trailer again at all costs. Saw the movie. Lost my shit completely.
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An ongoing RIP to the menchies of the following critics:
Harvey S. Karten-Compuserve
Matt Singer-ScreenCrush
Keith Uhlich-no review yet but his tweet already has an angry reply.
After watching the trippy 70's Japanese horror film House, this review on Letterboxd really stuck with me. It's sincere and contemplative, inviting you to enjoy the magic that is House. The author draws on interviews with the director to explain the film's place in Japan's history and talks about how this film exemplifies the magic of cinema.
> At the root, House, like the best movies I know -- even and especially, low cinema, b-movies, horror -- seems to me an overflowing love for movies or an obsession with film. The rest of the magic -- the joy and struggle -- flows from that source. > > To me, cinema is falling in love. And there is such joy here.