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  • The Princess Bride

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    Under discussion:

    This is one of my three all-time favorite movies, and I'm not really sure why. Everything just works. Rob Reiner, the director, nailed it. Peter Falk and Fred Savage nailed it. Cary Elwes, Mandy Patinkin, and Andre the Giant nailed it. Christopher Guest totally nailed it with his villain-with-the-flat-affect characterization of heartless, truly heartless, evil. Even Mark Knopfler nailed the score.

    How can you not love a movie with the characters "The Ancient Booer" and "The Assistant Brute." I've watched it several times since it came out, and it draws me in every time. It's a truly iconic fantasy.

    My current theory on why the movie works so well is that the characters seem to respect each other. The Dread Pirate Roberts, Inigo, and Fezzik not only respect each other as adversaries, they seem even to care while they are adversaries, making their morph into friends completely credible. It's ensemble acting at a high level, and it makes it almost necessary for us the viewers to care about them, too.


  • Liquid Sky

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    Film Name  Production Year

    Liquid Sky  (1982)

    The title claims to be local slang for heroine in early 80s Manhattan. I class this film (with "Donnie Darko") as a noble but failed experiment.

    Ostensibly about the club scene in Manhattan, the plot thickens when aliens land on the apartment roof of a lesbian night clubber and somehow steal the endorphins of her partners when they have a climax. Unfortunately, this theft is fatal for her partners. C'est la vie.

    The film is a great documentary of its time, and it explored gender issues,  homosexuality, and the self-closeting of gays and lesbians in the 70s as they sought to fit in in high school among the straight crowd. The director, Slava Tsukerman, and his co-screenwriter (and star of the film) Anne Carlisle manage to take the themes beyond that, however, and they've made a film that resonates in a weird, narcissistic way. It teeters on the edge of being a great movie, but it falls the wrong way. Well worth seeing, though.


 

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