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Risselada Blog

  • movie year countdown #8 - 1999 - The Virgin Suicides

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    Under discussion:

    This blog entry is part of my “movie year countdown”.  To read more about that check out my first Spout filmblog entry.

    The Virgin Suicides

    Well I like Sofia Coppola's Lost in Translation.  And I've recently been enjoying the album Moon Safari by Air.  And I know a lot of people who seemed infatuated by this movie, but boy it seemed pretty mediocre to me.

    I mean there were some enjoyable moments.  And as I think I heard someone say, there is this interesting and indefinable mix of fantasy and reality.  The ideal and the truth.  Nothing seemed to rise up to really grab me though.  And sadly it seemed like it wanted to.

    I guess you know what the ending is going to be, but it still came upon me rather abruptly, in a way that I feel like I could have been affected differently otherwise.

    Yeah the girls were pretty to look at, at least.  Maybe that was part of the point.

    rating: 6/10


  • movie year countdown #7 - 2000 - Werckmeister harmóniák (Werckmeister Harmonies)

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    Under discussion:

    This blog entry is part of my “movie year countdown”.  To read more about that check out my first Spout filmblog entry.

    Werckmeister harmóniák (Werckmeister Harmonies)

    I somehow knew before ever seeing a Béla Tarr movie that I would love them.  I'd read about his history, a few rare words from him, descriptions of his stories.  Even heard him referred to as the Kubrick of Eastern Europe.

    To try to explain this movie would be an enormous task, and probably futile.  According to Netflix there are only 39 shots in this film which lasts 145 minutes.  The pacing is right.  So is the camera work.  And the black and white composition is some of the most gorgeous I have ever seen.  Scenes of people just walking for several minutes or long storage trucks slowly driving by are works of visual art.  To live with this movie is beautiful and ponderous.

    I'm sure there's a whole lot that has to do with Hungarian culture and political situations that I am totally oblivious to.  Perhaps there is a lot more to get, but if there is I am not sad.  I am glad that this nation has such a fantastic filmmaker to speak to them or through them.  It makes it so much more enjoyable to me as I feel like I am having such a much more authentic experience of a certain time and place whether or not it is entirely realistic or in some ways very surreal.

    Rating: 9/10


  • movie year countdown #6 - 2001 - El Espinazo del diablo (The Devil's Backbone)

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    Under discussion:

    Blade  (1998)

    X-Men  (2000)

    Blade II  (2002)

    Spider-Man  (2002)

    Hellboy  (2004)

    Batman Begins  (2005)

    Superman Returns  (2006)

    Pan's Labyrinth  (2006)

    This blog entry is part of my “movie year countdown”.  To read more about that check out my first Spout filmblog entry.

    El Espinazo del diablo (The Devil's Backbone)

    When I first saw television ads for Hellboy, I remember thinking it looked like the absolute worst of the latest trend of rehashed movies based on comic books.  I hadn't even heard of this one, and it sounded about as generic and stupid a possible.  Don't ask me why I ended up watching it.  I worked at a video store at the time and was able to take home new releases for free before the release date.  I don't know why I took that movie home and stuck it in my DVD player.  But I did and it was fantastic.  Probably the fact that I hadn't heard of it before was for the best.  It was cool and fun and clever and funny.  Better than Spider-man, X-Men, Superman Returns, or even everyone's beloved Batman Begins in my opinion.

    I watched some special features and learned more about Guillermo del Toro.  I felt in many ways drawn to him.  I realized that I had also seen another one of his movies Blade II, but remembered very little about it.  I couldn't even differentiate it in my mind from the original Blade.  But I wanted to see more of his movies.  And after hearing from many different people recommendations for The Devil's Backbone, and all of the recent buzz about Pan's Labyrinth, I was pretty excited about this.

    I'd heard it was going to be pretty scary, but this wasn't true.  Mostly just creepy.  After the movie was over, I was not as blown away as I had hoped.  It was a solid film.  Well executed to be sure.  Good integrity and production value.  But not too much really gripping or original.  I decided to listen to the filmmaker's commentary nonetheless.

    Apparently del Toro recorded two commentaries for this film.  He makes note that the commentary I was hearing was a new one for a new edition of the DVD.  But I will tell you that listening to the commentary, for me, was a lot more interesting experience than watching the movie as it was the first time.  I discovered much of what del Toro's inspirations were.  What he was trying to do.  His philosophy of filmmaking and his approach.  I greatly respect and appreciate everything he said.

    He knew a lot about the history of the genres he was conjuring.  The gothic romance mostly.  The commentary was an interesting history lesson.  He talked often about how this was a genre that had many things that always repeated.  Very melodramatic and certain expected conventions.  Although he was trying to do something new with it as well, I suppose this may be why it didn't feel too fresh to me.

    Well, I'm still interested in Pan's Labyrinth somewhat, but even more so for Hellboy 2!

    final score:  7/10


  • movie year countdown #5 - 2002 - Im toten Winkel - Hitlers Sekretärin (Blind Spot. Hitler's Secretary)

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    Under discussion:

    Der Letzte Akt  (1955)

    Downfall  (2004)

    This blog entry is part of my “movie year countdown”.  To read more about that check out my first Spout filmblog entry.

    Im toten Winkel - Hitlers Sekretärin (Blind Spot. Hitler's Secretary)

    I don't know if I want to say too much about this one.  To describe the premise is simple.  The entire film is one woman in front of a camera telling her story.  This woman is 81-year-old Traudl Junge.  When she was a teenager, she worked in close proximity with Adolf Hitler as one of his few personal secretaries.  She ate lunch every day with him.  She was there in his final hours and was one of the last to see him alive.

    Apparently the filmmakers were able to convince her to tell her story on film, only a few months before she passed away.  One wonders if this woman almost holding on, avoiding death until she was finally, seemingly with almost resistance at times to pouring out her true honest feelings at the time.  Up until then she had apparently been mostly silent, although is credited and was probably the primary source for a Pabst film in the 50's titled Hitler: The Last Ten Days.

    Again, I don't know if I want to say too much more about it.  As a film, it is about as simple as possible.  I almost wonder what someone like Errol Morris might have done with this.  But as it stands you will be captivated by her story.  Unless you are completely uninterested in Hitler and how a man who is seen by most as the most famous form of human evil was like up close.  My thoughts have always been that people are not fundamentally evil, but twisted that way by any number of factors.  In Junge's stories we can see Hitler's humanity and often twisted sense of what he was doing was for the best.  Even while Junge recites these stories that indicate Hitler's humanity, she is aware of the horrible things that she later discovered he had been the cause of.  You can see that she feels disgusted by her own impression of this man at the time when she was with him.

    Although I said the premise is simple, there is one other somewhat unusual technique used in the filming of this movie.  There are times when we are watching Junge speaking, and then it cuts to another image of her watching the footage of herself that we were just watching.  We see her own often disturbed reaction to seeing her tell these stories.  Occasionally in this second reel of footage she comments on what she said at an earlier time, changing her own opinion of things.  It really reveals how tortured people were who were swept into Hitler's enticing regime.

    Besides the Pabst film, her story was the inspiration for the recent film Downfall, which I have yet to see, but apparently has Bruno Ganz in a standout performance as Hitler.

    The obligatory score: 8/10 stars


 

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