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Smooth_J Blog

  • Part dos

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    …of my list.  I’m keeping the blurbs short on this one.

     

    11.  The Godfather Part 1 & 2 As close to perfect as films get.  There is not much to be said about these films that hasn’t already been said.  Completely timeless classics.

     

    12.  The Fisher King Another great Gilliam film.  Robin William’s performance is amazing, as are Jeff Bridge’s and Mercedes Ruehl’s.  The emotional power of this movie is phenomenal.

     

    13.  Children of Men Cuaron’s bleak vision of the future is excellently original.  It is a poignant, provocative, and disturbing masterpiece.

     

    14.  The Departed I know it’s a little bit sloppy, but it’s just so fricken cool.  The superb performances by the entire cast perfectly portray Monahan’s razor sharp script.

     

    15.  The Lord of the Rings Trilogy Peter Jackson perfectly adapted Tolkien’s classic series and created a few of the most breathtaking movies ever put on film.

     

    16.  The Proposition Easily my favorite western.  Nick Cave’s poetic score and script along with John Hillcoat’s desolately beautiful direction makes this film unlike anything I have ever seen before.

     

    17.  The Truman Show This is such a great movie.  It is awesome as both a commentary on our media driven culture and as an uplifting human story.

     

    18.  The Big Lebowski/The Man Who Wasn’t There I grouped these together, as they’re both Coen Brothers neo-noir masterworks.  The Dude is one of the greatest characters ever created, and the latter film is an obscenely underrated work of art.

     

    19.  Once Upon a Time in the West While The Man With No Name Trilogy may be regarded as Leone’s greatest work, I firmly believe that this film outshines those films in almost every way.  A starkly poetic western.

     

    20.  There Will Be Blood Destined to become a classic of cinema.  It is an outstanding portrait of American greed and ambition, an absolute masterpiece.  And I still believe that Anderson’s best is yet to come.


  • Calculated bizarrity as only David Lynch can do

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    Under discussion:

    Inland Empire  (2006)

    Inland Empire is exceptionally strange.  There is almost no comprehendable narrative, and where there is one, it is so sketchy and surreal that it is still difficult to follow.  It is a moody, dark, 3 hour nightmare.  It is a certified, hardcore mind-f*ck, leaving you with almost no sense of what you just watched, making it near impossible to decipher with just one viewing.  I loved every minute of it.

    Now, I know there are several theories about the plot floating around, and I have formulated my own after a repeat viewing.  I'll start with the basic plot, that is actually completely coherent and developed for at least part of the film:  An aging actress, played by the glorious Laura Dern, is cast in a film that could have the potential to rekindle her career.  She is cast alongside a notorious womanizer, who is warned not to try with her on account of her possessive and violent husband.  The film is apparently cursed, as revealed by their director, a criminally underutilized Jeremy Irons.  The rest of the film is up to the imagination as to what it all means.

    I have formulated a theory of my own.  While it is very possible that the film does in fact only occur in the mind of Dern's character, I like to believe that it follows a normal (if convoluted) narrative.  As Dern becomes more and more melded with her character in the film Blue Tomorrows, she loses her grasp with reality and delves into fear and apprehension.

    The subplot of the two Polish lovers is quite obviously of the two previous leads of the Polish version of the film.  They are both killed by a mysterious man, an omen of death to anyone who plays the lead in the film.  He hypnotizes Theroux's character's wife into killing Dern, but this event really only occurs in Tomorrows.  More about him is revealed later in Lynch fashion, but I'm not going to spoil the ending.

    There are several other subplots, better described as hallucinatory sidenotes, but one could go on for days discussing them and their meaning.  The important thing is that Lynch has given us yet another dazzlingly  impossible puzzle to sort out.  Hats off to you, Mr. Lynch.


  • A Boredom Induced, painstaking list

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    Under discussion:

    Blade Runner  (1982)

    The Shining  (1980)

    Pi  (1998)

    Fight Club  (1999)

    Memento  (2000)

    Donnie Darko  (2001)

    Kill Bill Vol. 1  (2003)

    Kill Bill Vol. 2  (2004)

    Knocked Up  (2007)

    After much deliberation, I have created a comprehensive list of my current 30 favorite movies ever made.  I am still debating about it in my head, considering there are still so many more movies that I want to include on it.  However, I widdled it down to 30.  I'll reveal them periodically over the next few days, with my absolute favorites (1-10) having long explanations, and then after that getting shorter and shorter.  Here's numbers 21-30 with brief explanations.

    21.  The Shining  Stanley Kubrick's masterpiece of horror is in my humble opinion the scariest film ever made.  I have never seen anything that has contained as much suspense and as much sheer terror as this movie.  And while I usually don't like the genre a whole lot, I love this movie.

    22.  The 40 Year Old Virgin/Knocked Up  There was a tie here, and I figured I could group them together since it's the same crew.  Apatow's movies have changed comedy, and both of these films are almost beyond hilarious.  I could never get sick of either of them.

    23.  Blade Runner  I love sci-fi.  It's probably one of my favorite genres, whether it be film or book.  This movie is near perfect as both provocative sci-fi and as neo-noir.  Outstanding.

    24.  Donnie Darko  This back end of the list contains a lot of mind-benders, and I feel this is the best of the bunch.  It's strange, morbid, and surreal, but amazingly relateable and compelling.  And Frank still scares the sh*t out of me.

    25.  Fight Club  This movie was just awesome.  Brad Pitt and Edward Norton are perfect, and surprisingly compatible playing two sides of the same character.  There are so many great scenes and quotes in this movie too.

    26.  Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas  I know this is a complete druggie movie, but I still just can't seem to get it out of my head.  It's hilarious and offbeat, but Thompson and Gilliam just seem to have so much to say about America, even in a drug-induced stupor.  And Johnny Depp is dead-on gonzo.

    27.  Pi  I only recently saw this movie, but there's just something about it that struck close to home.  The use of black and white is amazing, and some of the ideas presented are so interesting.

    28.  Kill Bill Vol. 1 & Vol. 2  These movies are great.  The fight scenes are amazing, and there are some scenes that are hysterical.  Everything about them is just so cool.  (As a note, I decided to include film series as one entry.)

    29.  Memento  One of the most influential mind-f***s ever made, it is also one of the finest.  The story is so strange and so compelling, as is the style in which it's done.  This movie seriously was gipped by the Academy and others in so many ways.

    30.  Close Encounters of the Third Kind  Another sci-fi masterpiece that I couldn't resist including.  The idea for this film is amazing, as is the style in which it's done.  I love how you can tell that this was Spielberg "back in the day", when his imagination was really flourishing.

    End of part one.  (As you may be able to tell, I am a compulsive list-maker.)


  • Happy Pi day!

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    Under discussion:

    Brazil  (1985)

    Eraserhead  (1977)

    Pi  (1998)

    First of all, I would like to say that Pi Day is the worst holiday ever created, and I hope the creators of it die a terrible death (well, maybe not that bad, but I hope they at least get crapped on by a bird).  However, since I recently saw Darren Aronofsky's outstanding film Pi, I figured that this holiday was good for something and that I would write something about it.

    As you can see, I did a recent post on another of Aronofsky's films, The Fountain, and as you can see, I was not a huge fan of it.  As a result, I didn't have enormous expectations in seeing this movie.  I mean, I remember that Requiem for a Dream was very good, but I saw that about three years ago, and I only saw the R-rated version, not the full one.

    Anyways, I found Pi to be an absolutely amazing movie.  I was actually convinced of how much I was going to like it by the haunting techno music playing while on the menu screen of the DVD.

    Sean Gullette is surprisingly good as the lead character, a math genius who struggles with a childhood trauma and insanity.  Some of his paranoid freak-outs are great; he successfully pulls off scenes that could have easily been ineffective if done by a lackluster actor.  But he goes all-in to this role, a role which is not only disturbing but sometimes transcendent.  The rest of the cast only truly appear in the dream-like fervor that Max is constantly in, except for his mentor, played by a magnificent Mark Margolis.  He is the one supporting character in the film that feels real, and though he feeds Max some of his ideas, he seems to be Max's only true link to reality.

    The rest of the movie is a surprisingly meaningful excersize in the nature of paranoia.  Though the film takes you through Max's drugged-up yet brilliant psyche, everything about his freak-outs ring true.  His journal entries that often narrate the film are a very nice addition to the sometimes incomprehensible action, which is sometimes confusing, but just press PAUSE and rewind once and you'll get it.  There are so many subtleties to the movie that one viewing just isn't enough...you really have to watch, and you will not be disappointed.

    The scenery is amazing, mostly occuring in his small confined apartment and in the subway station, but both places just ooze a sense of caustraphobia and paranoia.  The creation of the computer itself is an amazing feat, and its strange and intricate wiring almost bring to mind all the ducts from Brazil.  One of the strangest things, to me, was the processor, elevated above the rest of the workings in a glass case.  It was just so profound to me for some reason...but then again, a lot of aspects of this film were.

    I have heard a lot of references to "Midnight Cinema" in the discussion of this movie...I have not seen Eraserhead yet, but I plan to very shortly, because apparently that is the masterpiece of the genre.  And it seriously must be amazing if its better than Pi.  The black-and-white camera is utilized to outstanding effect, because it gives the entire movie a very strange and foreboding vibe.

    While I'm not a huge fan of math, the concepts introduced by the film (though farfetched) were extremely interesting.  I found myself just as intrigued by these concepts as by the trippy occurences happening throughout them.  I have really been noticing a lot of spirals in everyday life now, which is really freaking me out a little bit...I feel like I'm going to come home one day to snot-like goo bursting out of my computer.

    Pi is a new addition to my favorite films...now I'm going to go suck it up and re-watch Requiem and see if I like it more.

    "When I was a little kid my mother told me not to stare into the sun. So once when I was six, I did."


  • 300 acid trips?

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    Under discussion:

    I'm not generally a huge fan of the rock-doc genre...in fact, I'm generally don't like documentaries in general.  However, I was pretty intrigued when I saw this come in the mail, considering I actually have listened to a bunch of 13th Floor Elevators songs, since I do like 60s psychadelia.  However, I didn't realize how strange a story there is behind this band and its frontman.  The story is tragic and interesting, but the style that the film-makers utilize is very stale and borderline boring.  While you continue to be hooked to the film just to see how insane Roky Erickson really was, there is nothing that great brought to the table.  The film seems to leave out large gaps of his life, and since the topic is sort of obscure, there appears to be a shortage of archival footage on the man, since you see the same tapes in bits and pieces throughout the movie.  Also, as is the case with a lot of other similarly-themed documentaries, the film seems extremely exploitative and sometimes (possibly unintentionally) pokes fun at the subjects that it's chronicling.

    All in all, the film is a by the book documentary.  There's a promising singer with a messed-up family, whose drug abuse mixed with his childhood traumas cause him to aquire schizophrenia and go insane.  I feel like I've heard similar stories about a million times, and as I previously mentioned, the film-makers don't really bring on much new material to the genre.  The courtroom scenes are very dormant, since it really didn't seem to be a very high-profile case, and everybody in the courtroom (even sometimes the family) seems to be bored and distant.  Therefore, this was a very bad way to begin the film, and it doesn't really hook you at all.  But when the movie gets going and begins to dictate Roky's early life with the 13th Floor Elevators, the movie finally hooks you.  This was by far the most interesting part of the film.

    What the movie claims (and if true, what I did not realize) is that the 13th Floor Elevators in fact started a movement in San Francisco psychadelic music in making their sound more electric and R&B based than the folk based tunes of bands such as Grateful Dead.  This aspect of the film was very alluring to me, and it was to my sister as well, who I watched it with.  But the film did not seem to capitalize on this.  They treated that era of Roky's life as sort of a sidenote, and focused more on his insanity and his family issues.  While his insanity was a gripping and tragic thing to watch, his family issues just got annoying.

    That is where the film seemed exploitative.  It made no distinct effort to try and make you lfeel for any of the members of Roky's family (except maybe his mom, who was in my mind the worst of them all).  The film-makers basically wanted you to think that his entire family was messed up, and that, along with his extraordinary amount of drug use, caused his eventual schizophrenia.  I feel like his brother in Pittsburgh (his name escapes me for the moment...) was the most heart-felt of the bunch, but I also felt like he used his brother to an extent.  He was the one that seemed the most set on getting Roky back into performing, which is a very good idea, but I got the feeling that he just wasn't ready for that.  All his brothers were just weird, and so was his dad.  (I was really disturbed by the reference to one of the brothers being "with his father in bed.")

    The film also attempts to manipulate your sympathies too much.  It focused a lot on Roky's mother, and her great love for him, but his insanity was partially her fault.  In the accounts heard from the brothers and Roky's own son, Evelyn Erickson shut him away from the world.  She tried to "protect him", but in doing so she only increased his distance from the world by isolating him to his house.  And her firm belief in not using drugs was just stupid, especially after you see Roky in Pittsburgh after taking them and how much more down to earth he is.

    Despite all of the films flaws, there were several very interesting aspects, most prominently Roky's stint in psychadelia with the 13th Floor Elevators.  The accounts of his extreme drug use (300 acid trips???) are really strange, and it's very cool to hear accounts of people who lived through that era and witnessed the entire drug culture that Roky was so engraved in.  I also found it awesome how Roky once considered himself an alien, who was zapped by human beings into this human creature.  It was disturbing, yet hilarious at the same time.  And the mentions of his time in the asylum was cool, except there really wasn't many.  It was these parts when the film was at its best.

    Overall, though, it was a pretty mediocre documentary.  It's respectable, and the topic is great, but there just wasn't quite enough information on the parts that really should have been emphasized.  But something that I just found out:  Roky Erickson is back performing, and does concerts back in Austin.  That's pretty uplifting, considering he's a schizoid coming out of a mental asylum.


  • Good idea, terrible delivery

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    Under discussion:

    The Fountain  (2006)

    I really had to write something about this movie, considering I'm seeing raves for it everywhere when it really just wasn't that great.  The ideas Aronofsky presents are extraordinary, and some of the visuals are incredibly profound, but it's just that the way the story is delivered is stupid and melodramatic.

     I understand that this sort of movie isn't really about human drama...but you need it to at least be presentable to make it a relevant movie.  You cannot sacrifice any sort of human credibility for good visuals and ideas.

    I mean, watching this film was frustrating for me.  Every part of the premise is perfect...love, loss, redemption, spirituality, and just the film's entire vibe was flawless.  It could have been an amazing movie, a complete and total masterpiece.  But it just didn't deliver when it needed to.  To create a masterpiece, every element of storytelling has to be there.  This had the visual and philosophical elements nailed...but the human feeling was hideously lacking.

    I think people are hung up on this film because the ideas are so great, and because it's hard not to like a film by the great Aronofsky.  But if you get past the ideas put forth, and the hypnotizingly beautiful images, you will realize there is nothing there.

    I wanted to like this movie, I really did...but it's just not up to par.  It did not live up to its outstandingly promising premise, which I'm still sad about.  If you want a movie that presents ideas and visuals in a way such as this and still delivers on the human level, watch Sunshine.  However, The Fountain is still worth watching if you're in a fix for provocative sci-fi.


 

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