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My Dinner With Andre
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Directed by Louis Malle.
A extended conversation between two old friends over dinner proves an unexpectedly fascinating subject for a film in the critically acclaimed My Dinner with André. The talkers in question are André Gregory, a renowned experimental theater director, and playwright and actor Wallace Shawn, both of whom play themselves. The film is not a documentary, but a condensation of several real discussions fashioned into a dramatic exchange by Shawn and director Louis Malle. The subtle conflict stems from the differences in the men's characters: Gregory is an inquisitive, uninhibited wanderer, willing to travel to remote lands to take part in unusual foreign rituals, while Shawn is the cynical, realistic New Yorker, more concerned with the challenges and rewards of day-to-day city life. Malle approaches their philosophical yet playful back-and-forth with a straightforward, minimal style that only rarely wanders outside its restaurant setting. The focus therefore falls on Shawn's and Gregory's contrasting verbal styles and facial expressions, highlighting conversational nuances normally lost on film. While the idea of watching any conversation for over 90 minutes, no matter how fascinating, may turn off some viewers, enough audiences have supported the film to make it an art-house classic. ~ Judd Blaise, All Movie Guide
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RisseladaRisselada Re: Waking Life: An animated Ph ...
by Risselada in Philosophy of Film
loved it.
"Yeah I forgot about My Dinner With Andre. Amazing how a feature length movie with just two people sitting and talking in a restaurant with no other interruption or plot can be so much more engrossing than the majority of films that are given astronomical budgets.I've seen What the #$*! Do We Know?! and not only did I find the narrative portion of the film to be both pretentious and pandering (and WTF was with that horrible wedding scene with the dancing CGI blobs?), everything that the "experts" were saying had no central theme and were often at odds with eachother. I couldn't believe it at the end when they showed these people's credentials and the one who spoke the most and with the most authority was a chiropractor.But the most rediculous part of all was Ramtha! Here's a description of who this person is from wikipedia:Ramtha is an entity that JZ Knight, an American self-claimed spiritual medium claims to channel. According to Knight, Ramtha was a Lemurian war ... " [More]
quintquint Re: Waking Life: An animated Ph ...
by quint in Philosophy of Film
loved it.
"Godard's more rambling, political flings like Tout Va Bien, Sympathy for the Devil and more recently Notre Musique are in this class of 'movies of ideas". For that matter, isn't My Dinner with Andre the most popular movie in this vein? I love these sorts of films. I've watched Waking Life a couple times now and it's a treat because it doesn't let me be passive to the experience. I have to engage intellectually with the subject matter or I'm just lost, staring blankly at the screen until I fall asleep. I think that's okay. It's a different sort of engagement than most people expect. On the flipside, I found What the #$*! Do We Know?! to be completely tiresome and even condescending. If you're going to throw me in the deep water, save the water wings. " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: For Video Game Players
by Risselada in PulpFiction1975
loved it.
"I'm just wondering if you could get a kid to start playing a game version of 2001: A Space Odyssey. Would they be disappointed when it wasn't quite like Star Wars Rogue Squadron? And will they actually be able to beat the game when they realize the final challenge will be to sit in front of the screen for fifteen hours while they are subjected to what may be seizure inducing images of varying colors and textures? How about this one "You are Fitzcarraldo. Your mad dream of building an opera house in the middle of a South American jungle forces you to take the wakiest and wildest boat ride of your life. Let's go off roadin!" or My Dinner With Andre: the game. "Play as every kid's hero, Wallace Shawn, at an intense dinner situation where it is up to you to stear the conversation into the most exciting direction possible, or else Andre may get angry" Or a game based on 12 Angry Men. The game starts out and you watch a courtroom trial as a member of a jury. Then you go into the j ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
loved it.
It would be difficult to sell Hollywood producers on a movie that was nothing more than an extended conversation between two friends at a restaurant. Yet the risk-taking director Louis Malle turned this talk-fest into an art-house success. My Dinner with André is in many ways the ultimate art-house movie: low budget, highly philosophical, and demanding an intellectual audience's unstinting attention. Malle used two theater veterans, actor-playwright Wallace Shawn and director André Gregory, to play themselves, using a script based on their actual discussions. The film works surprisingly well, primarily because the two men seem to have opposite temperaments: Shawn shy and cynical, Gregory curious and adventurous. The camera rarely wanders away from the dinner table, yet the film's impact is considerable; Malle lets the audience unloosen its own imagination and thoughts, and the effect is much like listening intently to an excellent radio play. My Dinner with André is a one-of-a-kind film, and its success is unlikely to be repeated. ~ Michael Betzold, All Movie Guide
 



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Risselada
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loved it.
quint
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loved it.
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