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Before Sunset
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Directed by Richard Linklater.
Richard Linklater directs the romantic drama Before Sunset, a sequel to Before Sunrise (1995). Jesse (Ethan Hawke) and Celine (Julie Delpy) were strangers who spent a loquacious night together in Vienna. Nine years later, Jesse has written a book about the encounter. During his accelerated European book tour, he reunites with Celine in Paris. Before Jesse's flight home, he joins Celine for a picturesque walk around Paris peppered with intimate conversation: at first, about the minutiae of their day-to-day lives and their relationships, and then about their lingering feelings for one another. Before Sunset was nominated for the Golden Bear at the Berlin International Film Festival. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide
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minerwerksminerwerks You're Not Gonna Miss This, Right?
by minerwerks in minerwerks Blog
liked it.
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"In its function as documentary on legendary rocker Roger "Roky" Erickson, 'You're Gonna Miss Me' features testimonials from rock notables like Patti Smith and Sonic Youth's Thurston Moore, as well as ubiquitous MTV talking head Kurt Loder. Interestingly enough, before we see any of them, and even before we see Roky himself, the first faces shown in this documentary are Roky's brother Sumner and his mother Evelyn. The typical modus operandi for documentaries on rock 'n' roll legends is to go heavy on exceedingly positive interviews about the history and significance of the subject. In the case of Roky Erickson, we do get a sense that his work with the 13th Floor Elevators in the mid '60s was seminal and worthy of recognition. Roky's songs heard throughout the film are uniformly strong and attention-grabbing. Even in a disheveled, hesitant state, Roky still slips into a performance effortlessly and beautifully. Surprisingly, though, the majority of ... " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Julie Delpy Dancing — Clip of t ...
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"I’ve just returned from a screening of 2 Days in Paris, a comedy written, directed, starring and edited by Julie Delpy of Before Sunrise/Before Sunset fame. Delpy has been very vocal about how her involvement in those Richard Linklater films helped her get funding for Paris. But I wonder if Delpy’s candor isn’t doing her new film a disservice. Earlier today, I read a review of Paris in L Magazine (via GreenCine Daily) which seems to exemplify the general critical reaction to the picture. “The movie suffers terribly of course from the inevitable comparisons to Before Sunrise/Sunset,” writes Benjamin Strong “But in all fairness to Delpy, show me a film that wouldn’t.” With that in mind, I came home from the Paris screening and watched several clips of Sunset on YouTube (cough cough the whole movie’s there in eight parts cough cough), and I think the comparison actually made 2 Days in Paris stand out to me as a more original film. It’s fair to make comparisons. 2 Days in Paris, like B ... " [More]
kibrikakibrika Totally New
by kibrika in kibrika Blog
loved it.
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"I was just (yesterday) introduced to spout.com by Four Eyed Monsters (at foureyedmonsters.com) and I am enjoying it greatly. I love the fact that the makers of the film get some credit for sending me to this lovely place. What more can a person who love lists and has always (actually only for a few years now) wished to begin recounting all the movies she has seen, give them some description and have a list of them! (Well, originally I wished that for books, but films too.) Thank You creaters of this place and makers of Four Eyed Monsters.As to the film - it was mostly impressing. It is as tasteful as the website suggests, it is romantic, beautiful, original and I loved the story. I hope to watch podcasts and other stuff the authors have to offer as well as get the quality download at some point in my life (probably when I start earning something).Somehow I have always wanted to be different, to have something other than everyone else has. Even though I know that in this world whe ... " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Julie Delpy Can't Get Her Sci-F ...
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"I stumbled across this story via the FILMMAKER Mag blog: in a lengthy story for the Contra Costa Times, Mary F. Pols talks to a number of female filmmakers, from super-indie to mega-Hollywood, about working in a business that is still overwhelmingly run by dudes. There's a lot of good stuff in the piece, but an anecdote from actress/director Julie Delpy particularly caught my eye. Delpy's second feature film as writer/director, 2 Days in Paris, opens in the U.S. next month. Festival buzz has generally been positive, but no one who's seen the thing can overlook the similarities between it and the film that marks Delpy's greatest triumph as an actress, Richard Linklater's Before Sunset. Well, turns out, there's a reason for that. After working for some of world cinema's greatest directors and attending NYU film school, Delpy "had a drawer full of scripts that reflected her love of science fiction and other nongirlie topics"--none of which she could find financing for. Then, as Pols ... " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Julie Delpy Can't Get Her Sci-F ...
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"I stumbled across this story via the FILMMAKER Mag blog: in a lengthy story for the Contra Costa Times, Mary F. Pols talks to a number of female filmmakers, from super-indie to mega-Hollywood, about working in a business that is still overwhelmingly run by dudes. There's a lot of good stuff in the piece, but an anecdote from actress/director Julie Delpy particularly caught my eye. Delpy's second feature film as writer/director, 2 Days in Paris, opens in the U.S. next month. Festival buzz has generally been positive, but no one who's seen the thing can overlook the similarities between it and the film that marks Delpy's greatest triumph as an actress, Richard Linklater's Before Sunset/em>. Well, turns out, there's a reason for that. After working for some of world cinema's greatest directors and attending NYU film school, Delpy "had a drawer full of scripts that reflected her love of science fiction and other nongirlie topics"--none of which she could find financing for. Then, as ... " [More]
MovieBabeMovieBabe Spider-Man 2 - Before Sunset
by MovieBabe in MovieBabe Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"By Tricia Olszewski Peter Parker just gives and gives and gives. But his dedication to fighting crime and whisking clueless children out of New York traffic as his alter ego, Spider-Man, only gets the perpetually tardy Peter branded as lazy and undependable. Even when he fudges a little, abusing his superpowers to, say, transport some pizzas within his boss’s 29-minutes-or-it’s-free guaranteed delivery time—swinging, with pie in the sky, above congested city blocks in the Spidey suit as a bystander remarks, “Whoa, he stole that guy’s pizza!”—his efforts backfire. The pizza caper leads to dismissal with the line, “I know to you, Parker, a promise means nothing.” Stoic photographer Peter (Tobey Maguire) takes the abuse, though, which also comes from his professors at school, his maniacal editor at the Daily Bugle, and, indirectly, his best friend, Harry (James Franco), who blames Spider-Man for his father’s death. But when ... " [More]
ellimilleellimille I love you... no. I meant to sa ...
by ellimille in Introduce Yourself
loved it.
"Hi!I am Elli. New in Spout. I found Spout watching the Four Eye Monster -movie in Youtube. This is a place for me. Movie fanatic like the rest.Genres are great. I guess I mostly enjoy good comedies with a sparkle of darkness/drama. Like Little Miss Sunshine, Garden State or Lost in Translation. But I get trully excited with good action scifi stuff like the marvelous Sunshine or the first The Matrix. I love to spend time with good animation like the old Disneys The Little Mermaid or The Lion King or Japanese creations like Miyazaki`s Sen To Chihiro No Kamikakushi. When I want something really romantic I watch Before Sunset. I regard Clueless as a classic. Fabuleux destin dÁmelie Poulain makes me smile, some Bollywood movies and Moulin Rouge (in the end) makes me cry and Quentin´s Kill Bills makes me want to go jogging. Horror I cannot watch because with my over active imagination I get nightmares. Usually I prefer to see a movie I haven´t yet seen over a good mov ... " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: Waking Life: An animated Ph ...
by Risselada in Philosophy of Film
loved it.
"Those darn prepositions. It's easy to get hung up on them.I think it would be easier to criticize a movie like this if it seemed to carry more pretense. Richard Linklater has said that the construction of the movie is just ideas and scenes that he either could never find ways to fit into other films or were meant for other films but never made the final cut. It's a hodge podge script-wise, and it's that way stylistically. Almost every scene was animated by a different artist. It's really just a series of short films that are loosely connected. Luckily the plot that connects them is just as mysterious and ethereal in a way. This is as opposed to some other films like Kill Bill Vol. 1 and Kill Bill Vol. 2 which seemed like a bunch of stylistically different short films but were often forced too hard into a more tangible narrative. Or if you look at theme as opposed to style, it's opposed to the Matrix movies, especially Reloaded and Revolutions which tried ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
"I really believe that if there's any kind of God, he wouldn't be in any one of us -- not you, not me, but just this space in between. If there's some magic in this world, it must be in the attempt of understanding someone else, sharing something. Even if it's almost impossible to succeed, but who cares, the answer must be in the attempt." Those words were spoken in Before Sunrise and they represent not only the theme of that film, but also a statement of purpose for director Richard Linklater, whose every film has been about attempting to forge connections. Before Sunset continues with this theme, but it has the wisdom to understand how difficult maintaining those connections can be. Over the course of about 85 minutes -- presented in real time -- Celine (Julie Delpy) and Jesse (Ethan Hawke) talk in an endless flow of words that reveals them each to be essentially the same people they were when they last saw each other nine years before, while still acknowledging that both have been colored from suffering the typical disappointments of life. The dialogue, as is usually the case in any Linklater film, sparkles with intelligence -- and these actors are easily up to the challenge. Delpy and Hawke co-wrote this sequel with Linklater. Reportedly, their work did not divide along gender lines, making this film more of a generational statement than an examination of men and women. While the first film showed Generation X that romantic love was possible in the age of irony, Before Sunset lets that same generation know how difficult life and love can actually be. The regrets and disappointments these characters feel toward themselves and each other should be familiar to anyone, but the great achievement is that never once do these characters feel like spokespeople. These are two living, breathing three-dimensional people, and their specificity -- something that is heightened by the real-time structure of the film -- allows the viewer to feel remarkably close to them. There is nothing artificial about Before Sunset, and thanks to that honesty, the flawless technical aspects of the film, and the incomparable writing and acting, Linklater has lived up to his artistic sense of purpose. He has attempted to share, he has attempted to understand someone else, and most remarkably, he has defied the odds and succeeded. Before Sunset is divine. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
 



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