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Author Message
25 new of 323 responses total.
mary
response 81 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 4 13:30 UTC 2004

I just have to start reading your blog, Lynne.  

I also really enjoyed Station Agent.  Fin was so unexpected and 
memorable.  And the movie wasn't sweet.  Big plus.

Last night I watched Aria.  It's a collection of shorts, by 
different directors, each done to an opera aria.  Three or four of 
the seven or eight I'm still thinking about, and that's good.  All 
are visually stunning and the music is incredible, as you'd expect.

I'd like to hear from someone who knows opera (Ken, Leslie?) as to 
whether the stories being told in the arias actually have much to do 
with the stories acted.  My ignorance of opera is vast.
fitz
response 82 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 4 14:07 UTC 2004

I rented Aria so long ago.  The Liebestod from  Tristan und Isolde I still
think about.  Yeah.  The two actors (one was Bridget Fonda) even look like
brother and sister.  The incestuous relationship explains a great deal.  Wow.

On the other hand, Vesti la giubba is played straight on and would be
recognizable to anyone--even if there were no music.  All you need know is
that Canio has been horridly cuckolded and belts out a classic lament of
having to make the audience laugh even though his life is a disaster.  That's
Caruso sing the track, by the way.  I've listen to it since I was ten and,
really, I have quite wearied of hearing any more of it.

The one with the bodybuilders:  I haven't a clue.
tod
response 83 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 4 17:04 UTC 2004

This response has been erased.

twenex
response 84 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 4 17:07 UTC 2004

Eww.
jvmv
response 85 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 5 08:18 UTC 2004


     Watch "Girl with a Pearl Earring". It's fascinating.
     As someone who is a great fan of movies, I highly 
     recommend that film. 
     This is a beautiful film worthy of attention. Not the 
     best film of the year, but certainly one to look out 
     for. The direction was brilliant, the acting good.
     Directed by Peter Webber, made in Luxembourg, based on 
     a soap opera of Tracy Chevalier, "Girl with a Pearl 
     Earring" is definitely one of the best beautiful films. 

        
rcurl
response 86 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 5 18:17 UTC 2004

It's not just a "soap opera" - it is am invented story woven around the
painting of the same name and the artist Johannes Vermeer. It is worth
learning more about the painting, either before or after seeing the movie. 
See http://girl-with-a-pearl-earring.20m.com/. 


furs
response 87 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 6 20:32 UTC 2004

Saw Spiderman 2 yesterday.  I was suprised how prevalent the love story 
was, but I don't know that much about the spiderman comics or orignal 
series, so I'm not sure if it's dead on or not.  But I like it a lot.  
I thought the special effects where great and they even added a little 
humor.
tod
response 88 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 6 20:49 UTC 2004

This response has been erased.

richard
response 89 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 7 05:38 UTC 2004

BEFORE SUNSET--  Saw this earlier this evening.  It is a sequel to a 
movie called "BEFORE SUNRISE" which came out ten years ago, and told 
the story of an american traveler (Ethan Hawke) who meets a french 
woman (Julie Delpy) on a train, and how two complete strangers ended up 
spending a long night walking around Vienna.  That movie ends with them 
leaving and agreeing to meet again in six months in Vienna.  There 
wasn't supposed to be a sequel, we weren't supposed to find out if they 
ever met again.  But "Before Sunrise" became a cult hit on video, and 
now ten years later the movie's stars, Hawke and Delpy, and director 
Richard Linklater, have reunited to continue this story.  And this is 
one of those cases where the sequel is BETTER than the original.

It is now nine years later, and Ethan Hawke's now thirtysomething 
character has become an author and he's written a book about the events 
in the first movie and is doing an autograph signing at a bookstore in 
Paris.  Delpy's character reads about his appearance in the paper and 
she shows up.  The rest of the movie is following them around as they 
walk through the streets of Paris on a late afternoon catching up on 
their lives.  The movie is one long conversation, a two person play 
where we see these people who connected a long time ago try to re-
connect.  They aren't even sure why they connected that time years 
back, but only know that its rare to connect with anyone at all.

The script was co-written by Hawke and Delpy, and it is clear that they 
know their characters quite well and had great command of the dialogue. 
Sometimes they are talking superficially, talking to cover their 
nervousness or to cover the fact that they actually don't know what to 
say or have nothing to say.  With actors also having been the writers, 
the dialogue comes across as quite natural.  The conversation SOUNDS 
real.  You'd actually think these really were two people walking downt 
the street talking.  This is really refreshing when you consider how 
bad the heavily prepared dialogue is in some movies.  Director 
Linklater does really long extended camera shots of them walking 
through Paris, which is intended to make what we are seeing and hearing 
come off as real as possible.  

It is also crucial to see how the passage of years has changed these 
two characters, which is why it is vitally important that the same 
actors play them. You can see the lines in Hawke's face which tell a 
lot more than he does about what his character's probably been through 
in the intervening years.  You can sense the world weariness in Delpy's 
eyes and her mannerisms, and that her character has really changed in 
the intervening years. I also like the fact that neither of these two 
characters are intended to be completely likeable or dislikeable.  You 
start to see in this movie why they connected in the first movie ten 
years ago.  

You even wonder if they might connect yet again.  But it isn't 
important.  This, as was the first film, is an existentialist movie.  
It is the moment that matters, only the moment.  "Before Sunset" takes 
place in real time, literally an hour and twenty minutes in the lives 
of these two memorable characters.  

This is a wonderfully acted and directed movie.  "Before Sunrise" 
and "Before Sunset" are like two halfs of a whole.  The second movie 
completes the first.  Which doesn't mean that it wouldn't be totally 
cool if ten years from now, in 2014, director Linklater finds Hawke and 
Delpy and gets them to revisit the characters yet again.  

I highly recommend "Before Sunset", even if you haven't seen the first 
movie.  Best movie I've seen this year so far.
jvmv
response 90 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 7 07:24 UTC 2004


     I watched "Before sunset" some years ago.
     I don't like all of Richard Linklater's films but he made 
     a good work in this film. I don't like Ethan, he's a good actor 
     but very inexpressive.
     One of the great things about "Before sunset" is the 
     characterization. The screenwriter put a lot of thought into    
     philosophical issues. I really liked the ideas the characters 
     had and they made me think.
     Well, I'm a little skeptic about the sequel.

     
gregb
response 91 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 7 15:55 UTC 2004

Saw Van Helsing last weekend and while visually great, the story was,
IMO, thin.  This was, basically, an action story.  In some ways it
reminded me of a Bond flick, especially a scene early in the film where
Van is in a "lab" located in the basement of a church, getting his
briefing for his next mission.  There's even a Q-type character who
shows him the newest gizmos he'll use.  Unlike Bond, however, this "Q"
goes on the mission.

If you like action-oriented stories, this one is definitely worth seeing.

richard
response 92 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 7 19:25 UTC 2004

re #90, you watched "Before SUNRISE" some years ago.  That movie takes place
mostly at night, before sunrise.  "Before SUNSET" is the new movie, which
takes place in the day time and ends at sunset.  Which I suppose could be
intended as a metaphor for the idea that you see things more clearly when you
get older.  In the first movie they are walking around in the darkness and
relishing the moment.  They don't even want to know each other's last names.
In the second movie they are a decade older, and are walking around in the
daytime actually making something of an effort to really get to know each
other.  They can see each other now, as they are older, in a way that they
couldn't then...
jvmv
response 93 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 8 06:08 UTC 2004

     That's right, I made a mistake. I meant "Before sunrise".
     
     
     
bru
response 94 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 8 10:11 UTC 2004

We Went to see King Arthur last night and found it quite entertaining.  Much
more gritty and dirty than any other Arthurian movie, more accurrate to the
conditions of the time.
tod
response 95 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 8 15:26 UTC 2004

This response has been erased.

anderyn
response 96 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 9 19:38 UTC 2004

Why>
krj
response 97 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 9 21:06 UTC 2004

Oh pooh, nothing could be more accurate than "Monty Python and the 
Holy Grail":  "He must be a king, he hasn't got shit all over 'im!"
richard
response 98 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 11 08:40 UTC 2004

I saw Spiderman2, I thought it was well made and one of the best of the
superhero genre movies.  I especially liked Alfred Molina as Doc Ock, aka
Dr. Octavious.
jvmv
response 99 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 11 09:20 UTC 2004


     Has some interesting elements.
     
     I think the special effects were great. The future of exciting 
     movies is in exploring & exploiting that one, however if only the  
     special effects were as competent as the ideas which I can only say
     that it's a matter of incompetence.

     A sentence of the previous film still sounds in my memory when one 
     of the characters even says "just because you can beat someone up,
     doesn't mean you have to". There Raimi added interesting messages.

     


     
klg
response 100 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 11 16:54 UTC 2004

We went to the local multiplex yesterday to waste money on Anchorman, 
which was playing on 2 screens vs. 1 screen for Michael Mooron's 
F9/11 - and the parking lot was pretty much empty.
twenex
response 101 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 11 16:58 UTC 2004

What is that you were saying about insults VS logical arguments?
klg
response 102 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 11 17:04 UTC 2004

We apologize for insulting Anchorman.  (Happy now?)
katie
response 103 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 11 17:18 UTC 2004

Anchorman was awful.
klg
response 104 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 11 19:22 UTC 2004

No, worse.
tsty
response 105 of 323: Mark Unseen   Jul 11 21:40 UTC 2004

did anchorman even try to reincarnate network? 
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