It's Impossible to Learn to Plow by Reading Books. The first film ever by Richard Linklater.
It's Impossible to Learn to Plow by Reading Books. The first film ever by Richard Linklater.
i took a 70s film class when i was getting my associates degree and, though many of the movies were FUCKING AWFUL ("an unmarried woman" being the worst offender), we watched some really good stuff. i had already been into john carpenter since i was a kid but had never seen Assault On Precinct 13 (the original, obviously) and it was so fun to watch in the high-end screening room at my school. it's definitely one of my favorite 70s films, and it's up there on my ranking of carpenter films.
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Last edited by Your Name Here; 07-25-2016 at 01:40 PM.
have you seen The Conversation? i just remembered, that was one of the other amazing ones we watched in that class. that was six years ago and i still haven't been able to stop thinking about how well-done and intense that film was. gene hackman is top notch and harrison ford's small but pivotal role is really, really great.
now i just want to marathon a bunch of my favorite 70s films.
Hail, Caesar! I didn't think it was as bad as everyone made it out to be, since I'm a Coen junkie, and it had its moments (especially its multiple loving homages to 50's cinema), but too much of it felt too derivative of other Coen works. The premise reminded me of The Big Lebowski, the "complete idiot character" shtick has been done too many times, and even a joke near the end of the film was lifted from The Ladykillers. Still, when it rips on Hollywood, it hits hard. The cast is a joy to watch, because when wasn't it in a Coen movie? And Wayne Knight was completely unrecognizable.
Coppola's run of Godfather - Conversation - Godfather Part II - Apocalypse Now is only equaled but never surpassed in impressiveness to me.
In general I consider the entire New Hollywood era to be the greatest in American movie history. From Easy Rider up till about '79 the amount of highly challenging and unique films that all managed to be major successes and parts of the cultural dialogue is just stunning.
@Khrz said it pretty well -- more than anything they're about the inability to break free of the fate your familial ties have tethered you to, the struggles of power, how good men become corrupted not out of maliciousness but out of perceived necessity, the way that vengeance hardens the human heart and fails to satisfy, the ways things done in the name of our families often isolate ourselves from them and the story of the Italian-American immigrant family in the mid-1940's. It's a sweeping American epic (at least the first two are; skip the third, really) and so worth your time, even if the set-dressing isn't quite your thing.
(Harold and Maude was 1971)
My personal 70s faves (besides the Godfathers I and II and Alien and Harold & Maude): Dog Day Afternoon, Jaws, A Clockwork Orange, Animal House, Deliverance, Close Encounters, Annie Hall, Last Tango in Paris, The Black Stallion, Love and Death, Young Frankenstein ...
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Last edited by Your Name Here; 07-25-2016 at 01:38 PM.
Speaking of Dog Day Afternoon, this is fascinating:
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Last edited by Your Name Here; 07-25-2016 at 01:37 PM.
Just watched Nightcrawler, starring Jake Gyllenhal... a messed up movie with an interesting premise... and a very warped take on the drive to make it and succeed. It's inspiring in a very demented way. Although not flawless, this movie was very charming and dark. I definitely recommend it. Before watching this film I thought it was like a Drive clone... but it's something completely different.
Insidious Chapter 3
I enjoyed it more than the first two. How about you @elevenism ?
I saw Independence Day: Resurgence the other day. It's a horrible, terrible movie.
But I'm still happy to have seen it because Jeff Goldblum, Bill Pullman, Judd Hirsch, the wonderful Charlotte Gainsbourg and Brent Spiner ( I love him). And Brent Spiner's bare ass.
Y
Fucking fantastic. I recommend it to all of you. It's on Google Play Movies for $3.99/$12.99 Rent/Buy and it's on Amazon Video for $3.99/$7.99 Rent/Buy. Watch it.
I may also have a link to an HD, less than legitimate, stream.
wow
'the wonder years'
fucking applicable ass television.
Green Room
about a punk band that gets into some deep trouble. a major thrill ride and highly recommended.
Angie Tribeca. It fills me with joy with each episode. As a huge fan of the series Police Squad!, which got cancelled after only six episodes, I longed for a return of some sort. And Angie Tribeca fills that void for me. It's stupid, ridiculous and pointless, and I love every second of it. Sight gags and puns are aplenty, and the cast kills it. So happy it got a second season. Those who prefer dry, "sophisticated", Parks and Recreation-style comedy probably won't like it (though Rashida is brilliant in both); those who simply need some brainless, zany, cartoonish, loud, over-the-top fun will have a blast.
Oh, and Sarah Chalke had a small guest spot, which reminded me of how much I miss Scrubs.
Casey Neistat's YouTube videos. This guy is my new hero.
4 episodes into Stranger Things on Netflix. I'm in love.