It's the first film I've seen outside Gone with the Wind that features Hattie McDaniel (or actually where I recognized her). But why the hell is she playing another maid again??
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Karl, what have you been smoking!?!
That part coul be true.
There's also a Jaymoti, filmed in Assamese. Probably an outlier historically and artistically but I expect I'll watch it.
The Droste effect (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈdrɔstə]), known in art as an example of mise en abyme, is the effect of a picture recursively appearing within itself, in a place where a similar picture would realistically be expected to appear.The effect is named for a Dutch brand of cocoa,
This is super interesting, thank you for the infotwodeadmagpies wrote: ↑Sat Sep 07, 2019 4:20 pm - and this my fave discovery - 1935 was the year the cinema worm turned or at least revealed its dark underbelly (in the UK) - the first time film was used as evidence in a criminal case - a policeman had covertly filmed illegal bookies in chesterfield and it was used in the trial to successfully prosecute a few men. but the thing is, that still, even here, cinema insists on its dreams & magic - couple of minutes into the footage elephants (elephants!!!!) appear. in chesterfield. in the UK. where elephants habitually aren't. (the prosaic explanation is that a circus was in town, but still, for the cinema-gods to have inserted that into the criminal case seems wonderful/necessary)
that is very probably my favorite ozu
The only other 1935 film I've seen so far is Harry Lachman's Dante's Inferno which also felt like a product of this, basically a cauionary tale about the pursuit of wealth and success, complete with a lenghty vision of hell. It was a neat hell sequence but wasted on a post-code film. Even had Spencer Tracy in blackface getup.Evelyn wrote: ↑Sun Sep 08, 2019 4:58 pm Pluto's Judgment Day exemplifies something that's really jumped out at me so far in my 1935 viewing: just how thoroughly and loudly 1935 US cinema is letting it be known that they're on the side of law and order, that Hollywood will henceforth be telling ostensibly impressionable viewers that Crime Does Not Pay (the telling name of a short subject series, begun by MGM in 1935). A post-Code rebranding for the whole US film industry. And of course, Walt Disney perhaps better than any other film producer in the period perceived that a fortune could be made by positioning his company's film products as parent's little helper in the moral development of children.
(Rather galling, on that note, to consider that as part of this enterprise Disney not only attempted but actually succeeded in taking a character who originated as a sexually assaultive Blackface minstrel mouse [Mickey] and turning him into a shorthand emblem for all things pure and wholesome in children's entertainment...)
Much help, thank you nrh! Only after viewing and feeling stumped did I remember that Sallitt had that online companion for Naruse, but I'll definitely turn to it going forward whenever I have one of his films lined up. Wasn't familiar with that Rouge article, but it looks fascinating, thanks - love learning about the transnational reception of filmsnrh wrote: ↑Mon Sep 09, 2019 2:58 pm don't know if it helps but sallitt's notes on rumor - https://mikionaruse.wordpress.com/the-g ... the-rumor/
also good notes on wife be like a rose which i think is incredible - https://mikionaruse.wordpress.com/wife-be-like-a-rose/
and fascinating article on wife's reception in new york in the '30s - http://www.rouge.com.au/10/kimiko.html
Watched Naruse's Wife! Be Like a Rose! today as well. Arrestingly beautiful. Thanks for the reading recommendations, nrh, just finished the Rouge article and it was fascinating indeed! Good 'ol Mark Van Doren.nrh wrote: ↑Mon Sep 09, 2019 2:58 pm also good notes on wife be like a rose which i think is incredible
and fascinating article on wife's reception in new york in the '30s - http://www.rouge.com.au/10/kimiko.html
i'm on this. enjoyed proto-noir toni---> this most wanted: gréville's remous/whirlpool