- not caring about the notion of "pre-code"
- having no interest in abstract-art short films
- thinking film noir is gateway cinema for moody teens
What about youse? What do you see affirmed here continuously that leaves you like "...erm
![Confused :?](./images/smilies/icon_e_confused.gif)
For sure! "Usually" we should, except in this thread
Same, with The Rules of the Game... (maybe it would've been better had it had Henry Fonda in it?)
Count me in on that.
True. It surprises me sometimes, but I respect that about this group.
Oh... good reminder for me to make that thread again!Lencho of the Apes wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 7:25 am Sometimes I'm less than convinced that martial-arts movies are significant filmmaking.
I should hope movies can do better than titillating viewers with good guys beating bad guys. It strikes me as juvenile. I rarely watch martial arts movies, but I recently saw The Raid - impressive setpiece, amazing fight sequences, and I'd be lying if I said I didn't get a thrill from it. But I don't judge movies merely by how I feel when watching them. I want something more lasting. Add that to my list of heresies.Lencho of the Apes wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 7:25 am Sometimes I'm less than convinced that martial-arts movies are significant filmmaking.
There's certainly a place in movies for these questions, but do many martial arts films go beyond the obvious in addressing them? And is one martial arts flick much different from another in handling these topics?Holymanm wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 8:11 am Man, a proper melodramatic martial arts movie gets right to the heart of the human experience - what are we here for? What is our relationship to others, and what our responsibility to others? - and attempts to answer the even more important metaphysical questions: ...what are our bodies for? What is the relationship between body and mind? Do we have a responsibility to develop either of the two, either for our sake or for that of others? Quite plainly, is it - should it be - every individual's duty to develop themselves sufficiently to be able to protect those around them, and to make the world a better place? Or no? It's perhaps a radical view, but, I think, an intriguing one...
i'd say a good comparison would be the american western - within that genre or tendency or whatever you'd want to call it, not just in movies but in books and tv series (much like wuxia), you get a pretty swath of examples. so on the one hand you get cheh chang hypermascualine nationalism and king hu's buddhist abstraction, chor yuen's baroquely stylized tragedies and lau kar-leung doing something like martial club (a film in which nobody dies) where martial arts is as much a matter of community daily practice as violence.
haven't heard that name in a while... thought life seemed strangely peaceful
as our origin story, we're the anti-mubi, or at least we used to be, many of us met on the mubi forum. but one day mubi just decided to shut their forum down, probably because it wasn't making them money, with imo no concern for their community. we migrated to letterboxd from there, but that wasn't a great spot for conversation, and that's how the super champion film zone was born! i perpetually boycott mubi now (and i suspect my taste would also be distant from that of their stream service!).Evelyn Library P.I. wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 7:08 pm I think it's possible that this makes my taste distant to some members here (certainly it makes my taste distant to that of MUBI's streaming service, if that's any judge)
Right, I'd pieced together that story, but it's good to know exactly. I guess i figured former members of the MUBI forum would have liked the sort of stuff I associate with MUBI, which i gather these days tends to be stuff from Berlinale and other Euro festivals and the like, but obviously MUBI has gone through all these changes, so it's good to remember there's not necessarily any connection between the tastes of the former MUBI forum and the market niche of the present MUBI streaming service. And yeah, it makes sense you'd want to boycott MUBI now, i haven't given it money or attention in years either, to the begrudgement of my in-real-life film connections.flip wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 8:23 pm as our origin story, we're the anti-mubi, or at least we used to be, many of us met on the mubi forum. but one day mubi just decided to shut their forum down, probably because it wasn't making them money, with imo no concern for their community. we migrated to letterboxd from there, but that wasn't a great spot for conversation, and that's how the super champion film zone was born! i perpetually boycott mubi now (and i suspect my taste would also be distant from that of their stream service!).
mentioning that because i'm not sure how many newer members know how scfz began.
that depends if you're talking about something like barren illusions or something like creepy, but based on what he's said in interviews he would largely agree with you.Evelyn Library P.I. wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 8:53 pm This made me think Kurosawa was this lofty high art thing above my lowly love of Hitchcock, only to discover years later that Kurosawa was basically a popular genre filmmaker too!
Oh, I've assumed all these years that the person meant Akira Kurosawa not Kiyoshi (who of course wouldn't have crossed my mind because I would have never heard of him then), but Kiyoshi would have been the more apt comparison to Hitchcock for sure. My description was referring to Akira, but, mmhmm, it could probably apply well enough, though less well, to Kiyoshi too.nrh wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 8:57 pmthat depends if you're talking about something like barren illusions or something like creepy, but based on what he's said in interviews he would largely agree with you.Evelyn Library P.I. wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 8:53 pm This made me think Kurosawa was this lofty high art thing above my lowly love of Hitchcock, only to discover years later that Kurosawa was basically a popular genre filmmaker too!
i don’t like ozu.flip wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 8:41 pm as for the original topic, i'm not sure exactly what would constitute 'blasphemy' around these parts. maybe hating renoir or ozu or something like that?
i'd have a harder time now listing directors who somewhat represent the site, directors who get discussed most often or top our polls, maybe jacques rivette, chantal akerman, raul ruiz? michael curtiz maybe? i'm curious who others might list now!
It's also much harder to "try" them when all the movies are 3 hours long