it's funny that you mention monteiro, because i almost included him and de oliveira, but i started to think my list was too geographically concentrated.
i have liked some ozu, but others seem to be getting a lot more from his films than i am.
it's funny that you mention monteiro, because i almost included him and de oliveira, but i started to think my list was too geographically concentrated.
It probably hasn't changed that much though it's kinda hard to get a good idea from recent polls. The year polls are too specific to really get a good sense of directors and the director polls aren't really covering the top picks anymore. In those old country/genre polls you def get a sense of pervading taste but there hasn't really been that many general polls since the move.flip wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 8:41 pm
i used to feel there was a kind of dominant aesthetic at scfz, a lot of people were interested in directors like eric rohmer, hong sang-soo, mikio naruse, john ford, abel ferrara, johnnie to, jacques tourneur, and even when people had diverging tastes otherwise, that was the part of the venn diagram where a lot of us overlapped. that's still partly true, but with james• and m_penalosa only stopping by occasionally, and with a lot of new members, i feel the scfz identity is more diffuse, 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!
heh, i also included several indian directors (ghatak, kaul, ray) as ones we like but then took them out and that was right before silga’s post about not liking indian films. hey silga, maybe try watching a ghatak film?
I'd always steered clear of Bollywood as I'm generally not into musicals at all but saw Lagaan a few months ago and fucking loved it. Sad to hear it's an exception that proves the rule.Mario Gaborovic wrote: ↑Wed Mar 11, 2020 3:42 pm I don't enjoy
- Bollywood musicals (with few exceptions like Lagaan)
Say more?
I think it's a mistake to say there should be or is (only) one cinematic language that all productions have to adhere to.
Never implied any such thing.Lencho of the Apes wrote: ↑Tue Apr 28, 2020 9:04 amI think it's a mistake to say there should be or is (only) one cinematic language that all productions have to adhere to.
Some of the things that seem nonstandard in classic-era Indian cinema suggest a different way of understanding narrative, character motivation, even causality itself, that's inimical in essence to Western stylistic and conceptual norms.
Lencho of the Apes wrote: ↑Tue Apr 28, 2020 9:04 amI think it's a mistake to say there should be or is (only) one cinematic language that all productions have to adhere to.
Some of the things that seem nonstandard in classic-era Indian cinema suggest a different way of understanding narrative, character motivation, even causality itself, that's inimical in essence to Western stylistic and conceptual norms.
Again, never implied any such thing, my point is that they appear to either be inept or subpar. If we look at Sholay, for instance, they can't even succeed in basic blocking, there is nothing in this cinematic language that appeals to me. In the other films, I mentioned it is rather the absence of anything of note or value cinematically, true/pure mediocrity. They are not interpreting anything differently, they are just doing basic, low-skill cinema.greg x wrote: ↑Tue Apr 28, 2020 9:10 am That's a controversial take in very few places, here being one of them for at least some of us, in its broader reading.
The problem, or one of them, is that talking about "cinematic language" in that way makes it sound akin to how some view mathematics, a "natural" language, rather than a set of agreed upon socially adopted conventions like spoken languages are. The expectations you bring in to watching movies will go a long way towards determining what you will be able to take out of them. Expecting "Bollywood" to be just like movies from somewhere else is to ignore on what they are for what you expect to some important degree. Bollywood movies clearly have found strong appeal to viewers who accept their conventions, so there is something that works there on a basic level not unlike other mass market film centers, and for those who are more "arty" there may be fewer works that are well regarded, again like with all other mass market film production, but with still strong appeal for those deemed best.
Trying to convince those who dislike Bollywood, or other disliked film styles or industries of the things that drive their appeal is difficult if one is set against the style or methods of those film centers. Just on the face of it though, there should be some doubt raised by the suggestion that one of the largest film production centers in the world that has a long history of appreciation from huge audiences isn't "really" capable of making good movies, because they don't fit an outsiders view of what that should mean.
Edit: Or what Lencho said in a much more concise way. Heh.
My view had nothing to do with western norms though.wba wrote: ↑Tue Apr 28, 2020 10:17 amLencho of the Apes wrote: ↑Tue Apr 28, 2020 9:04 amI think it's a mistake to say there should be or is (only) one cinematic language that all productions have to adhere to.
Some of the things that seem nonstandard in classic-era Indian cinema suggest a different way of understanding narrative, character motivation, even causality itself, that's inimical in essence to Western stylistic and conceptual norms.
I'd like to add that there's also styles and concepts in much of Western films that's inimical in essence to canonized and or conventionalized Western stylistic and conceptual norms.
I believe Sholay is the only one I referred to as incompetent, but I take the note re: semantics.Evelyn Library P.I. wrote: ↑Tue Apr 28, 2020 10:40 am I guess it's a question of whether the goal of classic Bollywood films is to take the narrative or stylistic forms that they do, or whether the goal is to achieve a different form than the one they in fact achieve. If the goal is to take the form that they do in fact take, then it's hard to call that incompetence, just the realization of distinctive or somewhat distinctive narrative and stylistic norms. Not saying you couldn't still criticize those distinctive norms on aesthetic grounds, just meaning to point out that in that case the problem wouldn't be filmmaking incompetency, it would be the competent realization of norms for cinematic expression that you dislike.
i'm not sure what to do with her argument. i get the little gestures and seem to remember some of them watching those films. i don't get the sense that ozu doesn't like women or wants to see them suffer, and there's something to be said for the fact that he keeps going back to that same topic, dutiful daughters taking care of parents instead of looking to move on in life. it's also a problem that other than some of the later films with mariko okada he doesn't really give much attention to the idea that they might want something beyond getting married. if all they have to look forward to other than taking care of their parents is ending up in a marriage with some guy who hits them or pushes them down the stairs or always comes home drunk then it's not really getting to much of a range of liberating possibilities anyway. i'd prefer a yoshida film that gets more into those other possibilities and gives more range to a woman's experience and feelings than that she took off a scarf pretty brusquely.