![Image](https://imgur.com/H0wdWzB.png)
it's basically animal crossing...in hell
i can't watch violent/horror films, i just don't understand why people maybe sit down of an evening and think something like this which is obviously going to be horrific would be a nice film to put on. do they burn themselves on the oven beforehand for fun? maybe pour acid on some exposed skin as a chaser? is it for catharsis? (if you're watching fictional auschwitz films for that seek help) why do these films even get made? if it's to explore some kind of moral problem, the fact that you have to use what may be the most extreme limit of human historical experience might suggest that it's inappropriate as some general mankind quandary, like using the realest thing ever to construct a fairy story...
I guess there's just an inherent fascination with the morbid. When I was a kid I had a book of UK centered mysteries, filled with stuff like Jack the Ripper, Spring-heeled Jack...spontaneous human combustion, the disappearance of Leslie Howard/Lord Lucan, ghosts and whatnot. It would always creep me the hell out and I ended up hiding it away, went to play with my cat and watched something feel good to get in a better mood, promising myself that I wouldn't read it again, but I kept coming back for more...Just the other day I read an article about an old Arizona Jane Doe that had been identified. Naturally I ended up on that dreaded /unresolvedmysteries for a good while, after that I went to play with my cat and watched something feel good...twodeadmagpies wrote: ↑Wed Mar 03, 2021 12:39 pm
i can't watch violent/horror films, i just don't understand why people maybe sit down of an evening and think something like this which is obviously going to be horrific would be a nice film to put on. do they burn themselves on the oven beforehand for fun? maybe pour acid on some exposed skin as a chaser? is it for catharsis? (if you're watching fictional auschwitz films for that seek help) why do these films even get made? if it's to explore some kind of moral problem, the fact that you have to use what may be the most extreme limit of human historical experience might suggest that it's inappropriate as some general mankind quandary, like using the realest thing ever to construct a fairy story...
i mean i watch films that do that as well sometimes, but i don't really know why. is it masochism? do i understand the world any more after a false needless suffering for it?
dammit modern films giving me a 'what is cinema crisis' already, when are we polling 1925 again?
was son of saul widely acclaimed? it got into a bunch of major festivals, as is probably pre-ordained for this kind of thing, but i remember nothing but the harshest criticism from critics and friends after it released. maybe that is just selection bias...
Won the Grand Prix at Cannes and The Guardian loved it, that's pretty much where I caught wind of it. Claude Lanzmann rated it highly iirc.
LOL!
It was a critical darling. Metacritic has a score of 91/100 out of 49 reviews, but I think it’s grossly overrated. As with most films about the holocaust, it overwhelms with its sentimentality even while trying to appear otherwise, and it is completely unnecessary. The subject matter is horrific enough, there’s really no need to dress it up in a sentimental narrative. I was reminded a lot of The Pianist which I disliked for much the same reasons. I’m deeply sceptical of any fictional holocaust film. Night and Fog on the other hand is one of few films that moved me to tears.greennui wrote: ↑Wed Mar 03, 2021 8:50 pmWon the Grand Prix at Cannes and The Guardian loved it, that's pretty much where I caught wind of it. Claude Lanzmann rated it highly iirc.
It was a different time...that was before I knew that Peter Bradshaw gives 5 stars everytime the sun rises and sets.
https://vimeo.com/138716594A film examining cohabitation and the everyday bodily functions and grooming rituals of a shared home. Using my rayogrammed hair as a mask, I assembled glimpses of private moments of my partner and I in our apartment, resulting in an abstract yet slightly voyeuristic portrait of a couple's shared life.
this is a cross between the fairy of spring (1904) and the waterfall in sleep has her house (2017) which i can't get beyond because it sends me to sleep-death immediatelyjiri kino ovalis wrote: ↑Tue Mar 02, 2021 10:31 am 2015 poll viewing No1:
STRATA OF THE IMAGE (Lois Patiño)https://vimeo.com/117412872Colors are matter's effort to become light. —D’Annuzio
I watched that film silently over someone's shoulder on an airplane and had a real good time looking at the editing. Maybe that's the optimal way to view it?
Me too. I drove 40 minutes to a theater to go see it, and when I got there they said no one bough tickets so they cancelled the screening and replaced it with a 3rd screening of an Avengers movie (or something along those lines) instead. I feel the residual bitterness might taint my feelings while watching the movie.
Or alternately a cross between "Fairy" and "States".twodeadmagpies wrote: ↑Thu Mar 04, 2021 8:25 pm this is a cross between the fairy of spring (1904) and the waterfall in sleep has her house (2017) which i can't get beyond because it sends me to sleep-death immediately
2015 poll viewing No12http://www.andrewkotting.com/ak%20web/buoyedby.html
Gladys v/o
Sea air does you good if you can get some good sea air.
Andrew, do you know that air is sexually exciting for you?
I don’t know, it all depends who you are with.
And did you know that sea water is good for the bowels?
https://vimeo.com/119849265
2015 poll viewing No13http://www.andrewkotting.com/ak%20web/COMBAT.html
That’s what I’m not sure about
What are we going to do now?
That’s what I’m not sure about
I just need time to think
You’ve got to fight for the revolution
No more rich
More Poor
No that’s not right
Wait
No more rich
More Poor
No that’s not right
Less Poor
More rich
No that’s not right
You’ve got to fight come the revolution
https://vimeo.com/142380477
http://www.andrewkotting.com/ak%20web/BLACKAPPLES.html
Provoked by the strange, enigmatic series of paintings, Afal du Brogwyr (Black Apple of Gower), made by the artist Ceri Richards in the 1950s, Sinclair leaves behind the familiar, ‘murky elsewheres’ of his life in Hackney, carrying an envelope of black-and-white photographs and old postcards, along with fragments of memory that neither confirm nor deny whether he belongs here...
Black Apples was inspired by Iain Sinclair’s book BLACK APPLES OF GOWER
https://vimeo.com/142397007
Ceri Richards (1903-1971)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceri_Richards
https://www.caughtbytheriver.net/2015/0 ... jon-gower/
The Black Apple of Gower, 1952 by Ceri Richards, Private Collection
https://vimeo.com/104889936See the ruins of a castle at the far edges of land. The birdsong you hear mimics the sound of the river, and the human voice mimics the song of the bird. This is a failed historical gesture sung in a playful, wild mimetic gesture.
The mapping of a desolate house in southern Sweden encased in iron and cement, standing as a monument of one man’s loneliness and paranoia.