finished watching an interesting movie dada suggested to me:
de aanslag(english title: the assault). very interesting dutch movie. i guess you could call it a WAR MOVIE, but it's really uncomfortably benign for a war movie so it'd probably be best described as a drama. it's a really interesting movie nonetheless. one of those movies that, despite not being outwardly emotional or aesthetically significant, manages to do its own thing. never quite seen anything like it. really leaves a lot to the viewer to consider and digest, to the point where you kinda have a stronger reaction to the happenings of the story than any of the characters visibly appear to have. really strange stuff, the more i think about it. fucking lizards.
i don't know if you folks would be particularly grabbed by this movie, though. it's a bit more subdued than i think most people would expect from a movie.
also i've started watching twin peaks. not a movie i guess, but stimulating enough that i guess it's worth mentioning here. just watched the pilot and now i think i'm sufficiently interested in watching the rest periodically. i made a BIG MISTAKE and read some pretty major spoilers, but i think that has me a little more interested in watching more of it. it's the sort of thing where i have some vague idea of where it goes, and have seen where it started, and am pretty curious to see everything go so completely bonkers to the point where that's where it will end up. david lynch is always worth watching anyway, even though i feel like he blurs the line between madman and genius a little too much.
actually, does anybody know of a good place to stream twin peaks on the internet? i found some episodes on youtube but they're scattered and leaves some episodes out. i don't think this is the sort of thing i'd want to watch out of sequence or with major gaps in the story's timeline.
to be fair, Blade Runner isn't an action film nor is it meant to be
i don't understand what you are saying here. i probably
would describe blade runner as an action film noir, for lack of a better way of categorizing it. i think you could have made the movie black and white with stock film noir protagonist(bogart, widmark, o'brien etc) and it'd border on indistinguishable from a 50s noir(production value aside). blade runner is the movie where i understood why harrison ford is a decent actor and has any appeal at all; he's really this throwback actor to the days where all you really needed was to HAVE MOXIE and look convincing when being punched by a large dude. he was unusually successful partially because he stumbled onto senselessly iconic roles, but in part because there really weren't many actors like that in his time. he'd probably have been fairly run-of-the-mill had he been born early enough to be a film noir actor. i'm not entirely convinced that harrison ford and glenn ford aren't actually the same person.
i'm actually just not sure what point you are asserting here, which is why i'm interested enough to question you on it. i've seen it a bunch of times, but i'm still trying to figure out what i really think about blade runner. it's not really a great adaptation from what i've heard(idk if this is an exaggeration but i've been told it's only about HALF of the do androids dream of electric sheep novel), and kinda puts itself in the noir realm because there wouldn't really be anything to watch without it, but i think i've always kinda battled with the thought of if it's just an otherwise EMPTY movie with a couple inexplicably nice lines and careful aesthetics. a ridiculous amount of film noir are kinda like that actually, where it's this kinda vivid, intriguing experience but i'm hesitant to really go out and call it IMPORTANT or something. the more i think about i would probably put ALL FILM NOIR into this general category, aside from the asphalt jungle. good movies, don't get me wrong, but the relationship between the aesthetics and the subject matter never really seems to be that strong.
kinda rambling but i guess i was in the mood to just ramble about this stuff