I think Kurosawas latest film "Chime" is great again, even though its shot digitally.
@andrefernandez5431Ай бұрын
Victor Erice is written with a C not a Z
@DavidKay-u9b2 ай бұрын
I think its become fashionable to call directors "dishonest" when something is a bit overdone.. everyone's a critic 😅
@JustPassingByBaby3 ай бұрын
Bobita is Andrew Tate character filter. Who lives in Romania and has this exact character.
@joaotabarra66654 ай бұрын
Allensworth an Amazing film. So... Were does all this " BS" comes from :(
@eldritchbidoof4 ай бұрын
I'm only like an hour into this film but it's already in my Top 3 of this year, if not no.1- couldn't disagree more with the critiques tbh
@Bruce-h8w4 ай бұрын
I stopped listening at 6m15, when you suggested Rohmer made his first film in 1961 (born 1920). In fact he was 30, with 'Journal d'un scélérat', now lost, then 31 with 'Présentation ou Charlotte et son steak. Did you not research your subject before committing yourself to KZbin? I know it isn’t wiki, but still…
@chrisbaker75834 ай бұрын
Did you just lump Jordan Peterson in with Andrew Tate??
@JoshuafromKerncounty5 ай бұрын
I may be the only one to listen to all of this.
@kitkat80215 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this review…I just watched the film and was stunned as to why so many people said this film was so deep and raw and amazing and I watched weird and clumsy interactions
@johns1235 ай бұрын
What do you guys think of Ken Russell?
@Garrett12405 ай бұрын
5:46 Louise Brooks was American. Born and raised in the ‘heartland’ of the country actually. My great-grandfather was born in the same town as she. I would’ve assumed she belonged to that old stock of upper-crust anglos from the northeast, but nope; of a well-to-do family from the breadbasket.
@Mailomaily5 ай бұрын
Great film
@Starkardur5 ай бұрын
Well made film but had really NOTHING to say really. We got the message in the first 20 minutes and then just goes on and on and on. I honestly felt more interested in the supporting characters including the teens that were having fun (suprisingly a much better movie about that came out a year later about that so) Mescal was miscast.
@shuaigege123456 ай бұрын
Agree with u generally. Especially about social realism films in UK. They suck. But why not mention Anthony Asquiths silents or Terence Fisher?
@Mihai-eg6ux6 ай бұрын
One little correction, the road with the crosses is not the road they were driving on from the airport, it's a different road to another city, i've actually driven on it and I survived so I can write this comment.
@SM-ef7ypАй бұрын
The legendary one that she talks to an Austrian woman about?
@Mihai-eg6uxАй бұрын
@@SM-ef7yp yes
@OFFICIALBrawl6 ай бұрын
absolutely on the money with this, BFI shorts are getting more and more grating every year
@429766756 ай бұрын
Tragedy longs for but does not require explanation to be affective. Are tragedies ‘earned’ in life or do they come as a shocking surprise with motives never adequately satisfying? Good movie.
@ddtk856 ай бұрын
I couldn’t agree with you more.
@daisymoore6726 ай бұрын
this review was drab
@earthcultr6 ай бұрын
that was andy milonakis, not a woman 😭
@MrPSBSMR6 ай бұрын
I learned a lot from this episode, and I commend your breadth of film and film theory knowledge. Yet while I mostly agree with your conclusions, I think you make it too easy on yourselves by dismissing nearly every single counterexample. You somehow dismiss Powell and Pressburger, who are rightfully being canonized now as titans of a melancholic romanticism unmatched in world cinema. Comparing their operatic epics to Douglas Sirk feels like a total non sequitur. I understand the tendency to fixate on the flaws and limits of one's own culture (as the french new wave did with le cinema de papa). It is a big world, and cinema has much to offer. But there is no need to dismiss Mike Leigh, Nic Roeg, even Greenaway and Hogg, which you seem to do here, as if they were necessarily second-tier filmmakers. And there is always something worthy to be found even in stale and overdone genres, from social realism to the documentary, from comedies to the period film (all pioneered by the British). Lawrence of Arabia is probably the greatest historical epic ever made, surely that counts for something. And I am not entirely convinced that Chaplin, Hitchcock, Nolan, McQueen and Glazer's Britishness can be disregarded just because they worked in America. Thank you for highlighting Watkins, Keehler, Macpherson, Clarke, Potter, the coop, and all the others, you made me watch more of them.
@TheRocksbarney6 ай бұрын
Thanks for this review - I couldn’t disagree more. I am grateful for critical film content, but I feel this review really is from the perspective of three blokes. As a (male) child of a hoarder myself I was thrilled to see this disorder on screen, in the style of how (for example) Baby Reindeer put stalking on screen in a new light. I do not mean to offend, but I can’t help but feel your perspective is that as three privileged men (me too!) But I have been affected by hoarding and I hope one day there is a film that speaks to your own story.
@landofthesilverpath58236 ай бұрын
I feel like the film signals the end of an era when it comes to Holocaust film and documentary. It just doesn't have the same impact after hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of films and documentaries-- and the overly serious, somber, pretentious, and turgid constipation of Occupied City is the perfect representation of it. People have just gotten tired of this subject. Even those who make the films, apparently!
@SirAbyss6 ай бұрын
The best movie of 2023, hands down. One of the most brilliant critiques of capitalism and the current human condition I've ever seen. God bless Radu Jude, that demented fucking genius.
@Tavener896 ай бұрын
seemingly one mention of Mike Leigh and it's only 'we don't like them', but praising the canonised classic.. Boring & dismissive take for seemingly curious people, who obviously are dedicated to film, but have got lazy. he is much more like Rohmer than people give him the credit for & is unfairly dismissed as social realist adjacent when there is a lot more going on in his films this pod episode is a remarkable record of how feeling like if you can name all the disparate elements & put it in neat nameable cognitive chunks you may well feel you know the width and breadth of a medium, place, director, etc - which ironically becomes one of the most constraining attitudes you can have. No mention of 'Bablyon' too, surely one of the best British films ever & certainly of the 80s.
@war-painter6 ай бұрын
Best film of the year that I’ve seen, totally outrageous, exciting, funny/sad- I loved it. Now I gotta see everything Radu Jude has ever made. So cool. More like this.
@duckydae6 ай бұрын
2:48 think you’ve kinda missed the point of the film if you think tara loosing her virginity was consensual.
@PerfectNull6 ай бұрын
Do you dislike Lanthimos. I have never seen the favourite, but every film I have seen of his I have liked.
@gab_gallard7 ай бұрын
Weird take. The structure was fundamental because it reflects the same themes as the film, which is how biases and expectations work against us. Audience gets in the same boat of prejudice the characters are in. It's not for the "fun of it"...
@vampirediariesfan-i4m7 ай бұрын
j ai jouer dans ce film je suis une des enfant
@karpediemxx7 ай бұрын
First time viewer - loved it.
@meltingmoody7 ай бұрын
Its a good movie with a fun parts but in the end it's just a beautiful young women successful escaping any trouble she creates all other characters dont really do anything or change. Fun one time watch
@Garrett12406 ай бұрын
What kind of criticism is that?
@shocked19918 ай бұрын
I really am looking forward to seeing this movie!!
@LunauraReiki8 ай бұрын
So you three losers sitting in your living room with your little microphones and earphones trying to be someone, think this movie is drab and manipulative? You WISH you were Joseph Quinn but happily you are NOT.
@JethroWestraad8 ай бұрын
On the vomiting: I think it’s interesting that we never see him actually expel vile. It’s more like a dry heave/retch - which is reminiscent of Anwar Congo from the end of the Act of Killing. Vomiting equates with disgust, but perhaps the retching speaks to something more suppressed and visceral - like his body rejecting his own thoughts.
@JethroWestraad8 ай бұрын
*bile. Vile is clearly my take away from the Höss character…
@esignsmedia8 ай бұрын
Brit-ish. Classic!
@EyeofAffinado8 ай бұрын
The one on the left knows what he is talking about: but overall this is a huge f mess, and feels like unscripted and opinionated
@1992AJL8 ай бұрын
My unpopular opinions validated and my watch list doubled, thanks lads!
@jziffi8 ай бұрын
I've always felt this but no one seems to agree; most people think that because Harry Potter and James Bond exist, Britain is some kind of a world leader in cinema. But it's really not. A hugely disproportionate amount of films made in the UK have historical settings. There just seems to have always been a serious shortage of funding for interesting ideas featuring everyman characters.
@jeanbartsammy42248 ай бұрын
Fritz lang and Lubitsch didn’t went to Hollywood for money ! They went because of something called « the Nazi »…
@curiositytax93608 ай бұрын
They said the same thing about Monte Hellman’s last film Road to Nowhere, that it felt Lynchian but it has nothing to do with Lynch. Same with this film.
@curiositytax93608 ай бұрын
Monte Hellman’s final film Road to Nowhere was a big influence on Close Your Eyes. Hellman was 80 years old when he made Road to Nowhere.
@revdckmz3 ай бұрын
Source?
@Mrbpj018 ай бұрын
'Powell and Pressburger don't have a dark'? Well each to their own, but I think that's a bizarre claim. I find a gorgeous kind of melancholy coupled with an ecstatic mysticism in their best films, perhaps missed if you are too readily distracted by the clipped period accents. Films utterly unlike any others. Part of Britain's film problem is that it doesn't recognise its own geniuses - no surprise that P&P were consigned to the dustbin, and it took the American New Wavers to rehabilitate them. It's incredible to me that, even now, P&P are not household names. You can't help come to the conclusion that Britain gets the cinema it deserves.
@curiositytax93608 ай бұрын
Correct. Britain doesn’t recognise what it has. You would probably disagree because he was never as commercially successful but I feel same way about Nic Roeg. In his last 20 years, he made 1 film. In the 90’s, he worked a lot in American television. He deserved better.
@curiositytax93608 ай бұрын
Nic Roeg did Mulholland Drive in the opening 25 minutes of Eureka. The Dont Look Now comparison to Mulholland was correct. And then you have Track 29, Cold Heaven. Track 29 foreseeing the rest of David Lynch’s career almost but in a very take the piss way.
@curiositytax93608 ай бұрын
You mentioned Carol Reed. Why not mention Outcast of the Islands? Or The Fallen Idol. They are amazing films. Lynch copies the opening of The Fallen Idol for Blue Velvet. Outcast of the Isalnds is not discussed enough. It’s amazing.
@curiositytax93608 ай бұрын
Not much mention of Nic Roeg when you mention Douglas Sirk and then I have to hear David fucking Lynch mentioned for the billionth time. Next it will be Stanley Kubrick. Yes, Lynch is great. But what about Roeg? What about Eureka? That was touching on the Sirk thing in 82 before Lynch with Blue Velvet. Roeg even nods towards Written on the Wind in Eureka’s court room scene. How could he not? But that pastiche of melodrama Roeg was doing before Lynch. Then Roeg made Track 29, which preceded Twin Peaks. The Gary Oldman character in that is essentially Bob and I feel like that film is Roeg’s amused reaction to Blue Velvet. It’s annoying when people refer to that film as Lynchian when it’s clearly Nic Roeg. The Man Who Fell To Earth is never mentioned when talking about Twin Peaks. Lynch even cast Bowie in Fire Walk With Me. And Candy Clark is in The Return. Isn’t Twin Peaks partly about TV or how TV corrupted American society? There’s an internet famous 4 hour long video about it all. Twin Peaks finally explained it’s called. Am I fuck watching that but I think that’s the conclusion he comes too. But iv known that for years through it’s obvious connection to Man Who Fell. That central theme is basically an expansion on the famous TV scene from Roeg’s Man Who Fell and who is in that scene? Bowie and Candy Clark only. Both appear at Twin Peaks at some point. I’m not the only one to make these connections but in different ways. That Marilyn Monroe film Blonde, the director Andrew Dominick just keeps visually referencing The Man Who Fell To Earth and Fire Walk With Me throughout with Fire Walk With Me mostly referenced through the sound. The ending to Fire Walk With Me with the Angel even mirrors The Man Who Fell To Earth’s ending aswell but it feels like abit of a rip off of Eureka’s ending more so, but I’m 100 percent certain Lynch never saw Eureka. Nobody has. It’s not like Paul Anderson with There Will Be Blood. He took freely from Eureka. Both Man Who Fell and Eureka written by Paul Mayersberg and Roeg only worked with him on those two films so maybe Roeg, Lynch and Mayersberg all reading the same things? With it being a Roeg film though, I doubt the final film resembles the script. I doubt even the writer of the film can understand half of the visual language in the film. No one watches films visually. It’s annoying. Roeg outright references the TV title sequences of Carl Sagan’s Cosmos and Jacob Bronowski’s The Ascent of Man in Eureka. And everyone bangs on about Lynch’s connection to quantum mechanics blah blah. What about Roeg?! It’s throughout all his films. Roeg understood relativity and cinema are closely linked with cinema breaking linear time before relativity was discovered, which sounds pretentious but it’s true. The very final episode of The Return is a retread of one of Roeg’s later films Cold Heaven but I’m certain Lynch hasn’t seen that either because like Eureka nobody has. So probably reading the same things or similar beliefs. They even use similar visual symbols when trying to portray something visually. Cold Heaven even has a Twin Peaks cast member in it. Took me over a decade to be able to see Cold Heaven and I already knew about the Roeg, Lynch connection so that really made me chuckle when the Twin Peaks cast member turned up in the Cold Heaven. It goes even deeper with Lynch and Roeg though. I’m sure Don’t Look Now influenced the black lodge in Twin Peaks. The dwarf in red being the most obvious but it’s all very similar. Probably has something to do with Jung. Even Roeg’s last film Puffball has many similarities with The Return but of course Lynch hasn’t seen that either. I don’t even no what point I’m trying to make. I like both filmmakers but Nic Roeg is insanely underrated, even though Don’t Look Now was voted greatest British film by critics, the rest of his filmography is seriously untapped. Insignificance? Castaway? EUREKA? He even did a really fucking great adaptation of Conrad’s Heart of Darkness for TV in the 90’s. He humanised Kurtz. It’s a great little film. What I’m saying is you should probably do an episode on Nic Roeg. Yes. Nic Roeg forever. And his films, you can tell Roeg was British. He was a British romantic in a way. And maybe a Monte Hellman episode too? Erice’s Close Your Eyes was influenced by Hellman’s last film Road to Nowhere. That’s also referenced in Blonde funnily enough. Connections galore. And it’s closely linked to Roeg’s Bad Timing. Hellman has an amazing spaghetti western film stuck in limbo called China 9 Liberty 37 that needs some attention shone on it.
@curiositytax93608 ай бұрын
A conversation on British cinema and you don’t go into detail about Nic Roeg. He’s not discussed enough. Why is he constantly overlooked? It’s such a fucking ball ache. Did Ken Russell even get a mention?
@returntoformpod8 ай бұрын
Much of Roeg's work is made and financed abroad - this episode aims to address work made within the British film industry or independently by British directors. Roeg's success reinforces our point that Britain lost many of its best talent in the 20th century. Ken Russell is an omission we regret. He fits firmly in the tradition of TV/BFI-funded arthouse films of the 60s-90s we discuss in the second half, alongside Greenaway/Watkins et al - on balance the most hopeful moment for British film. Thanks for listening and sharing your thoughts!