Great video, thanks for reminding me of this fantastic movie
@crazytony1811 күн бұрын
Really good, glad KZbin suggested this video to me
@Somberton13 күн бұрын
The teepee, which we see prominently in the climax, is visually an intersecting crossing of lines.
@sinjunchapman13 күн бұрын
@@Somberton Ooooo I hadn’t thought of this but I like this a lot
@Nightmare_vZ13 күн бұрын
Cross a dotted line on a job application lil bro
@hayden751213 күн бұрын
cooked i fear 😓
@llusionerr13 күн бұрын
Such a well done analysis!! You talking about the framing and the up and down walls, side walls, and crossing the lines was genius and helped me gain much more intricate respect for Parasite. Would love to see more videos like this and keep up the such great videos 🫡
@sinjunchapman13 күн бұрын
@@llusionerr Thank you! Parasite is a film that the more I think about, the more layers it reveals
@Spectre_19513 күн бұрын
We need more breakdowns 🙏🔥🔥🔥🔥
@juppe725213 күн бұрын
based
@blaine821613 күн бұрын
Great analysis, really well done
@linguisticspaceship2 ай бұрын
I've been watching a lot of classic horror films this month (since I haven't seen a lot of them) and Halloween made a great impact on me. Not my personal favorite but it is undeniably iconic. You can see its DNA in basically any slasher after it. And despite that, there is something really unique and chilling about Halloween's atmosphere... I didn't know exactly what it was but your vid hit the nail right on the head for me.
@alwinbenjamin3 ай бұрын
On point.
@pablocanade48573 ай бұрын
With all the respect I have for John Carpenter and the love I have for much of his filmography, there are three titles that are superior to Halloween. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, The Shining and The Exorcist. It is the great Olympus of horror films.
@British_loyalist3 ай бұрын
Please do recommend English Slow Cinema
@propoppop98664 ай бұрын
Death of the autuor is valid but only really applies to certain forms of ananlysis. For example in technical/trope analysis the authors intent is important too find where tropes are used and why. And in any ongoing work the authors intention is important as it will decide whats true in future works in the same series. And then theres theorising where the whole point is to guess the authors hiden intent
@Thatsafunnywoman5 ай бұрын
Jokes on you, i already like long "boring" movies
@pointlessreplay6 ай бұрын
Really cool insights! Ive always loved the scene where Laurie is walking in the morning but couldnt quite place what made it powerful. But your video did that for me with some of the technical stuff about how everything in the frame is in focus. Good stuff!
@thomasffrench36397 ай бұрын
Texas Chainsaw Massacre is just the better film. This is not the best horror film ever. It’s amazing, but not in my top 10 horror films (ones that are actually scary and not gory comedies, although I do love some horror comedies).
@AbrasiousProductions8 ай бұрын
pretentious video essay alert..
@AbrasiousProductions8 ай бұрын
there's a difference between slow and boring. Figures In A Landscape (1970) is a slow burn masterpiece. Jeanne Dielmann (1975) is boring, unwatchable garbage that shouldn't even exist.
@signorpafnuzio9 ай бұрын
Rephrasing the title: "death. learning to love the lyrical beauty of death". In other words, just because some "directors" do not know how to make a film and, thus, they film everything, assuming you will be that gullible to go looking for a hidden where there is none, does not mean there is beauty in it. Beauty does not come from void, for there is NOTHING in the void. There is no need to "learn to love boredom", as there is no need to "learn to love death". Boredom is... boring, and boredom is the total opposite of "beauty". Artists do not use boredom to make beautiful stuff - they make beautiful stuff to avoid boredom. As for all the names inside this video, whom some think that might represent great film directors... well, there is something that describes them all and their pseudo-aesthetics of boredom. It is ""the emperor's new clothes". Those clothes that weere so beautiful that only the very bright ones could see and understand them - and why was that? Because those clothes were not there. Tarkovski or Kubrick, dressed and rapped in the incredible void of boredom, acclaimed by "intelliogent" people as being "goregeous" and "amazing". learn to love boredom. PS There is a way something might come out of such a movie. Your psychiatrist might prescribe it together with sleeping pills, for a consolidated effect. "Take these, every night, before sleep, while watching Antonioni/Tarkovski/Resnais etc You will sleep like a baby, in maximum 30 minutes.". That was my reaction to "Stalker" and "A clockwork orange", at the first attempt of watching (and I took no sleeping pills, so...).
@FilmsFirstLove10 ай бұрын
Bro my love for this film can’t be expressed this video brings me so much joy😂
@nathanieldrake665810 ай бұрын
“Slow cinema”..hmm..that’s like when people decided that there was “wordless music”..new labels on old established things don’t make new things
@AsterLea10 ай бұрын
I feel like I learned so much from this video, thank you!
@leightonbate751610 ай бұрын
Nice insight depends what you find boring,I find modern superhero films and generic action thrillers tedious in the extreme. The Godfather is long and could be thought of as slow but it's never ever boring.
@phillipphillips806410 ай бұрын
Ppl can get into different debates a horror films such as black Christmas, psycho, texas chainsaw , and scream. Lets cut the bs Halloween is the superior film and always will be. $300,000 budget with a gross of 70 million in 1978 was unheard of. I've watched all of the horror films and Halloween 1978 surpasses all period point blank. Cut the bs
@tgriffin30594 ай бұрын
It's all subjective, of course. But I don't think there's any question that MORE people would rank Halloween as the greatest than any other movie of its' kind. As I've said before...what The Sound of Music was to musicals...what The Godfather was to gangster films...what Star Wars was to sci-fi....what The Karate Kid was to martial arts...what Titanic was to disaster films...Halloween is to horror. Even people who don't usually like horror or slasher movies will often love Halloween. But it's also revered within the horror community. That's rare.
@FrankieTeardrop19984 ай бұрын
Black Christmas is better in every single way. Stop fooling yourself.
@tgriffin30594 ай бұрын
@@FrankieTeardrop1998 Black Christmas is basically a Lifetime movie with lots of profanity thrown in. It's not terrible...but there is simply no comparison to Halloween.
10 ай бұрын
A Slow film can be extremely boring if you do not see the point of the content. Content in film is everything and is different for every viewer. Chantal Ackerman's greatest film is slow but not Slow like in ' Jeanne D. ' I was bored by this film but not by ' The Captive ' ( her great film for me ) and it is based on parts of Proust's ' In Search of Lost Time. ' It is a slow film as is ' Ruiz's ' Time Regained, ' again based on the last part of ' In search of Lost Time. ' Proust is Slow and is perfect for slow cinema.
@krkngd-wn6xj10 ай бұрын
Something I thought of when you were talking about realism were Mondo movies. Those are the closest type of movie to actual "realism" I can think of, since they even basically eliminated acting from the art.
@jonasrihtarsic74510 ай бұрын
Great video, I remember listening to yumejis theme on my headphones after finishing the film and feeling such empathy and longing..
@benfisher137610 ай бұрын
Well, there is slow, and there's......slow!
@itss.giulio918910 ай бұрын
actually slow cinema is not a genre but it's a characteristic of some kind of movies
@sinjunchapman10 ай бұрын
Wait until you find out what a genre is
@itss.giulio918910 ай бұрын
@@sinjunchapman a genre is something that allows different cinematographic works to be classified based on some recurring themes (like crime/romance) there’s no such thing as the “slow” movie genre lol
@sinjunchapman10 ай бұрын
@@itss.giulio9189 Slow cinema literally fits into that definition of a genre lmao. I promise you Slow Cinema is absolutely a genre
@AlexaFaith-t1n10 ай бұрын
Boring smhoring
@theotherfritz264310 ай бұрын
You know, it’s equal parts funny and sad that a meme decrying overanalysis is itself so frequently overanalysed. Is that irony or is it just apt?
@Zaidrsly_11 ай бұрын
u just give me a whole new perspective on cinema interpretation.. really preciate ur work n unreal passion towards cinema❤
@troygaspard673211 ай бұрын
Her dresses alone deserve a whole video. This film is sensual like a novel.
@sinjunchapman11 ай бұрын
She’s so iconic in every outfit it’s insane
@Nightmare_vZ11 ай бұрын
Yappasaurous Rex
@Nightmare_vZ11 ай бұрын
I ate with that comment be real
@hayden751211 ай бұрын
@@Nightmare_vZunfortunately not 💔
@DeadNoiseBlog11 ай бұрын
I wish they would’ve shown this in film school
@sinjunchapman11 ай бұрын
They absolutely should have
@connors499711 ай бұрын
this is amazing. please keep making well written videos!!
@sinjunchapman11 ай бұрын
Thank you very much!
@herzogesque11 ай бұрын
amazing analysis bruh
@sinjunchapman11 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@eliasw2967 Жыл бұрын
great video!
@bluevalid9559 Жыл бұрын
In my opinion this is the greatest horror film of all time because they made an iconic horror film without all the gore and the blood there is an actual story behind this people might think it’s boring but they don’t understand most people think that horrors are just about blood and gore and gruesome kills but this showed that horror films doesn’t need to be like that what makes this film so good is the creepiness and eeriness you really care about Laurie and it’s not often that you care about a character in horror films she was the original scram queen and let’s not forget this has the most iconic theme tune off all time in my opinion and the most iconic mask
@chozochiefxiii3298 Жыл бұрын
If Halloween had themes of paranoia in mind then it worked on me. I fear Michael Meyers more than any other horror icon because he behaves and looks the most real. He could be anyone, anywhere, at any time and you would never know.
@Rugy_Azizova Жыл бұрын
Definitely, an underrated video
@DelightfulRain713 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic work man. Keep it up. I made it 40 minutes into Jeanne Dielman but I'm thinking I gotta go back now
@imfireproof Жыл бұрын
Fantastic video!!
@StudioGimlii Жыл бұрын
This was such a great analysis. Just watched this film for the first time and it broke me. So good though
@MaxBomy Жыл бұрын
Fantastic video!
@Nightmare_vZ Жыл бұрын
need a video to learn how to enjoy boring videos LMFAO
@bothandorneither40335 ай бұрын
Tip: Increase the playback speed and be happy
@DeadNoiseBlog Жыл бұрын
I also practice methodological skepticism, but that's because I have trust issues
@DeadNoiseBlog Жыл бұрын
I also practice methodological skepticism, but that's because I have trust issues
@fatebeats4647 Жыл бұрын
Really well constructed and thought provoking, well done !