No way!!! Sacrifice theory, of greetings and goodbyes and wester and lost souls and morning star are by far the greatest songs. Then after afi died.
@Joeyjoeyjoey42016 күн бұрын
My absolute favorite movie of all time
@yournamehere600219 күн бұрын
REAL LIFE and MODERN ROMANCE are laugh out loud Albert Brooks films.
@yournamehere600219 күн бұрын
Well, BROADCAST NEWS (which I love) is written and directed by James L. Brooks (co-creator of THE SIMPSONS) and THE SCOUT was directed by Andrew Bergman, who wrote FLETCH, co-wrote BLAZING SADDLES and wrote and directed THE FRESHMAN.
@gatika865Ай бұрын
Wtf….
@matteogenova3485Ай бұрын
wonderful film
@mkscottmcp2 ай бұрын
I think Scott's ranking is perfectly sane
@jasonmorgan15432 ай бұрын
If you guys haven’t seen Defending your life it’s a great Brooks film which he also directed. It also has a criterion blu ray. Great review on this great film.
@devontehuntley62742 ай бұрын
Freddy's resurrection in Part 5 is easy. Freddy used his mother's spirit to bring him back by rebirthing him in the dream world and then crawled to the church setting from where he was defeated in 4 to truly gain his figure back by touching his clothes that were left behind. Don't know the why, but that's the how. You see, when Freddy dies in the dream world he never truly dies as it only takes him out temporarily, but he can generally restore his power and resurrect himself through various methods. His death in Part 3 seemed definitive, but still in the dream world so in Part 4 he was able to come back by recreating the junkyard his skeleton was buried at by Neil in the real world in 3 to bring himself back that way and by means of something unholy to counter the holy water Neil used to defeat him (and so we have flaming dog urine). Part 6 is many years after this and Freddy is already out and about again, but it's clear his mother couldn't keep him captive within her for very long after the events of 5 seeing how she struggled to keep him contained at the end when he ripped his arm out of her.
@Sorellarium2 ай бұрын
My God, you are so wrong in your assessment of that movie. I first saw it in 1975 at 12 and it became instantly became a favorite. The movie is much better in French, but the English has been very well done. You clearly can't appreciate masterpiece of that level. It's the best sci-fi movie ever made. Mind blowing story. Wonderful animation and drawing. It's so unique and look and feel like nothing else. And that music!!!! You younger generations don't have a clue about what is good you are just a generation of know it all who doesn't know anything. Go watch today's crap! It's so much better! So glad to have been born in the 60s! Everything was SOOOOO much better than today!
@Triplr33 ай бұрын
I like the knives man
@colortura3 ай бұрын
The gays of a certain age love this movie.
@shadoww79753 ай бұрын
Yo this is my absolute favorite Martial Arts Movie of all time❤
@theshakyproject29713 ай бұрын
I saw The Doom Generation on VHS at 17 (in 1997), when I worked at my local video store. I remember I didn't like it, but I kept coming back to it for its visual style and soundtrack. I grew to appreciate it over time, especially when I saw Nowhere a year later, and it had a similar effect. I think I genuinely like Nowhere and I'm excited to see it in 4k (I don't like that both films are on one disc). I've never seen TFU, outside of a couple clips and screenshots. I'm glad Araki has had success in bringing his music tastes and visual sensibilities to mainstream projects like 13 Reasons Why and Riverdale.
@mkscottmcp4 ай бұрын
John Woo. Ric Flair's favorite John
@deckofcards874 ай бұрын
This is one of the best documentaries ever made... that's a shoot and miss
@AllenHansford-xz3mv5 ай бұрын
I can't remember that movie 🎥🎥🎥🎥🎥🎥🎥🎥🎥🎥🎥🎥🎥🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿
@AllenHansford-xz3mv5 ай бұрын
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮
@Sqdlow5 ай бұрын
Not his best film, but definitely great nonetheless
@dudemask49435 ай бұрын
After rewatching "Querelle" in a more organized manner, my current thought is that this movie might not be simply a gay film. The definitive narration throughout the movie, along with some very obvious symbols of traditional patriarchal society (what comes to mind is a lamp post base resembling a phallus, on which the captain graffiti's: 'young men need boys with big cocks,' and then there’s the scene where the police officer flips through Gil's photos, where the naked women are always accompanied by a naked man, perhaps the brother of the naked woman), these overly explicit and apparent representations of a male-dominated society's perspective on 'gay love' make me doubt that Fassbinder is delivering a crude conclusion. Instead, it’s possible that he uses these frameworks to metaphorically (artistically) depict Querelle’s self-awareness exploration process as a journey to find oneself under a specific power structure. Especially the way the lines are recited like dramatic dialogues in the film seems to imply an unquestionable framework structure. Also, there's a line in the movie where Lys tells Querelle that he is infinitely self-replicating, which might be from Artaud. I remember seeing something similar in "Difference and Repetition." But even from this perspective, the film still inevitably seems a bit narcissistic... Nevertheless, emotionally, I still enjoy watching it. I never find it boring, and instead, I think there are many points of doubt (the meaning of the tarot cards at the beginning, the intention behind the birth certificate at the end, the significance of Gil and Robert being played by the same actor, etc.) that can be interpreted or explored from multiple angles...
@dudemask49435 ай бұрын
I really agree your guys opion:It's super simple and super complicated,there's many things worth digging in
@kapilsethia92846 ай бұрын
how unfortunate are those who die unaware of the beauty of music and this movie.
@brandonhamaguchi7 ай бұрын
I liked the analysis but sorry I feel disgusted by the continued coughing and through clearing, please drink some water, pause the recording
@nuuskamuikkunen4078 ай бұрын
Every American: I'm in 1/8 Polish. No you not.
@ChrisW_Essex8 ай бұрын
Lets be real this movie asks more questions than it gives answers, its thought provoking....it makes you think more about each character as to why they are the way they are... there are some answers but ultimately those answers could change its open to intepretation.
@-xirx-8 ай бұрын
Dear oh dear. So many factual errors about the film, I'm honestly wondering if you two watched the film & did ANY research or just read the back of the DVD case? Do better guys. Great film btw, ignore this review though
@jack-c3g9 ай бұрын
you guys don't know what you are talking about that section of NYC is called the lower east side and it was bad but crazy exciting and fun i loved it because i live on the lower east side all my life and i really like the some of the actors actually speaking with a lower east side accent, and wren was a tough and smart but she, but looking at the movie made me think of the good old days, wren is not center and she needs a friend.
@mikelai409 ай бұрын
Anita Mui was not only a good artress but also an icon in Hong Kong music. She was dubbed the "Madonna of the East". Just introduce you her concert in 1991 : kzbin.info/www/bejne/i5mtn4xupJh7o9k
@perryfan4910 ай бұрын
I bought the blu ray and I enjoyed them both. I favored The Executioners more personally. I watched these with a group of friends. Definitely a fun time for our first watch!
@chiaweinam10 ай бұрын
I tot Cheung stole the show
@GeraldLange196810 ай бұрын
Always enjoyed this fun overboard at times action film. Balanced with drama in between. Picked up the laserdisc back in the mid 90s. Unfortunately Anita died of cancer in early 2000s I believe.
@trevorrapp722710 ай бұрын
A movie that reminded me of this film is The Other Side of The Wind by Orson Welles. I agree with you that Irma Vep requires a deeper interest in cinema to be recommended. Good rec for people interested in the behind-the-scenes, filmmaking-process kind of movie. Which isn’t for everyone. Good review though, and nice to find as there is sadly not many reviews on KZbin about this film, despite it being a movie that opens a lot of space for discussion and analysis.
@mkscottmcp11 ай бұрын
Shoutout to The Rock. Interfering in The Fast & The Furious franchise, the DCEU, Wrestlemania XL, and NOW the Criterion Connection?!
@mkscottmcp11 ай бұрын
One minute you're defending the whole galaxy, and, suddenly, you find yourself sucking down (The)Darjeeling(Limited) with Marie Antoinette... and her little sister.
@_PL_11 ай бұрын
Just watched Frownland, after seeing Patton Oswalt quasi-rave about it during his visit to The Criterion Closet, and in another clip on Trailer From HeII. I can totally see why this would appeal to almost no one, but I have to say I found it intriguing as a darkly humorous character study and mood piece. I'll admit that it was tough going at first, as I struggled to find something to either connect with or understand about it. But as it went on I got more and more into it. I agree with Joe's tastefully discrete suggestion of the main character's "neurodivergence," as that came through strongly to me while watching the film (being "on the spectrum" myself, I tend to find cinematic depictions of the condition alternately fascinating and exasperating; this was much more of the former than the latter). That said, I don't think the nature of his neurodivergence was because it was "just an amalgam of stereotypes," because (again, speaking from direct experience and extensive observation) Dore Mann's portrayal in the film gets so many specifically autistic traits so right that I'm tempted to wonder if the actor isn't on the spectrum himself (not that he'd need to be; that's why it's called acting ;-). Some further reflections on the movie: In the opening scene, I wondered how this guy even had a girlfriend, if that's who the Laura character is supposed to be. (Side note: the fact that she sports an old green Army jacket made me wonder if this was a reference to the Lindsay Weir character from Freaks and Geeks.) While watching, I thought the Sandy character had to be Keith's brother, because what normal / functional person would be friends with someone like that. But according to every review of the film I've read, he is indeed supposed to be Kieth's only friend I suppose one of the modest successes of the movie is that it made me want to know more about the other people in Keith's life, such as Laura (what's with the numbered scenarios in her notebook? She appears to be a student - if it's high school, why is she hanging out with twentysomething Keith?), and Sandy (why's he wearing a t-shirt with an NYPD logo in his last scene with Keith? Did he work for the police dept. prior to becoming a waiter? Or, maybe he is or was a social worker with professional ties to the police, which could explain not only the t-shirt, but also how he came to know Keith, and why he ostensibly feels some kind of obligation to help Keith.) I thought the brief scene with Keith disclosing to a psychotherapist a pivotal incident from his childhood was a nice touch. And the way the therapist tried to guide Keith to insight about who he feels "betrayed" him in the incident felt authentic. Roger Ebert, in his review, wondered about the purpose of the test-taking "digression." As I watched the movie, I entertained two ideas about the test-taking sequence: (1) it might serve as a break from the patience- and empathy-testing assault of Keith's locked-in character; and (2) it looks like turning the tables on the roommate, Charles, who in one of the previous scenes had berated and belittled Keith, but then in the stairwell scene after the LSAT test, Charles himself is treated the same disparaging and scornful way by the other test-taker, who seems more intellectually dominant and verbally expressive than Charles, just as Charles is (or at least comes off as) more intellectually dominant and verbally expressive than Keith. Basically, the scene seems to demonstrate a hierarchy of intellectual bullying. As for the complaint that the film "doesn't go anywhere," I don't think the absence of a plot or contrived dramatic tension are necessarily deficits in any film; as mentioned in this review, Slacker is both plotless and meandering, though I'll agree that it's a vastly more entertaining movie than Frownland. And I know I've seen many other films that are much less about plot than about character, atmosphere, and/or stringing together otherwise unconnected vignettes. But even apart from that, it seems to me that there might be something like a character arc in this movie: in the early scene where the female friend is sobbing to the point of dripping with mucus, Keith tries to explain to her that he can't cry, and then proceeds to force his eyes to water by spreading them wide open for over a minute. But by the end of the story, he's undergone such a maelstrom of humiliation and frustration that he's finally been brought to an emotional catharsis even more extreme (and disgustingly mucusy) than Laura's. The fact that this last act transpired over what almost looked like a Dantean descent into heII (note the red glow of the room where the drunk guys toy with him), followed (post-purgation) by a later re-emergence into the rooftop sunrise (rebirth?), further suggests that there wasn't literally _nothing_ happening in this film. One last thing is that, according to the IMDb, just about everyone in the cast has done almost nothing apart from this movie.
@Diabolik77111 ай бұрын
I have to watch this every now and then. The grittiness and great acting. I 100% believed all the actors
@mkscottmcp Жыл бұрын
LIKE MUSSOLINI!
@Zenshirokojima Жыл бұрын
Damn. Americans suck huh.
@TS-qr3rk Жыл бұрын
Good talk guys!
@STEVEHEROLD Жыл бұрын
always enjoyed this movie. saw it in theaters in 1987. this and Buddy Holly Story make a nice double feature.
@codychavarria6088 Жыл бұрын
Why didn't they make this 4k????
@mkscottmcp Жыл бұрын
The most visible Invisible Man in history!
@CanadianBacon6ix Жыл бұрын
Just finished watching it. Loved it. I will check out all the extra stuff on the bluray tomorrow but what a great film. I remembered watching this as a kid with my family.
@ricogomez4020 Жыл бұрын
So the transfer is good?
@CanadianBacon6ix Жыл бұрын
@ricogomez4020 Yeah, it was. Mind you last time I saw this was on vhs lol. But it looked great to me.
@ericfelds6291 Жыл бұрын
Loved it guys, this is a classic. subbed.
@JamieEvansBooks Жыл бұрын
Great movie! Great review!
@JordanPhegley Жыл бұрын
You guys are both looking great!!
@rosav1000 Жыл бұрын
Tank you richard chamberlain..l love❤💝😍😘💝😍😘💝😍😘💝😍😘💝😍😘❤❤
@deckofcards87 Жыл бұрын
My all time favourite horror movie. It never ceases to both puzzle and disturb me and it does it all with imagery, music and a forboding feeling. Extremely effective filmmaking. Robert Altman's "Images", which came out a year earlier, does a lot of the same thing.