Author Topic: ABCs at the Movies: The Doubles Round!  (Read 3225993 times)

Offline memento

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"P" is The Piano (1993)
« Reply #3420 on: April 07, 2008, 04:29:50 pm »
Australia


Offline MaineWriter

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"Q" is Qivitoq (1956)
« Reply #3421 on: April 07, 2008, 05:03:09 pm »
Denmark

Nominated for the Oscar for Best Foreign Language film; also nominated for the Palme d'Or at Cannes.

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Offline Fran

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"R" is Romeo and Juliet Get Married (2005)
« Reply #3422 on: April 07, 2008, 05:53:58 pm »
Portugal

AKA O Casamento de Romeu e Julieta



From IMDb:

A Romeo-and-Juliet kind of love affair.  The difference here is what sets the two lovers apart: their soccer teams. Being a fan of Corinthians, Romeu has to fake he really likes Palmeiras in order to gain Julieta's heart.

Offline oilgun

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"S" is Steam: The Turkish Bath (1997)
« Reply #3423 on: April 07, 2008, 06:43:50 pm »
Turkey / Italy

AKA: Hamam

IMDb Plot Summary: Francesco and Marta are husband and wife running a small design company in Rome. When Francesco's long forgotten Aunt Anita dies in Istanbul, he travels there to look after the sale of the hamam (one of a few traditional Turkish baths left) he inherited. There he meets the family running the hamam, gets attracted to a member of it and the whole Turkish atmosphere and decides not to sell the hamam..

IMDb Comment:
A Beautiful, subtle, literate movie

This film is really a very subtle, literate story. Nothing hits you over the head, there's nothing to win or lose at the end, it's just characters and events unfolding and interacting within a languid pace. It's really a beautiful film, both in scenery, sentiment and depth of feeling.

If you've ever visited Istanbul you should see this film. I expected to see the Hagia Sophia and Blue Mosque right off, but you never see them-- the film chooses to see Istanbul through the charming back alleys and everyday people. The traditions of the country and the warmth of the people are ever-present in this film. Istanbul itself is like a character here, and its special charms are at the center of the story. If you have visited there, you will understand why the characters become so captivated.

But this film only uses Istanbul and the Hamam as a vehicle for showing its characters ways of finding happiness and tranquility in one's life. The story is much more general and eternal. It shares that quality with literature-- it is at once about these specific characters, and also about everyone, everywhere.

Here in New York this film is called "Steam" and is being sold as a major homoerotic experience. It's sad that they have to cheapen this wonderful movie in that way, and people going expecting to get their jollies will be woefully disappointed-- and entirely missing the point.

One tends to think of Turkish/Italian cinema as not being as technically sophisticated, but this film is vary carefully and intelligently written and directed. This really is one of those special, beautiful movies, not as flashy or intense as some, but I think I will remember this film for a long time.


Village Voice Review: 

http://www.villagevoice.com/film/9848,lim,1704,20.html




Starring the ridiculously handsome Allessandro Gassman (right):


And to prove that it is called Steam in North America (because we are too stupid to go see a film called Hamam?  ::)):



==COMMENT==
I guarantee that watching this will make you want to visit, if not move to, Istambul.  An absolutely wonderful film!

Offline MaineWriter

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"T" is Tigrero: A Film That Was Never Made (1994)
« Reply #3424 on: April 07, 2008, 07:12:55 pm »
Finland



This comment is long, but I am including it for Gil:

I didn't find Tigrero: A Film That Was Never Made to be one that worked completely as a documentary, but there was a lot that I did admire about it. The director Mika Kaurismaki (of the Kaurismaki brothers, the famous Finnish filmmakers) chooses to not just plunge the viewer into the Karaja culture, of which Tigrero is mostly set in, but sets up a sort of 'huh' opening scene where director Samuel Fuller persuades Jim Jarmisch to go with him on a trip into the jungles of Brazil for some odd reason or another. I could get a sense of what Kaurismaki was after with this, to make the documentary feel more like a hybrid, like something out of Jarmusch's own Coffe & Cigarettes where the real people are themselves, only still playing characters. But the film really only gets some lift once Kaurismaki gives up on the scripted stuff- which isn't awful but feels like it's out of some other movie- and gets to the facts, the images of total reality and the stories of old. In this case, like with Les Blank's Burden of Dreams, Kaurismaki is almost more interested in the native people of the area, the Karaja, who were there for centuries when Fuller arrived in 1956 to do some 16mm rough shooting of the area for a film he was preparing (of the title here).

In fact, I wondered after a while when Kaurismaki would get to the story behind the 'film never made', as he continually shows the Karaja and their customs. This isn't a bad thing at all actually, and there are even a couple of wonderfully strange moments, like the two men doing their chant as their stuck together and go by the cigar-chomping Fuller. Or when we see how the natives do their mating ritual, which involves the men being covered completely by bushes and going around the women, who rub their bellies in hope of having babies. But really, part of the touching factor is just in seeing how these people lived and payed heed to nature, which is their sort of God, however not exactly their God as Fuller observes "they don't know what God is" (he makes a note, however, that Christians don't either, but they just flaunt it more). With all of this footage, either shot by Kaurismaki or Fuller or even through Jarmusch as he carries around a camcorder, it's all very absorbing on an anthropological level, and the history behind the people too is interesting, how the Westerners came into try and modernize, and they almost crushed their culture.

Once this is mostly through with we do finally get to Fuller talking about Tigrero, and it's pretty much worth the wait to hear one of the giants of American film in the 50s and 60s (both studio-wise and independent) talk about the ambition of it all, how John Wayne and Ava Gardner would be cast, how it all rung of slight subversion of the action/adventure picture set in exotic locations. It's always a treat too just to hear how Fuller tells these stories, no b.s. involved ever, and how after the crushing blow from the insurance company that the film could not go on (they wouldn't want to put up the millions of dollars in case, well, one of the stars died), how he integrated the footage into Shock Corridor. Jarmusch also makes sure the questions are direct as possible, however with a good level of adoration from an obvious fan, and with his own dead-pan narration telling of the Karaja's stories and the like. By the end, I knew I had seen at least 2/3 of an excellent documentary on a group of people I'd never known before, and had seen things about their ways of life and understanding of one another that was fulfilling, and from knowing another lot of great lost stories by a filmmaker who knew his stuff. If only Kaurismaki wouldn't get in the way sometimes.
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Offline Fran

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"U" is Under the Flag of the Rising Sun (1972)
« Reply #3425 on: April 07, 2008, 09:31:44 pm »
Japan

AKA Gunki hatameku motoni



From Digitally Obsessed:

Under the Flag of the Rising Sun concerns Sakie Togashi (Sachiko Hidari), a war widow whose husband (Tetsuro Tamba) was, so the only surviving document shows, executed after a court martial for desertion. Every year since the war's end (the film is set in 1971), she has appealed this status, feeling that her husband never would have abandoned his duty or country. The film opens with footage of the Emperor presenting flowers in honor of the war dead; Sakie simply wants her husband to be one of those honored, something his status as deserter will not allow. The latest bureaucrat to handle her claim tells her that during their inquiry, four members of her husband's unit failed to respond to letters asking for their recollections. If she visits them and discovers new proof, then perhaps something can be done.

Each man of the four is haunted, and in some ways ruined, by their experiences as soldiers. The first man, Terajima, lives like a refugee in a Korean shantytown on the outskirts of Tokyo. The next, Akiba, is a comedian parodying his own war days. The third, Ochi, drank himself blind after the war. The last of the four, Ohashi, is a teacher whose questions about the war throw out answers he doesn't like. A final visit to the fat cat officer who ordered the husband's execution reveals both the ruling class's disinterest in the truth as well as an unexpected and shocking surprise.

Offline oilgun

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"V" is Vive l'amour (1994)
« Reply #3426 on: April 07, 2008, 09:42:03 pm »
Taiwan

From U of Edinburgh Cinema of China Festival 07 Catalogue: Bernardo Bertolucci once said that Tsai Ming-liang is re-inventing cinema. Malaysian by birth, his films are set in present day Taiwan, where rapid urban development is bewildering ordinary people, where loneliness is palpable, and sexuality uncertain. In Vive l’amour, his third and perhaps best film, his regular actor Lee Kang-sheng steals the key to an empty apartment that Yang Kuei-Mei is selling for a real estate company; Chen Chao-jung plays her new lover, whom she meets there. The three interact and the result is like Billy Wilder’s The Apartment, remade by Michelangelo Antonioni. Filming in long, engrossing takes, Tsai attempts nothing less than a portrait of the human soul. In the extraordinary last shot of this film, he succeeds.



==COMMENT==
Another one of my all time favourite films.  This round is really working out for me  :)

==ASIDE==
Quote
This comment is long, but I am including it for Gil:

For me?!  Thanks!  (Why is it for me?  ???)


Offline BelAir

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Aside = Re: Wildcard "X" is Chocolat (2000)
« Reply #3427 on: April 07, 2008, 10:03:22 pm »


=aside=
That is one hot picture of Mr. Depp!
"— a thirst for life, for love, and for truth..."

Offline BelAir

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"W" is The Weeping Meadow (2004)
« Reply #3428 on: April 07, 2008, 10:26:33 pm »
Greece

The Greek title: Τριλογία 1: Το Λιβάδι που δακρύζει



from imdb:
This is the first film of Theo Angelopoulos' trilogy. The story starts in 1919 with some greek refugees from Odessa arriving somewhere near Thessaloniki. Among these people are two small kids, Alexis and Eleni. Eleni is an orphan and she is also taken care by Alexis' family. The refugees build a small village somewhere near a river and we watch as the kids grow up and fall in love. But difficult times of dictatorship and war are coming... Written by Chris Makrozahopoulos {[email protected]}

"— a thirst for life, for love, and for truth..."

Offline MaineWriter

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Re: "V" is Vive l'amour (1994)
« Reply #3429 on: April 08, 2008, 06:16:03 am »
[
==COMMENT==
Another one of my all time favourite films.  This round is really working out for me  :)

I had a feeling it would!
Quote
==ASIDE==
For me?!  Thanks!  (Why is it for me?  ???)

Because I was mixed up...LOL. Seriously, I was thinking you had posted a bunch of Jim Jarmusch films and talked about him as a director, but now I see I had confused him with someone else. Oh well, sorry!

L
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