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Resurrecting the Movies thread...

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Lynne:

--- Quote from: Kd5000 on March 09, 2009, 12:21:05 pm ---That's weird (though not suprising) that an employee of Blockbuster would say that.   :o What section of the section of the store is the film located? Is it in the action section?   I never been to a BLOCKBUSTER that said G/L interest though I've been to one's that say "Community Interest."   

I checked out LARS AND THE REAL GIRL and the clerk at Blockbuster said something about he doesn't rent movies about blowup dolls.   I thought I was going to be watching a FARGO type film and it was nothing of the sort. I still enjoyed it.  ;)

--- End quote ---

Hey there, Karl!  Dog Tags was on the New Releases wall alphabetized with the other New Releases.  I expect it will go to Drama eventually; it was not really an action movie, more of a growing, coming-of-age type film.  I watched it last night and it was OK...not great, but better than many I've seen.

oilgun:
PONTYPOOL - (2008) Dir: Bruce MacDonald
IMdb Synopsis: The flick is set in a radio station in Pontypool where one day the morning team starts taking reports of extreme, bloody incidents of violence occurring in town. As the story unfolds, the radio staff soon realizes the violence that is ripping society apart is due to a virus being spread through the English language. That in turn poses a problem for a yappy radio jock [Stephen McHattie, the bad guy who gets hit with the coffee pot in A HISTORY OF VIOLENCE)] and his staff holed up in the broadcast booth housed in the basement of the town's abandoned church as a slaughter rages beyond its walls.
3.5/5

Ellemeno:

--- Quote from: southendmd on March 07, 2009, 05:52:34 pm ---Frau Blucher!  Perfect!

--- End quote ---


[youtube=425,350]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e5IWHt4OoNk[/youtube]

southendmd:
Thanks for the three seconds of hilarity! :-*

oilgun:

I just received my Amazon DVD order, which includes CANNIBAL by German filmmaker Marian Dora.  It's a dramatisation of that horrific gay cannibal case from a few years ago.  Has anyone seen the film?  Will I regret buying the dvd?  ???



From IMDb:  Sparse, economical, and surprisingly affective, this film wisely eschews exploitation to instead attempt an oddly serious and almost artistic analysis of the famous Meiwes case. Almost in 3 clinical acts (the hunt, the seduction, and the consumption), the film minimalistically explores the theme of sex as predation, consummation as consumption. It also superimposes Meiwes' favorite Grimm tale of Hansel and Gretel onto it as a frame, creating an odd fairy-tale for adults.

It is not an entertaining or pleasant film--but it works very ingeniously. With little to no dialog, the film creates a sense of unease and distaste in the audience through the simple use of frank male nudity, homoeroticism (which for some will seem more disturbing than the violence), and ritualistic slaughter and cannibalism implied cheaply and brilliantly with what appears to be almost no real special effects. Much of what we see is most likely the carcass of a pig, and yet we will feel like we are seeing much more.

The film also creates a sense of an actual relationship between the two men--not that they loved each other, but that they understood each other and each other's desires. The way they interact seems genuine and a part of the paradox of this case.

Shot using the simplest and cheapest of home equipment and with only 2 real actors, the film is also a testament to how successfully done an independent film can be. So little was needed to create this, and it all comes together very well.

Unlike American films like "Hard Candy", which try to moralize its themes to death, this film is far superior in its provocation. I'm not sure who else the audience for this film is, but for those to whom it works--it works almost perfectly.

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