Author Topic: ABCs at the Movies: The Doubles Round!  (Read 2571036 times)

Offline southendmd

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"T" is Le trou (1960)
« Reply #5610 on: December 10, 2008, 09:43:02 am »


IMDb user:  Probably, to really get "Le Trou", this splendid, intense movie, you have to be conscious that the great Jacques Becker was dying during the making of the film. A quiet stoicism permeates this work of art. The story is supposed to be very sad, but it isn't. The guys on the screen are too tough, by no means apt to mourn their dire destiny or, metaphorically, to ask for the viewer's sympathy.

We have the true story of the hole dug by a bunch of in-mates to escape from a jail in Paris. The screenplay is taken from a novel of the distinguished writer and film-maker Jose' Giovanni, himself formerly a convict. Becker chooses to tell the story in the simplest, neatest possible way. No music at all, an essential, dry, sharp yet powerful dialog. The in-mates do their job, to try to escape. The director avoids the annoying cliché, typical of the American jail-movies, of showing the wardens as sadistic torturers. They are tough and strict, they don't like but they feel no hate for the prisoners. The wardens just do their job, that's all. In fact, there are no really despicable characters in the film. At his last appointment with the art of cinema, Becker seems to accept and forgive all human beings.

A brilliant idea is to show how the guys turn common objects and waste iron into the tools needed for the escape (a key, a lamp, a pick, a sand-glass). The little periscope made with a tooth-brush gives raise to a shocking scene, few seconds of great cinema. We follow the in-mates' apparently endless, exhausting labor of digging and sewing. That should be rather boring for the viewer, but it isn't. How comes there's not a single moment of bore in the film? That's the privilege of Art.

The work of the camera and the black and white photography are sensational, and convey the intense emotions of the characters. The psychological study is made in such an understated way that you may overlook it at a first view. But, after seeing the movie a second time, and knowing the development of the story, you fully appreciate how the psychology of the characters is treated, with accuracy and depth. The actors make an excellent job. This is stunning, thinking that "Le Trou" was the first movie for Philippe Leroy and Michel Constantin, later prominent actors of French cinema. And Jean Keraudy wasn't a professional actor, he was one of the in-mates that actually dug the hole fourteen years earlier! (at least, this is stated by himself at the beginning of the movie, and is testified in several books on French cinema)

Are there deep messages in the film? Two wardens bring a fly to feed a spider. There is the spider, a patent symbol of death, ghastly in its immobility. Two prisoners are peeping and wondering: what the hell are the wardens doing? Got no idea. And who cares, after all? Maybe that is Becker's dry, ironic message. Don't be too deep. Fight against bad luck, be stoic and brave. Who cares, after all?

My opinion is that the artist Becker, displaying the same toughness of the guys on the screen, just fought to leave us a major work of art. Our task of viewers is to enjoy and love it. "Le Trou" is an unforgettable film, which honors the art of cinema.

Offline oilgun

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"U" is Under Lock & Key (1995)
« Reply #5611 on: December 10, 2008, 11:42:19 am »


Plot: An FBI agent goes undercover in a women's prison to find evidence hidden by a drug dealer's ex-girlfriend. After she is taken off the case, she finds that the drug dealer has kidnapped her daughter. She enlists the help of one of her prison guards, and together they take on the drug dealer's mob.

Offline Fran

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"V" is Violenza in un carcere femminile (1982)
« Reply #5612 on: December 10, 2008, 12:16:51 pm »

From IMDb:  Emanuelle goes undercover into a prison to expose the corrupted officials who are brutalizing the inmates. Emanuelle is shocked by the horrors and humiliation the prisoners are subjected to, but when her true identity is discovered, she finds herself at the receiving end.

Offline memento

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"W" is Why Worry (1923)
« Reply #5613 on: December 10, 2008, 07:27:10 pm »


Plot: Harold Van Pelham (Lloyd) is a hypochondriac, rich businessman who sails to the tropics for his 'health.' Instead of the peace and seclusion he is seeking, he finds himself in the middle of a revolution. He is imprisoned where he befriends the friendly giant, Colosso (Aasen), and they engineer an escape. Together, they quell the revolution.

Offline oilgun

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Wildcard "X" is Prison (1988)
« Reply #5614 on: December 10, 2008, 08:34:59 pm »


From IMDb:   Renny Harlin's first American film was one of the best of a slew of prison-set horror films(like "Death House" or "The Chair")in the late 80's.  Twenty years before, guard Lane Smith had wrongfully executed a condemned man.  Now,he is the warden of the newly re-opened prison, and the man's ghost is back for bloody revenge.  This atmospheric and very moody film features lots of gruesome gore and violence.  Viggo Mortensen, Tiny Lister, Tom Everett and Kane Hodder are on hand for the entertaining carnage

Offline Lynne

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"Y" is Yol (1982)
« Reply #5615 on: December 10, 2008, 08:53:45 pm »
From IMDb:

A harsh portrait of Turkey, its people and its authorities, shown through the stories of five prisoners given a week's home leave, and the problems they encounter in adjusting to the world outside. 

From Wiki:

Yol (Turkish for "The Road" or "The Way") is a 1982 Turkish film. The screenplay was written by Yılmaz Güney, and it was directed by his assistant Şerif Gören, who strictly followed Güney's instructions, as Güney was in prison at the time. Later, when Güney escaped from prison, he took the negatives of the film and edited it in Switzerland.[citation needed] The film is a portrait of Turkey in the aftermath of the 1980 Turkish coup d'état: its people and its authorities are shown via the stories of five prisoners given a week's home leave. The film has caused much controversy in Turkey, and was banned until 2000s due Yılmaz Güneys involement more than its content.
"Laß sein. Laß sein."

Offline southendmd

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Wildcard "Z" is Azuloscurocasinegro (2006)
« Reply #5616 on: December 10, 2008, 10:04:23 pm »

AKA Dark Blue Almost Black

Plot:  Jorge is a 25-year old janitor who desperately tries to find himself a new, and especially, better, job. This undertaking is complicated by the fact he takes care of his handicapped father who had a heart infarct seven years earlier. His soon-to-be-released brother Antonio finds a girlfriend (Paula) in jail who wants to get pregnant. When Antonio finds out he's infertile, Jorge is asked to make Paula pregnant. To make the dilemma even heavier, Jorge's childhood sweetheart Natalia returns after many years. Meanwhile, Jorge's best friend Israel (nicknamed Sean) secretly photographs men visiting an erotic masseur to find out something he didn't bargain for.

Offline southendmd

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Re: ABCs at the Movies: The Composers Round!
« Reply #5617 on: December 10, 2008, 10:17:50 pm »
The Composers Round!

Please post an unplayed film with notable music, and name the composer.


« Last Edit: December 11, 2008, 01:38:47 am by Fran »

Offline Fran

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"A" is An American Tail (1986)
« Reply #5618 on: December 11, 2008, 01:13:37 am »
Composer:  James Horner


From Wikipedia:  The film follows Fievel Mousekewitz, who is separated from his family after falling overboard the SS Austria as it approaches America after departing the Port of Hamburg. With nowhere to go upon arrival, Fievel ends up meeting Warren T. Rat, a conman rat who sells him to a sweatshop. Fievel escapes and with his new friends Tony and Bridget, begins a search for his parents, who believe that Fievel drowned at sea.

[youtube=425,350]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRjb8sMjYu8[/youtube]
"Somewhere Out There"
Written by James Horner, Barry Mann, and Cynthia Weil

« Last Edit: December 12, 2008, 01:10:57 am by Fran »

Offline Lynne

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"B" is Body Shots (1999)
« Reply #5619 on: December 11, 2008, 07:56:41 am »
Composer is Mark Isham

From IMDb:

A tale of the mysterious, but necessary, mating ritual between men and women of today and everything they think about sex but are afraid to say.
"Laß sein. Laß sein."