Scarecrow wrote:Yea, Jim Henson was fantastic. I'm still waiting for a director to be as experimental and imaginative as him but no one has really taken the risk and stepped up to the plate.
GrubbTheFragger (post: 1215370) wrote:I still need to watch scanner Darkly heard alot of good things about it. Anyways watched The mist the other night. Love the two disc set with a black and white version of the movie that was the directors vision. Also concerning someone steping up to the plate after Jim hensen i think Tim Burton is the next jim hensen or soon will be. He is the most daring film maker i can think of off hand except and this one is very close the director of Hellboy, and pans labyrinth comes very very close with the costumes and stuff.
Amzi Live (post: 1216386) wrote:Just saw Michael Clayton!
Danderson (post: 1218049) wrote:Pride and Prejudice?....Boring? Was it the Kierra Knightly version or the AMC series? The AMC one is freaking hilarious....Sarcasm was as great an art then, as it is now....
Anywho, just watched Henry V last night....Let's just say it was like watching an actual Shakespeare play, just not a stage and with great cinematography.....It took a good hour before I could figure out what all the ruckus was about, but then I started liking it.....
Would definetly recomend to anyone who loves Shakespeare or has the patience for his plays......
GhostontheNet (post: 1215714) wrote: It was fascinating to see Tim Burton drop his usual cinematic style of Gothic Expressionism to employ the violent bright shades of the older German Expressionism.
GhostontheNet (post: 1220105) wrote:Mystery Science Theatre 3000 - Overdrawn at the Memory Bank
Yep, I'm fairly familiar with Expressionist art, cinema, and even music. In fact, I just recently used Christ's Entry Into Brussels by James Ensor for the Powerpoint of a sermon titled "Jesus: Mascot or King" at my church. I have indeed seen Metropolis directed by Fritz Lang - its one of my favorite movies. There are so many classic scenes in that movie, its just incredible. Not to mention, there are so many references to that movie all over cinema its just mind-boggling. It you pay attention to it, your understanding of the real meaning of a lot of Horror and Science Fiction symbolism takes leaps and bounds when you realize it began right in this movie.Doubleshadow (post: 1220267) wrote:Someone else who knows about German expressionism! Have you seen Metropolis? I want to see it really bad!
Well, as they say "Great minds think alike." I really liked Raul Julia's performance in Overdrawn at the Memory Bank. He was like a wild animal filled with passion let loose on a boring dystopia. It was quite charming. Our common musical interests run deeper than you know. If you ask me, I say you should bite the bullet and purchase some Gothic/Darkwave CDs. Half of your favorite musicians are/were either directly involved in that music scene or were strongly influenced by it anyways.Oddly enough, that's the last MST I watched too. XD And I was listening to the our common music interests today. Weird how that works out.
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