Showing posts with label Denis Lavant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Denis Lavant. Show all posts

6/02/2013


Oh the mountain of must-see-movies and my humble attempts to scale it...

Progress will be compiled at the end of each month and the films are listed in order of preference.

Late Spring
YasujirĂ´ Ozu (1949)
A young woman must decide whether or not to marry, knowing that her decision could condemn her widower father to a life of solitude. In his trademark fashion Ozu’s characters face the camera almost square on, their emotions left exposed. A masterwork of warmth and gentle humanity; it’s not quite Tokyo Story- but then again what is.

The Goldrush
Charlie Chaplin (1925)
The gags are strong, the sets and story too, but Goldrush ranks just outside Chaplin’s best work. That said, when seen next to the Soderbergh film something becomes startlingly apparent; With Goldrush bordering on 90 years of age it’s safe to say that while slick subversions will come and go, if a film can shed playful light on our universal struggles it will never become obsolete.

Sex, Lies and Videotape
Steven Soderbergh (1989)
It’s difficult to imagine a time when videotape was considered subversive-chic and sex was still taboo but thanks to Soderbergh’s lingering camerawork and that seductive grainy flicker of early home video this game-changing debut feature has lost little of its voyeuristic appeal. Winner of the Palme D’Or in 1989, it blew American independent cinema wide open.

The Night is Young
Leos Carax (1986)

Denis Lavant flies about the set like a kathrine wheel and Carax, with his debut effort, employs his now trademark visual style with startling confidence. Unfortunately the pleasures of this film might rest on the viewer’s preference for Juliette Binoche and that whole delicate French thing she just loves to do. 

3/01/2013

Beau Trevail
Oh the mountain of must-see-movies and my humble attempts to scale it...

Progress will be compiled at the end of each month and the films are listed in order of preference.


Beau Travail 
Claire Denis (1999)
Denis Lavant gives a performance of pure intensity in this ode to absurd masculinity; Clair Denis’ use of imagery and music to tell this story of French legionnaires in East Africa is almost Kubrickian.

Chungking Express 
Wong Kar Wai (1994)
This distinctively Kar-Wai slice of pop noir feels so crisp and fresh it’s difficult to believe the film is almost two decades old. The soundtrack is a killer too.

Contempt
Jean Luc Godard (1963)
Bridgette Bardot, in full bombshell mode, and Michel Picoli fall out of love on the set of Fritz Lang’s fictional take on The Odyssey in Godard’s first attempt at high budget filmmaking. Far more romantic than Truffaut’s similarly themed Day for Night but vibrant and dramatic enough to pull it off.

Following
Christopher Nolan (1998)
With flashes of the director’s eventual hallmarks throughout; Following is an enjoyable glimpse at the roots of Nolan’s thinking. It's a little dated but still a clever, well made psychological thriller. 


 
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