This post is a day late.
I went to see Guardians of the Galaxy last night instead. Marvel delivers another real winner. Unless you hate fun, entertaining movies you
should go see it. Trust me.
I saw 28 new movies in the month of July. After some months of watching very few films
because I was working on my book, I got back into the swing of things a little
in July.
For whatever reason I didn’t have much interest at the
beginning of the month in working on my remaining Oscar Best Picture nominees. I decided to concentrate on
the They Shoot Pictures Don’t They list.
I got the 2014 version of the Top 1,000 movies and went through it. There’s a lot of volatility from year to
year, but my overall totals seen for both the 2013 and 2014 lists were very
close.
I decided to see if I could knock off the remaining films I
had not yet seen that were in the Top 500 of these lists. I didn’t quite make it. I was one short on the 2014 list and three
short on the 2013 version. I’m just
under 850 seen on both lists. I did
manage to knock off a few of the very longest remaining entries. I’ve still got 8 titles that are at least
three hours long on the 2014 list, 3 of which are at least 6 hours long, and 1
of those is the TV miniseries Heimat which is almost 16 hours long. The 2013 list has all of those remaining,
plus four others, for a total of 12 entries at least three hours long.
Here are the 28 new movies I saw in July. Highlighted films are ones to which I would give
at least three stars out of five.
TSPDT (20): After
Life (1998), Providence (1977), Naked (1993), Wagon Master (1950), Miracle in Milan (1951), The Round-Up (1966), La
Terra Trema (1948), Xala (1974), The Silence (1963), Faust (1926), Ludwig (1972), Fantomas (1913), As I Was Moving Ahead
Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty (2000), Days of Being Wild (1990), Kagemusha (1980), Black
Girl (1966), Don’t Look Back (1967), The Red Circle (1970), The End of Summer (1961), The Hawks and the Sparrows (1966)
Other Movies (8): Christmas Magic (2011), A Bride for Christmas (2012),
Queen of Outer Space (1958), Dogtooth (2009), 30 for 30: Slaying the Badger (2014), The Great Gatsby (2013), Behind the Mask: The Rise of
Leslie Vernon (2006), Non-Stop
(2014)
Rewatches (0):
After Life (1998)
– This could go either way on recommending or not recommending. There’s some interesting stuff, but
ultimately it fell a little short for me.
2.5 stars tspdt
Naked (1993) – a
loafer sponges off his friends and acquaintances and nothing much of anything
happens. 2 stars tspdt
Wagon Master (1950)
– John Ford and his usual cast of character actors tries to get a Mormon group
across hostile territory to a new valley they plan to settle in. 3 stars tspdt
Miracle in Milan (1951) – a
fantasy about how an orphan and gifts from God helped save a squatters’
community from the Italian government. 3
stars tspdt
The Round-Up (1966)
– a pretty similar film in style and content to the director’s later film The
Red and the White. 2.5 stars tspdt
La Terra Trema (1948)
– unhappy story about the tough lives of fishermen on Sicily , played not by actors, but real
fishermen. 2.5 stars tspdt
Xala (1974) –
Supposedly a comedy (according to professional critics, not me) about Africans
taking over control of their own country’s government. We follow one man in particular who makes a
mess of his life. 2.5 stars tspdt
The Silence (1963)
– A Bergman film, which means it’s about death, religion, and/or suicidal
depression. In this case it’s the last
one. 3 stars tspdt
Faust (1926) –
Well done film from F.W. Murnau (Nosferatu).
It presents the tale of the man making a bargain with the devil and, of
course, coming to regret it. 3.5 stars tspdt
Ludwig (1972) –
Opulent sets and costumes, but ultimately it’s nothing more than a nearly four
hour long soap opera about a 19th century German king. 2 stars tspdt
Christmas Magic
(2011) – Hallmark movie I happened to catch while flipping though
channels. They were having a “Christmas
in July” series of films. 3 stars
A Bride for Christmas
(2012) – Same note as above. Neither
of these will stretch your brain in the slightest, but they are
heartwarming. 3 stars
Queen of Outer Space
(1958) – The film that Amazon Women on the Moon was clearly spoofing. This one plays the story seriously of some
astronauts ending up on Venus and meeting gorgeous militant women in high heels
and short skirts. 2 stars
Fantomas (1913) –
Early French film serial about a master criminal. The five episodes total more than five
hours. In a lot of ways it is similar to
Les Vampires, but I liked this a little more.
3 stars tspdt
As I Was Moving Ahead
Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty (2000) – Nearly five hours of
randomly edited, few seconds long per scene, silent home video footage of
people I did not know, nor ever came to know.
The “director” even says at the beginning that he was going to organize
the footage but then couldn’t be bothered.
What a colossal waste of time. 1
star tspdt
Dogtooth (2009) –
A father is basically leading a small cult with his wife and three teenage
children locked in a compound that they can never leave. They are completely under his control. Problems ensue. 2 stars
Days of Being Wild
(1990) – Wong Kar Wai (In the Mood for Love) delivers another take on relationships
in early 1960s Hong Kong . In fact, it’s possible that Maggie Cheung’s
character is the same one in both films.
3 stars tspdt
Kagemusha (1980)
– Late career attempted epic from Kurosawa.
It has incredible scenes of extras and costumes, but ultimately it’s
somewhat bloated. It’s still Kurosawa,
though. 3 stars tspdt
Black Girl (1966)
– It is considered the first film by a sub-Saharan African man. Unfortunately, it’s an early, obviously
amateur effort from Ousmane Sembene (Xala, Ceddo). 1 star
tspdt
Don’t Look Back
(1967) – Footage from Bob Dylan’s tour of England in the mid 1960s. Unfortunately, the director almost never
showed Dylan performing an entire song.
Instead we get snippets more than anything. However, he did show Dylan being pretty much
a full time dick to most everyone, including a couple separate scenes that run
uncut for more than 10 minutes of him giving reporters a really hard time. We got that instead of musical performances? 2.5
stars tspdt
The Red Circle (1970)
– Better than average heist film from Jean-Pierre Melville. If it hadn’t relied on extremely improbable
coincidences and events I would have rated it higher. 3.5 stars tspdt
30 for 30: Slaying
the Badger (2014) – Good documentary on the competition, both physical and
mental, between teammates Bernard Hinault and Greg Lemond at the Tour de France
in the mid 1980s. 3 stars
The Great Gatsby
(2013) – The book didn’t do much for me in high school, and the Redford film sucked, so I didn’t go into this with much
hope. It turned out to be a decent
movie, with DiCaprio playing Gatsby as a nicer person than in the book. 3 stars
Behind the Mask: The
Rise of Leslie Vernon (2006) – Recommended by Steve Honeywell because I
liked Man Bites Dog. This is quite
similar for a while, and I was laughing out loud at some of the macabre humor,
but the ending devolved into a generic horror film. It’s still well worth seeing if you liked Man
Bites Dog, though. 3 stars
The End of Summer
(1961) – Yet another late Ozu film about a family trying to get a daughter
married off. Jane Austen has nothing on
Yasujiro Ozu. 3 stars tspdt
The Hawks and the
Sparrows (1966) – I’ve yet to see a Pasolini film that I’ve had any use for
(Salo, Teorema, The Gospel According to St. Matthew) and this is no exception. Supposedly a comedy, but I
didn’t crack a smile once. 1 star tspdt
Non-Stop (2014) –
Yet another exciting film starring Liam Neeson in his improbable late career
shift to action hero. The suspense on
who is manipulating events on a non-stop flight from New
York to London
is very well done. The reveal was a
surprise to me. 4 stars
Looking forward into August I’ve
already seen a film (Guardians of the Galaxy) that will clearly make my Top
10 of the year list. I should have no
problem achieving the TSPDT goal I mentioned at the top that I didn’t quite
make in July. And that’s even with the
fact that I have a week’s vacation coming up where I will be doing a lot more
hiking than movie watching (assuming the weather is good.) I’ll try to knock off a few more of those
really long entries, too.
Faust (1926) I was especially impressed by the visuals during the first hour. The man who turned the sky black with his dark cloak was an amazing image. For me, the second half of the film was not quite as dazzling, but still pretty good.
ReplyDeleteNaked (1993) a bit depressing, and not my favorite Mike Leigh, though the dialogue is well-written I would argue.
Fantomas (1913) Would you say it only makes sense watching the entire series (335min), or its it divided into separate stories for each of the 5 episodes?
I agree on Faust's visuals.
DeleteYou could decide to stop watching Fantomas after each episode, if you chose. You should definitely watch them in order, though. Don't just skip to an episode that sounds the most interesting.
I'm happy you liked Leslie Vernon. I don't see it as devolving into a typical horror movie--it devolves into the stereotype, which is kind of the point. It's a movie that plays with its genre in the way Scream or Hot Fuzz do. I think it's really smart.
ReplyDeleteI've got Naked coming up this year at some point. This does not bode well.
Thanks for the recommendation. It took quite a while to make it to the top of my Netflix queue.
DeleteYou may like Naked more than I did. The lead character is someone I wouldn't put up with in real life, so following him around, watching others put up with him was not that entertaining for me.