OK, full catch-up this time.
Raxivace wrote:Eva Yojimbo wrote:Kuribo4 wrote:(Looking at the first post here)
160~ films in one year. Damn. That's about one every other day or so.
Pfft, back in my late teens I saw around 1100 films in one year. Some days I did almost nothing but watch films all day.
![cool [cool]](./images/smilies/cool.gif)
Man I wish I had that kind of energy. Some days I struggle just to get out of bed.
If film watching requires energy, you're doing it wrong. ;)
Raxivace wrote:On a semi-related note, I happened on a YouTube playthrough of the new Spider-Man game, and being a lifelong (semi-closeted) Spider-Fan who was rather astounded by what I saw, I broke down and bought a PS4 just to play the damn game. I've spent the last few weeks playing it through several times and it's addicting as hell, and I'm secure enough in my masculinity to admit that the ending makes me cry every damn time. This game gets Spider-Man right better than any media since the first two Raimi films.
You know I haven't actually followed the new Spider-Man game much.
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I'm kind of surprised to hear you're back into gaming though!
If there's anything you want to know about the game just ask. I'm about through with my 4th playthrough so I pretty much know it inside and out now. FWIW, I'm back into gaming for now. If I get back into film and literature I may end up selling everything again... in fact, I kinda planned on selling it around Christmas anyway, which would give me enough time to play all the DLC and then be done with it. But I enjoyed it so much I thought I might catch up on some other titles. We'll see what happens over the next few months.
Raxivace wrote:So, now that I have a PS4 (for now, anyway), any must-play games? I know you'd recommend the RE remakes, but given that I just recently watched the walkthroughs on YouTube (twice, no less!) I'd rather hold off for a while so it'd be fresher. I was hoping that I could catch up on the Metal Gear Solid games (I've played 1 and 2, and the first was, along with Ocarina of Time, my all-time favorite game back in the day), but I found out the PS4 isn't backwards compatible and there's no version of MGS 3 and 4 for the PS4, so that's frustrating. I thought about maybe the latest Grand Theft Auto (I loved 3 and Vice City), but given Spider-Man is also an open-world game I'm not sure I want to play a similar game right after. Maybe an RPG might fit the bill... if I don't get bored with it (that used to be my problem with RPGs; I loved them, but they were always so long that I'd usually get bored before I finished them).
It's a real shame you missed out on the PS3 generation. There's a lot of cool stuff from then that hasn't come to modern systems yet. MGS2 and MGS3 (As well as Peace Walker and Revengeance) will probably get modern ports eventually (Konami has already created a PS4 port of Zone of the Enders 2 of all things, and that was way less popular of a franchise than Metal Gear ever was), but MGS4 still hasn't left the PS3 for anything else even a decade later. MGS5 is on the PS4, but will be literally incomprehensible if you haven't played at least MGS3 and Peace Walker (And there's thematic context from the two original MSX games, MGS4, and Revengance as well that you'd be missing out on).
I don't play a lot of the bigger mainstream games, so its hard for me to throw out blanket recommendations. I can just throw out a list of stuff I liked though, and if you have questions about them I can try posting some more thoughts.
-Bloodborne
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Final Fantasy 15 (It's a big open world game though, might not be your cup of tea ATM)
-Evil Within 1 and 2
-P.T. (The Silent Hill demo thing Kojima and Del Toro did. If you want to play this though I'd have to lend you my account/password and instruct you on some uh questionably illegal methods to acquire this. It's very cool though)
-Super Robot Wars V (I don't think you would like this one as much as I did, but its the closest we'll ever get to having an Evangelion game in English)
-Tales of Berseria
-Persona 5
-Friday the 13th: The Game
-NieR: Automata (I liked the original NieR better though, but alas that's on the PS3)
-Firewatch
-Telltale's The Walking Dead (You don't need any familiarity with the show or comics to jump into this)
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BioShock HD Collection (Well the first two games in it anyways. BioShock Infinite disappointed me)
-Haunted Castle (Just kidding, don't fucking played Haunted Castle, it's a piece of shit)
-Bloodstained: Curse of the Moon (If you liked old NES platformers like Castlevania. This is a huge throwback to those, particularly Castlevania III: Dracula's Curse)
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Dark Souls: Remastered
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Shadow of the Colossus (I think you mentioned playing the PS2 version back in the day, but the remake on the PS4 is utterly gorgeous)
-Journey
-Fez (If you like bullshit puzzles wrapped around a cute platformer)
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The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt (This is another big open world RPG though. Maz liked it more than I did but I thought it started strongly enough)
Maz and I talked about some of these games in the Games forum btw.
http://forum.pittersplace.com/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=1805
http://forum.pittersplace.com/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=2047
I'm sure he could recommend you some stuff too. IIRC he said he liked the new God of War a lot.
If I really get the itch I may look for a cheap-ish used PS3 just so I can catch up on MGS. As much I loved the first game (and really liked the second), if 3 and 4 are on that level it'd probably be worth it.
From your list, the bolded ones are the ones I've heard of. Believe it or not, in all my gaming years I never played a Final Fantasy game. I bought VII because of all the hype but never got around to it. I also noticed they have an HD remaster of X and X-2, and XII on PS4; any of them worth it? I rented Shadow of the Colossus back in the day but didn't finish it. I just don't think I was in the right mood for it back then, but I might love it now. FWIW, my anti-open world thing was only in relation to a GTA-like games (which Spider-Man definitely borrows from), not full-blown RPGs. The Witcher definitely sounds interesting, especially with maz's high rec too. If you had to narrow it down to one, what do you think I should definitely play next?
Raxivace wrote:Part of me thinks that the narrative "mystery" of these films is part of what makes them so alluring and special.
Yeah its cool, it just is a little humbling when I thought I was getting the film only to realize that I didn't realize I was missing important stuff while watching the film until after I was done with it, if that mess of a thought makes any sense.
Messy thoughts kinda fit with these late, messy Godard films. I'm tellin' ya though, if you liked Woe, you should really make Passion and Nouvelle Vague a priority; they're both just as beautiful. The former is basically one of Godard's films about filmmaking, but it incorporates a lot of painting references in the form of tableaux vivants that are just gorgeous.
Raxivace wrote:Almost, dare I say, Malick-esque?
Yeah I can see it. Malick's more poetic though, has more of a sense of wonder, while Godard in this era is usually taking either a more essayistic approach or just kind of bombarding and overloading you with information in sometimes unpleasant ways. Interesting ways, but not always pleasant.
I'm tempted to say that they're both equally poetic but in very different ways. Malick is more sensuous/visceral, while Godard is more a marriage of the literary and the visual. Malick does have more of a sense of wonder, but I often feel a kind of melancholic longing in late Godard.
Raxivace wrote:188. Cronos (1993, Dir. Guillermo del Toro)
I remember really liking this one... more in memory than at the time perhaps. I saw it before I even knew who del Toro was. Now I have it in the Criterion blu-ray box set. Should really give it a rewatch...
Raxivace wrote:186. A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master (1988, Dir. Renny Harlin)
187. A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child (1989, Dir. Stephen Hopkins)
I remember nothing about these given I saw them as a kid, back when the entire appeal was just blood and guts and scares. It's funny reading these mature, critical takes on films I enjoyed on such a simple, base level decades ago! :D
Raxivace wrote:182. Taipei Story (1985, Dir. Edward Yang) -
Your write-up made me want to see this even more. I think you know my feelings on Yi Yi and ABSD--two of the best films EVER--and I quite liked Yang's The Terrorizers too. This one sounds closer to ABSD and The Terrorizers. Gotta say, though, I never would've thought of Godard or Herzog in terms of Yang... not sure what directors I would think of, really. Perhaps Renoir sprang first to mind: a combination of a complex visual style, complex narratives, and complex thematic substance, with a slightly detached but humanistic perspective. Though their subject matter was extremely different, with Renoir often focused more on the past, class differences, and outsiders. Yang has a broader social conscience, perhaps. If you think Taipei Story is so rich that you haven't scratched the surface, I can't wait to hear what you think of ABSD; it's perhaps the richest, most novel-esque film I've ever seen.
You know how well I can ramble about Hou. I really do wish you'd get around to one of his... any one, really. They're all worth seeing/discussing and other than his first few none are less than great.
Raxivace wrote:183. The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (2004, Dir. Wes Anderson) - Another Wes Anderson I just wasn't super into, though I liked some of the seafarer stylings in the movie, and the more bittersweet tone that pops up toward the end (Like when the jaguar shark is finally encountered, aided in no doubt by the track “Staralfur" by Sigur Ros that plays) worked better for me.
My thoughts exactly. I did dig the visuals on this one more than Anderson's other films (save Budapest), but nothing in the writing or characters interested me in the least.
Raxivace wrote:178. The Last Picture Show (1971, Dir. Peter Bogdanovich) -
I loooooooved this when I saw it back in my teens. I thought it one of the most emotionally profound films I'd ever seen, even if (back then) I couldn't quite put my finger on why. I'm surprised how much has stuck with me over the years; I still vividly remember the pool scene for some reason. But more than anything it's the melancholic, wistful tone that I remember most. It's like a heavier, less subtle version of what I like so much about Ozu, that palpable feeling of time passing and things/people inevitably changing. I also wonder what happened to Bogdanovich in terms of his filmmaking...
Raxivace wrote:167. Sympathy for the Devil (AKA One Plus One, 1968, Dir. Jean-Luc Godard)
171. Rushmore (1998, Dir. Wes Anderson) -
Haven't seen that Godard because, believe it or not, I'm still waiting to go through the Stones' discography. I've heard most of their major albums, but haven't sat down and gone through them chronologically like I've done with most all of my favorite bands.
I pretty much hated Rushmore. I've never understand what was supposed to be even remotely appealing about it. It's the film that got me off on a bad foot with Anderson.
Raxivace wrote:164. Lancelot du Lac (1974, Dir. Robert Bresson)
Lancelot is one of the few Bresson's that just didn't do anything for me (another being his Joan of Arc film). Perhaps in both cases it's because I knew other versions of the material and I didn't think Bresson's take fit well with either. For Bresson's "lesser" films, I preferred A Gentle Woman, Four Nights of a Dreamer (almost impossible to find in a decent version, sadly), and The Devil Probably; the last of which is perhaps his most underrated. Angels of Sin is also pretty underrated; it's early Bresson and not as minimal as his later stuff, but still quite solid.
Raxivace wrote:157. Strike (1925, Dir. Sergei Eisenstein)
I saw this shortly after I saw Potemkin for the first time and, TBH, I liked them about equally back then. Now, I've seen Potemkin more times since while I've just seen Strike the once, but there are still scenes in that have stuck with me, including the massacre that you mentioned. I vividly remember them using that huge fire hose (I think it was) on the people in the streets. I actually felt almost the opposite as you in that Potemkin seemed more abstract while I felt the story/characters in Strike felt more natural... perhaps because my dad used to work at a factory and there were times when some of its workers would go on strike so it hit home a bit more.
Raxivace wrote:159. The Seven Year Itch (1955, Dir. Billy Wilder) -
Seems we pretty much agree on this one. As I said, a rather middling Wilder comedy.
Raxivace wrote:160. Never Say Never Again (1983, Dir. Irvin Kershner) -
I didn't care for this one back when I watched it. It just seemed a pretty bloodless Bond with a way-too-old-Connery not doing much of consequence. Back then I didn't even know it was directed by the ESB guy.
Raxivace wrote:Alright I just have to get this one off my chest.
156. Gigi (1958, Dir. Vincent Minelli)
Never saw this one, but your review is hilarious. It's rather disappointing to hear that Minelli made something so awful. His Meet Me in St. Louis is one of my favorite films, and An American in Paris is dope too. Worse than Gentleman's Agreement, though? I find that hard to swallow...
Raxivace wrote:I didn't like how the debate about the Accords or whatever they were called was fairly muddled and underwritten (Which perhaps makes it not very surprising when the movie just becomes about Stark and Rogers fighting over more personal reasons), but more than that I found some of the action to just be awful, visually incoherent messes.
Like the big Bucky breakout sequence is just awful. Characters disappearing between shots, appearing out of nowhere, no real sense of flow etc. Compare that to like, any scene in Mad Max: Fury Road for example where despite rapid editing there's still a clear flow of action at practically all times and the difference is staggering.
I will say in Civil War's defense that it was a condensing of an arch in Marvel Comics that ran for over 100 issues across various titles. It would be nearly impossible to turn that into a feature film and have it be fully coherent. I will say that I was a pretty unabashed fan of the film and I thought that whatever flaws it probably had were dwarfed by its sheer sense of scale and momentum. It just caught me up in its riptide and didn't let go. I might notice more of the flaws you point out if I revisited it, but, TBH, stuff like incoherent editing is something I pretty much expect in action blockbusters these days, even though I know there are rare exceptions like Fury Road.
Raxivace wrote:153. Zero For Conduct (1933, Dir. Jean Vigo)
154. L'Atalante (1934, Dir. Jean Vigo) -
I enjoyed both of these films more when I finally saw them on the Criterion blu-ray. ZFC is still kinda meh, though. I agree that Truffaut did this much better with 400 Blows. L'Atalante is a film I've now seen three times. First time I thought it was probably the most overrated thing I'd ever seen. Second time I enjoyed it, but still wasn't in love with it. Third time on Criterion blu-ray I enjoyed a bit more, and I think I finally got its appeal even if I still didn't think it "one of the greatest films ever made." It was basically the first "poetic realism" film, and it had a huge influence on French films of the 30s and 40s. As I saw more films from that period--those of Marcel Carne and some of Renoir's spring to mind--the more I got why L'Atalante was so important to French filmmaking. I also think it has a wit and charm about it, especially with Michel Simone's role, that's really appealing, and I can understand especially why Truffaut loved it, because that tricky combination of realism and poetry, of easy-going lightness with touches of darkness, is something Truffaut built a career out of trying to achieve. I think he was only sporadically successful, and in retrospect perhaps I appreciate even more how well Jean Vigo did it.
All that said, the film just feels a bit too... inconsequential for its "one of the greatest films of all time" status. There's not much there beyond the surface pleasures. I do, however, love that scene of the bride in white running along the ship, and underwater love-making montage. It does have its rather magical moments. I think I can justify a 9.0, but no higher.
"As far as we can discern, the sole purpose of human existence is to kindle a light in the darkness of mere being." -- Carl Jung