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ruderrocket

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Posts posted by ruderrocket

  1. I loved The Leftovers, especially season 3, and am glad it got this high on the strength of a few votes. Easily on the short list for my favorite shows of all time. The way it got its characters from Point A to Point Z was so satisfying and sooo fucking earned. It took these characters who were broken (with good reason), almost irreparably so, and got them to the point where by the end of it all, we could say that even if all their shit wasn't fixed, some sort of corner had been turned. The first season was bleak to the point that it got hard to watch, and even though the succeeding seasons never let go of the despair and anguish at the core of the show and its premise, the show was able to expand its emotional palette and show us the good, the joy, the sheer fucking hope that can come with trying to be resilient in an incredibly fucked up world. And it did this without sentiment or token attempts at making us feel nice and fuzzy inside.

    This is incredibly corny, but The Leftovers is one of those pieces of pop culture that made me want to try harder to come to terms with my own shit, so yeah, definitely my number one show of the year haha. Also, it had some of the funniest, most surreal, most entertaining TV moments of the year (w/ scenes featuring the Wu Tang Clan, lion cult sex orgies, and spy adventure fantasy lands), and for my money, one of the best TV love stories of all time. Yeah, I really liked this show.

  2. September 24-30:

    147. 25th Hour (2002)
    148. The Tree of Life (2011)
    149. A Ghost Story (2017)
    150. Kingsman: Golden Circle (2017)
    151. Infernal Affairs (2002)
    152. Rear Window (1954)
    153. Enchanted (2007)
    154. Okja (2017)
     

    • Like 1
  3. Started a 365 movies challenge at the start of the year, but haven't really been able to keep at it. I'm at 147 right now. I have a soft goal of hitting 200 before the year ends, but at this point, I'm not all too fussed about reaching that number. 
    ____

    List of movies I've watched so far:
     

    Spoiler

    January 
    1. Things to Come
    2. The Tale of the Princess Kaguya
    3. Only Yesterday
    4. Split
    5. Vince and Kath and James
    6. Singin' in the Rain
    7. La La Land
    8. Manhattan
    9. Miller's Crossing
    10. Don't Think Twice
    11. Hail, Caesar!
    12. The Truman Show
    13. A Serious Man
    14. The Departed
    15. Manchester by the Sea
    16. Moonlight

    February
    17. Sakaling Hindi Makarating
    18. Sing Street
    19. Arrival
    20. John Wick: Chapter 2
    21. The Legend of Drunken Master
    22. The Lego Batman Movie 
    23. The ASsassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford
    24. Zootopia
    25. Brief Encounter
    26. Certain Women
    27. Hacksaw Ridge
    28. I'm Drunk I Love You
    29. The Umbrellas of Cherbourg
    30. Mariquina
    31. 20th Century Women
    32. Paterson
    33. Fences

    March
    34. Logan
    35. Tokyo Story
    36. Grave of the Fireflies
    37. Tokyo Drifter
    38. Margaret
    39. The Adventures of Robin Hood
    40. Heat
    41. In the Loop
    42. Memories of Murder
    43. Tokyo Godfathers
    44. The Night of the Hunter
    45. Kong: Skull Island
    46. Syndromes and a Century
    47. The 400 Blows
    48. Two Days, One Night
    49. Only Lovers Left Alive
    50. Get Out 
    51. Beauty and the Beast (1991)
    52. Ratatouille
    53. Beauty and the Beast (2017)
    54. Citizen Kane
    55. Breathless
    56. Walang Rape sa Bontok (No Rape in Bontok)
    57. Mother
    58. Certified Copy
    59. Life
    60. The Magnificent Ambersons
    61. Hiroshima Mon Amour
    62. Ghost in the Shell
    63. Crumb

    April
    64. Amour
    65. Blue RUin
    66. The Host
    67. Green Room
    68. Crimes and Misdemeanors
    69. A History of Violence
    70. The Matrix
    71. Dear White People
    72. The Overnighters
    73. Sicario
    74. Incdenies
    75. The Fate of the Furious
    76. Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2
    77. Serenity

    May
    78. Personal Shopper
    79. Reservoir Dogs
    80. The Maltese Falcon
    81. Brooklyn
    82. A Silent Voice
    83. The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser
    84. Colossal
    85. Pride (2014)
    86. The Silence of the Lambs (1991)
    87. Bullets Over Broadway (1994)
    88. Wonder Woman (2017)
    99. Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
    100. Snowpiercer (2013)
    101. The Purple Rose of Cairo (1985)
    102. The Lost City of Z (2017)
    103. Hoop Dreams (1994)
    104. Oh, Hello on Broadway (2017)
    105. The Wind That Shakes the Barley (2006)
    106. Love and Death (1975)
    107. Munich (2005)
    108 Kill Bill Vol. 1 (2003)
    109. Kill Bill Vol. 2 (2004)
    110. After the Dark (2013)

    June and July
    111. Vertigo (1958)
    112. Hannah and Her Sisters (1986)
    113. Monty Python's Life of Brian (1979)
    114. Spiderman: Homecoming (2017)
    115. Gifted Hands
    116. Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011)
    117. Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (2014)
    118. War of the Planet of the Apes (2017)
    119. Dunkirk (2017)
    120.Bicycle Thieves (1948)
    121. Baby Driver (2017)

    August
    122. Birdman (2014)
    123. Jackie Brown (1997)
    124. Hamog (2015)
    125. Toy Story (1995)
    126. Ang Mananangal sa Unit 23B (2016)
    127. Toy Story 2 (1999)
    128. Wall-E (2008)
    129. Lupin III: Castle of Cagliostro (1979)
    130. The Look of Silence (2014)
    131. I Am Not Your Negro (2016)
    132. Life Itself (2014)
    133. Lion (2016)
    134. Predestination (2014)

    September
    135. Toy Story 3 (2010)
    136. It (2017)
    137. Madoka Magica: Rebellion (2013)
    138. The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters (2007)
    139. The Big Sick (2017)
    140. My Neighbor the Yamadas (1999) 
    141. Phoenix (2014)
    142. Logan Lucky (2017)
    143. His Girl Friday (1940)
    144. Punch Drunk Love (2002)
    145. mother! (2017)
    146. Respeto (2017)
    147. 25th Hour (2002)
     

    • Like 1
  4. I want to commit to writing my thoughts on the movies I watch, so I'll try to use this thread for that. Don't expect much in the way of coherence or insight, I tend to just vomit out my thoughts and impressions.
    ___

    Movies I've watched this week:

    142. Logan Lucky (Steven Soderbergh, 2017)
    -Not much to say about this one. There were fun moments, and Channing Tatum and Adam Driver make a convincing pair of siblings. It didn't really make that big of an impression on me, even though I did dig the working class take on Ocean's 11.

    143. His Girl Friday (Howard Hawks, 1940)
    -I am a sucker for snappy, tit-for-tat dialogue, so I loved this movie. Cary Grant is delightful as the cut-throat scallywag asshole of a news editor, and he and Rosalind Russell have a great rapport. 

    144. Punch Drunk Love (Paul Thomas Anderson, 2002)
    -My favorite PTA film. Best known as the "Adam Sandler deconstruction movie", for good reason, but even with all that metatextual stuff aside, it works as an incredibly sweet, moving story of a lonely, anxious, overall sadsack being able to connect and fall in love with another person. Everything in this movie works, from the creepy, dissonant score, to the use of colors and lens flare, and especially Adam Sandler's lead performance. He's so good in this. In particular, I'm thinking of the mini-anxiety attack after his first encounter with Emily Watson, and the moment where he stands up to his overbearing sister over the phone. Speaking of Emily Watson, it's fair to say that her character was drawn a bit thinly, and that we weren't really made to understand why exactly she was attracted to him, but for me, it works. Mainly because it's hinted all throughout that she's just as lonely, and sad, and fucked up as Adam Sandler's character (the stalking, the wearing the same red dress, the note about her being an only child and wishing she had a big family like Barry's). Anyways, I love this movie.

    145. mother! (Darren Aronofsky, 2017)
    -This movie is a ride, and I really liked it. The biblical parallels are not at all subtle, but I don't think they were trying to be. It's an over-the-top mess of a movie, which I would say is part of the appeal. And for all the (valid) critique of the script and the anvil-on-the-head approach to symbolism, I don't think its an empty movie. It works as a black comedy bastardizing the Bible, but it's also fun to read as Aronofsky reflecting on his own creative process, even if that reflection was inadvertent. I don't want to say too much about the plot, but the fact that this movie is so clearly a vanity project is actually really interesting when put side by side with what happens in the story. What kept me from loving this was the lead performance by Jennifer Lawrence. I am not a hater of Lawrence, but she never reached the level of "unhinged" that the material called for, and given how central she is to everything that happens, it's a big handicap. But all in all, I enjoyed mother!, and wish that this kind of insane, narcissistic auteur-driven type work is rewarded.

    146. Respeto (Treb Monteras, 2017)
    -This is a local film (I'm from the Philippines), so unless an online copy is released somewhere, this probably won't be accessible to anyone not in the country. Which is a shame because it's great. The movie is set in one of the slums in Metro Manila and is focused on a group of friends who are into fliptop (a Filipino appropriation of freestyle hip hop and rap battles). Basically, they're a bunch of degenerates who come from troubled families and like to rap. The main character, Hendrix, delivers drugs for his sister's boyfriend, and ends up losing some of the money. In order to get the money back, they try to rob this old man (a former activist during our country's time under martial law), get caught, and end up having to do community service for the old man. What elevates this movie is the way it comments on our current situation here in the Philippines (our President is currently implementing a war on drugs which has resulted in the deaths of thousands of Filipinos, mostly members of the urban poor) and does it through a very small-scale story of a teenager trying to use free-style rap to win the respect of his peers. I'm sorry if this commentary was incoherent, there really is a lot going on in the movie, and some knowledge of the socio-political and cultural context is probably necessary to really understand it. Still, it's an angry film for angry times, and I think that's something people can relate to across cultures. 
     

  5. Watched Silence last week and loved it (probably in part because of my own experience having grown up around Jesuits and ignatian spirituality.) If I had watched it before making my ballot, it probably would've taken my number 10 slot (sorry 20th Century Women).

    Certain Women got high on my ballot mainly on the strength of the third act w/ Kristen Stewart and Lily Gladstone.

    I would've wanted The Handmaiden to place higher, but I'm just glad it made it at all. Probably my favorite Park Chan-Wook movie, although I've only watched 3, so take that with a grain of salt.

  6. Season 3 spoiler

    On a show like The Wire you can only really do a scene like Omar and Brother Mouzone's standoff in the alley once. But what a fucking scene it is.

    One thing the Wire does so well is not dwell on things that other shows would make a huge deal out of. Omar vs. Mouzone could easily have been a series worth of material...but it didn't need to be. It did exactly what it needed to. The same can be said of some deaths, which just seem to occur almost randomly, and with little to no build-up; because that's how death is in real life. Not everything happens according to the story.

    The only times the Wire really falls into TV cliché, for me, are Omar vs. Stringer - but that just works so beautifully that it's easily forgiven - and D'Angelo's chess speech in Season 1, which is just a cringeworthy, heavy-handed analogy completely at odds with the rest of the show.

    That said, a lot of people criticise the final season's McNulty storyline for being too unbelievable and cartoonish, but honestly, I'd go with "Hamsterdam" as the only time it really stretches suspension of disbelief, and then the rest of that season is so strong it doesn't really matter.

    I do agree that the chess speech in season 1 was a bit heavy-handed, but I thought it actually worked pretty nicely. I thought that the acting was strong enough to excuse any shortcomings in the actual speech, and when I think about it, I can buy that D'angelo found the chess analogy to be some deep shit. Plus, "unless they some smart ass pawns" is one of the best Bodie moments in the entire show.

  7. Embedding isn't really working for me right now, so i'll just post links to videos.

    Gun to my head, I'd have to choose between the openings of Freaks and Geeks (

    ), Cowboy Bebop (
    ) and Cheers (
    ).

    Cheers is in there mainly on the strength of nostalgia. Some of my most vivid memories from when I was younger involve watching Cheers on VCR with my mom (I'm just guessing that it was on VCR, not really sure). I remember I memorizing the lyrics of the song, and always trying to copy the face of the kid in the last picture of the credits.

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