1) "The Dreamer That Remains", a 1977 documentary on the musical composer and inventor Harry Partch
(approx 25 minutes)
2) Commentary and recollections by the filmmaker of the above-mentioned documentary
(approx 20 minutes)
3) A slide show of Partch's different musical instruments and inventions,
featuring musical samples of each that are included on the DVD audio soundtrack
(approx 45 minutes)
4) A filmed performance of "Delusion Of The Fury", that was performed in 1969 at UCLA
(approx 70 minutes)
Just got through watching Masaki Kobayashi's,
Harakiri, great anti-establishment, samurai/ronin, revenge, drama. Filmed in black and white, but some really lush cinematography
It was an 80’s bonanza at my house last night. We watched Kickin it Old Skool. I don’t even know how to defend this choice or the fact that we didn’t turn it off. It was like a bad car accident with break dancing and nonstop 80’s pop culture. Hard to turn away from. 2 stars
Also watched The Gate. I’m not sure how I missed this one. It’s good campy 80’s horror fun. And those little demons, despite the horrible effects, are scary!
Heh, there's almost no defending Kickin it Old Skool, Laur! Although I gotta admit I rented it also - but in my defense my husband wanted to see it because he is was a Jamie Kennedy fan back when The Jamie Kennedy Experiment first started (heh especially "B-Rad"). The 80's references almost made it worth it though, but yeah it was bad.
And I also remember The Gate, I think I saw that one at the theatre when I was a kid. Definitely good campy fun. And that little Stephen Dorff was a cutie. He growed up good, too. :)
I watched Sunshine last night and really enjoyed it. I could have done without the Hollywood part at the end, but the rest of the movie really sucked me in, and while the logic doesn't really work, I was pulled in by the idea.
I was going to watch The Captain's Paradise, but instead I received Ballykissangel Series 3 Disc 1. If it was season one, disc one, I probably would have watched it to see what it was like, but I didn't feel like jumping into the middle of an unknown series.
Yeah Sunshine had an identity crisis somewhere in the last half. First it was all "Look at me, I'm a tense sci-fi art film" then it it's all "nah, wait, I'm a gory monster flick". Whatever it was, I still liked it.
I think you'll like Death at a Funeral - if you like dark, British comedy that is. :)
spartan. i q'd this because of a recommendation from a fellow member here (thanks, napier!). mamet's style is interesting. also, the plot was intriguing and developed nicely. the only take-away for me was that there was something 'off' about the acting. the dialogue was...choppy, and IMO not delivered well by kilmer or his supporting ensemble.
i have another mamet in my q - house of games. i look forward to seeing how this one compares.