Dick
Senior HTF Member
- Joined
- May 22, 1999
- Messages
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- Real Name
- Rick
I hear this movie is pretty mind-blowing, with great 3-D visuals. It's out on 3-D Blu-ray right now, and am anxious to hear reviews.
But the French(followed closely by the Italian and Spanish) do nudity so well.StephenDH said:A fine example of the noble tradition of French art film making: say nothing but say it in French.
This load of merde seems designed to keep people out of cinemas and has all the usual French art movie tropes: pointless nudity, toilets, people staring earnestly into the middle distance or over each other's shoulders, whilst muttering poetry, random library footage, inability to keep the camera horizontal, everything bar killing an animal for real (something else which French directors seem to think is obligatory).
Godard seems to have just thrown bits of film into the air and cut it together in the order in which it hit the ground.
After 30 minutes I decided honour was satisfied and watched "Captain Harlock, Space Pirate" instead. Even in unsubtitled Japanese it was the more comprehensible of the two.
schan1269 said:Anybody in Chicago with a 3D projector want to watch this next week (I'm on vacation, getting a tooth pulled Monday).
I have everything but glasses in my theatre(no interest in permanent 3D though). I'll buy the movie...and you can keep it.
By the way. Have to go to Indy sometime during the week(other than Monday, day won't matter).
I'll even bring good beer...
Well's Banana Bread
New Holland The Poet
Lindeman's Lambic with "some chocolate beer" to mix(Saugatuck Neo Milk Stout, Boulder Beer chocolate shake, Bison organic chocolate stout or even Old Rasputin Russian Imperial)
Goose Island Sofie
I'm a fan of Godard.StephenDH said:I'm fairly sure having a tooth pulled will be more fun (and over more quickly) than anything by Godard.
StephenDH said:After 30 minutes I decided honour was satisfied and watched "Captain Harlock, Space Pirate" instead. Even in unsubtitled Japanese it was the more comprehensible of the two.
bujaki said:He uses 3D for all it's worth, including, at one point, different takes for the left and right eyes, creating a literally mind-blowing effect.
Actually I really liked that bit. Not sure what to make of the movie as a whole.StephenDH said:Godard's use of different takes for each eye made me think I was having a stroke.