Go Back   Horror.com Forums - Talk about horror. > Horror Movie Discussion > Classic Horror Movies
Register FAQ Community Calendar

Reply
 
Thread Tools
  #32781  
Old 07-23-2010, 06:14 AM
psycho d's Avatar
psycho d psycho d is offline
Bad Natured
 
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: in the gloom...
Posts: 1,256
Manderlay (2005). Our characters come straight from the drama in Dogville and fall right into the next chapter, only to face the difficulties of slavery, emancipation, and ruse that is democracy. At first this flick seemed to have nothing new to offer; yes, Dogville was that good. In fact, it was rather slow from an action point of view. Whereas Dogville was fresh and edgy, Manderlay is slow but deep, its power hidden in the dogma of culture. And when this so-called dogma gets called into question, Americans are forced to question the very basis of our existence. Working at many differing levels and having multiple parallels, Manderlay is one of those lovely flicks that exposes the icky hypocrisy of self-righteousness. It does so by threatening to expose "whitey's" festering guilt from the institution of slavery as appreciated through the racially difficult realities of emancipation, keeping the champions of denial and self-righteousness removed from the appropriate movie theaters. Technically, the movie is slow though philosophically brilliant. The story was thought out so as to work on many levels. At most points it seems to be predictable but of course keeps the cinematic soothsayer from earning his nickel. Lars once again extracts every ounce of talent from its cast. As such, the direction and camera work are sublime. And just around this flick's finish, good ol' William Defoe graces us with laughable dialog that will inevitably send us straight to Hell for having laughed at his abominable utterance. Merci beaucoup.
__________________

Fate is my mistress, mother of the cruel abomination that is hope.
Reply With Quote
  #32782  
Old 07-23-2010, 06:29 AM
urdevil urdevil is offline
Cranky
 
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: in your attic
Posts: 170
Manderlay

Quote:
Originally Posted by psycho d View Post
Manderlay (2005). Our characters come straight from the drama in Dogville and fall right into the next chapter, only to face the difficulties of slavery, emancipation, and ruse that is democracy. At first this flick seemed to have nothing new to offer; yes, Dogville was that good. In fact, it was rather slow from an action point of view. Whereas Dogville was fresh and edgy, Manderlay is slow but deep, its power hidden in the dogma of culture. And when this so-called dogma gets called into question, Americans are forced to question the very basis of our existence. Working at many differing levels and having multiple parallels, Manderlay is one of those lovely flicks that exposes the icky hypocrisy of self-righteousness. It does so by threatening to expose "whitey's" festering guilt from the institution of slavery as appreciated through the racially difficult realities of emancipation, keeping the champions of denial and self-righteousness removed from the appropriate movie theaters. Technically, the movie is slow though philosophically brilliant. The story was thought out so as to work on many levels. At most points it seems to be predictable but of course keeps the cinematic soothsayer from earning his nickel. Lars once again extracts every ounce of talent from its cast. As such, the direction and camera work are sublime. And just around this flick's finish, good ol' William Defoe graces us with laughable dialog that will inevitably send us straight to Hell for having laughed at his abominable utterance. Merci beaucoup.
I just wanted your thoughts about the director. Ive seen Breaking the Waves, Dogville, Dancer in the Dark and yes Antichrist. I enjoyed Breaking the Waves and Antichrist(as much as anyone could) but the other two were absolute prententious rubbish(IMO). What do you think about his work overall?.
Reply With Quote
  #32783  
Old 07-23-2010, 07:39 AM
psycho d's Avatar
psycho d psycho d is offline
Bad Natured
 
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: in the gloom...
Posts: 1,256
Quote:
Originally Posted by urdevil View Post
I just wanted your thoughts about the director. Ive seen Breaking the Waves, Dogville, Dancer in the Dark and yes Antichrist. I enjoyed Breaking the Waves and Antichrist(as much as anyone could) but the other two were absolute prententious rubbish(IMO). What do you think about his work overall?.
Have yet to see Breaking the Waves, but so far have loved all of his pretentious rubbish...
d
__________________

Fate is my mistress, mother of the cruel abomination that is hope.
Reply With Quote
  #32784  
Old 07-23-2010, 07:50 AM
_____V_____'s Avatar
_____V_____ _____V_____ is offline
For Vendetta
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 31,677
Quote:
Originally Posted by roshiq View Post
Don't Be Afraid of the Dark (1973)

Oh, it was really fun to be scared by those cute little creatures. Glad at last watched this beautiful gem of 70's.

>>: A-

One of the little underrated gems of the 70s, IMO. Anyone watching late night TV in the 70s should remember this for the scare-factor alone. Nice quality transfer to the DVD version too. Get it, people, if you haven't already. I second Roshiq's recommendation.


Last watched - Francois Truffaut's Mississippi Mermaid.
__________________
"If you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you." - Friedrich Nietzsche
Reply With Quote
  #32785  
Old 07-24-2010, 12:54 AM
neverending's Avatar
neverending neverending is offline
Cranky

 
Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 12,416
I Am the Angel of Death: Punisher 3

The dreary world of drug dealers in Copenhagen. Has some grisly moments toward the end when a body has to be dismembered. Fascinatingly gritty story told with realism.
__________________
Lee Widener, Author Website

Cartoon Artwork, Underground Art, Other Weird Stuff
Reply With Quote
  #32786  
Old 07-24-2010, 04:46 AM
psycho d's Avatar
psycho d psycho d is offline
Bad Natured
 
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: in the gloom...
Posts: 1,256
Arsenic and Old Lace (1944). With a convoluted story that is seamless and unaccountably easy to keep track of, acting that is top-notch on all accounts, and direction that is stellar, this mad-capped wonder is one of the best films ever made. Cary Grant steals the show with his perfect timing, wonderful facial expressions, and overall bearing. This comedy is to die for. 'Nuff said. Ashe.
d
__________________

Fate is my mistress, mother of the cruel abomination that is hope.
Reply With Quote
  #32787  
Old 07-24-2010, 05:17 AM
urdevil urdevil is offline
Cranky
 
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: in your attic
Posts: 170
The Legend of Hell House

The plot is definitely convoluted but it still makes you tense(fun).

Also, Adam and Evil. A steaming pile of shit. Dont waste your time or money.(IMO)
Reply With Quote
  #32788  
Old 07-25-2010, 04:18 AM
psycho d's Avatar
psycho d psycho d is offline
Bad Natured
 
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: in the gloom...
Posts: 1,256
My Bloody Valentine (1981). A pretty fun 80s slasher flick. Acting was decent at best, and the special edition had the extra gore that was cut our of the original release. Overall a pretty good time. Late.
d
__________________

Fate is my mistress, mother of the cruel abomination that is hope.
Reply With Quote
  #32789  
Old 07-25-2010, 06:43 AM
ChronoGrl's Avatar
ChronoGrl ChronoGrl is offline
HDC Idol

 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Waltham, MA
Posts: 8,566
Cabin Fever 2: Spring Fever




The Descent: Part 2




Two absolutely unnecessary sequels.

1/5 for the two of them together, 1/2 star each...


...


The Wolfman




And an unnecessary remake. Benicio Del Toro can't act. Anthony Hopkins was clearly only there to pull in a pay check. Even the brilliant Hugo Weaving couldn't save it. Utter waste of time and money.

2/5


...


The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo



Mystery/suspense/thrillers aren't exactly my genre, but I enjoyed this quite a bit. Really cared for the characters, especially Lisabeth. While you have your typical mystery thread (a whodunnit with bad guys and good guys), the journey to the end was definitely compelling.

If you're a mystery/suspense/thriller fan, definitely check it out.

3.5/5.
__________________


Join my Facebook Horror Group!
Reply With Quote
  #32790  
Old 07-25-2010, 08:24 AM
AmericanIdiot AmericanIdiot is offline
Undead
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 50
The Butcher (2007)............brutal korean toture flick. Reminded me of august underground Mordum.
Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 07:26 PM.