I am going to be out Sunday through Tuesday. Let's see where we get the next day or so and I will give a list to someone. Maybe the Captain? I don't think he and I are shooting for the same movies here at the end of the draft....
It would be a fair swap. And I don't think you have to worry about me stealing your movies at this point.
I’ve sort of run out of must have picks at this point, so I’m going to be kind of experimenting with picks from here on. Sort of like taking a high risk/high reward prospect in a real draft.
With this pick, I take A Clockwork Orange. This is a strange and polarizing film but it’s Kubrick and just about anything Kubrick did had an element of greatness in it. The first time I saw it, I thought it was awful. But that was mostly because I’d never seen anything like it (there is nothing else like it) and didn’t know what to make of it. On repeat viewings though, I liked it more. It’s twisted, and often disturbing and morbidly funny at the same time. But It’s darn entertaining once you’ve acquired a taste for it. It’s central theme, freewill and the good/bad of human nature also makes you think.
Oh, and on top of all that, it’s visually spectacular as well.
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Darn you.
et tu pdx?
Now I did warn you guys, but perhaps a refresher is in order...
Next time there may not be a swimsuit. Ponder this, and make the right call.
I didn't do anything wrong either! I was eight hours from timing out at that point on a Saturday after lingering around most of Friday evening waiting to make my pick! Brickie just wants to share his collection.Hey, PM that next time! I didn't do anything wrong!
And I would like now to acknowledge the incredible inspirational power of Roseanne Barr naked:
pdx, time from previous pick until pdx pick: 17hr 45min
pdx, time from naked Roseanne Barr warning to pdx apology and pick: 50min
Spike, time from previous pick until Spike pick: 13hrs 49min
Spike, time from naked Roseanne Barr warning to Spike apology and pick: 24min
We should make that lady a mod -- she just flat out gets **** done.
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A Streetcar Named Desire - 1951
When I first saw this movie, I hated it. Granted, I was only about 17 at the time so I can be excused for not appreciating the raw power and subtle tension of a plot stripped down to its frame allowing, if not forcing, the drama to be entirely character driven.
[Non-essential personal anecdote]
It has all the emotional intensity and smooth, interlocking dialogue one would expect from Tennessee Williams (he co-wrote the screenplay adaptation) but the entire work hinges on the strength of the actors.I believe my exact critique was "2 hours and nothing happened. Just a bunch of people walking around the same apartment yelling at each other". Oh the feeble-minded youth
Years later I picked up Streetcar as part of a compilation DVD with 3 other classic films for $10 (!) and absent-mindedly started it up to play in the background as I did some housework. I didn't get a thing done.
I became completely engrossed, sitting there with my mouth agape wondering how the hell I missed all this the first time - like after only ever watching the Wizard of Oz on a black-and-white TV finding out years later that most of it is in color.
And what an ensemble it is. The cast won 3 out of 4 academy awards for acting, with only the man pictured above, whose "animal, star-making performance" is synonymous with Streetcar, getting snubbed.
And as fine as Streetcar is as a complete piece, it also works as a microcosm for a direct clash between differing acting styles - with Vivien Leigh of Gone with the Wind stardom performing a pitch perfect classical theatrical approach and Brando, famously, introducing a wider audience to method acting. They are both utterly flawless at their respective styles with each approach being ideal for their respective characters.
Oh and "Stellaaaaaa!"
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A Streetcar Named Desire - 1951
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Road to Perdition (2002) R