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classic film

December 25, 2022

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Christmas Eve was McCabe & Mrs. Miller time.

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I’d seen it twice before and, let me tell you, it gets better each time. I think I picked up on a lot more of the humor. I don’t remember the movie having so many LOL funny moments. I also forgot how stunning the cinematography is.

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It’s presently below freezing here in Central Florida and I’m pretty sure John McCabe helped me dream of snow.

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The movie is a part of The Criterion Channel’s ’Snow Westerns’ selection and it’s leaving on December 31. If you’re a Channel subscriber be sure to watch this masterpiece (or watch it again).

https://memora8ilia.com/index.php/2022/12/25/christmas-eve-was-mccabe-mrs-miller-time/

December 23, 2022

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Last night I watched Robert Bresson’s 1959 masterpiece Pickpocket. The act of crime is portrayed as poetically as one man’s path to emotional revelation.

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https://memora8ilia.com/index.php/2022/12/23/last-night-i-watched-robert-bressons-1959/

July 13, 2022

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❝ The 1950s are widely regarded as a golden age of Japanese Cinema. To enormously simplify a complex period in history, a lot changed between the end of WWII in 1945 and the end of the Allied Occupation of Japan in 1952. Censorship was simultaneously lifted and imposed. The Occupation restrained Japan in terms of what it could say in films being produced (for example, anything that “promoted feudal values” was not allowed), yet at the same time, exposed it to all kinds of western material that had been forbidden in the pre-war years. When the Americans left, the restrictions were lifted but the new influences survived, unleashing a tsunami of innovative, passionate cinema, much of which is still widely regarded as some of the best of all time. ❞ *

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❝ There are a slew of canonical classics from Seven Samurai and Throne Of Blood to Life Of Oharu or Tokyo Story, but one of the major releases of the era that’s frequently overlooked (even though it won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 1955) is Hiroshi Inagaki’s Samurai Trilogy. It was released across three films over as many years but is best enjoyed as a single piece of work; a five-hour biography of legendary swordsman Musashi Miyamoto. ❞ *

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Samurai I: Musashi Miyamoto

❝ In Samurai I: Musashi Miyamoto (1954) we are introduced to our hero, played by the incomparable Toshiro Mifune (who, the same year, would also play Kikuchiyo in Seven Samurai – quite a hot time for him!). Angry and disenchanted with life in Miyamoto village, Musashi (then known only as Takezo, his childhood name) dreams of being a warrior. As he doesn’t have much in the way of family, he sets off to war with his only friend, Matahachi (Rentaro Mikuni). After a battle leaves them wounded and defeated they find themselves lost in the wilderness and are saved by a female thief and her beautiful daughter Akemi. This is only the start of their problems however, as a whole heap of betrayals, lies and other Shakespearian intrigues unravel… ❞ *

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I love this trilogy, though it might be difficult to follow if you’re not already familiar with samurai movie tropes and conventions. And I know Samurai I is just the first part of a trilogy, but, man, THIS is how you end a movie!

https://memora8ilia.com/index.php/2022/07/13/samurai-i-musashi-miyamoto/

June 11, 2022

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The Cremator is a horror film of the most horrifying kind. It depicts bourgeois banality swept up in fascistic promises, with the meek and privileged ultimately accommodating authoritarianism’s terrible aims. The film also follows the ‘rise’ of a morally weak and opportunistic sociopath, very much a topic of our time. That the horror is accompanied by satirically comedic moments only increases its darkness.

Regardless, it’s an eminently watchable film, masterfully drawn to the verge of cinematic perfection. Juraj Herz’s pacing and story-telling reveal just enough while subtly revealing a lot, enforcing the gut punch of the last ten minutes. The innovative cinematography evocatively portrays the unreliability of our narrator, dipping in and out of the protagonist’s narcissistic headspace and his timid reality. Jump cuts, fish-eye lenses, and disorienting edits from scene to scene give the viewer a sense of the encroaching madness. The music from Zdeněk Liška is one of the best scary-movie scores at times, made even spookier as it alternates between light-hearted themes and waltzes. And, it must be said, the lead performance by Rudolf Hrušínský is one of the creepiest of all time — name your favorite creepy film villain, and I assure you Kopfrking easily ranks alongside. A masterpiece.

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https://memora8ilia.com/index.php/2022/06/11/the-cremator-is-a-horror-film-of-the-most/

May 21, 2022

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Ryunosuke Tsukue reminds me of No Country For Old Men’s Anton Chigurh — an amoral anthrophobe willing to do harm for fun and profit. There’s no rhyme or reason (though The Sword of Doom does hint at daddy issues). Anton’s coin tossing becomes Ryunosuke’s non-lethal-turned-lethal fencing duels, both serving to amuse. Even Ryunosuke’s dead-eyed stare echoes Anton’s — I wouldn’t be surprised if Javier Bardem found inspiration in the great Tatsuya Nakadai’s portrayal of unfeeling psychopathy.

A commenter in a Letterboxd review of The Sword of Doom has the most intriguing take on the Ryunosuke character which could also apply to Anton Chigurh:

❝ From a certain perspective, Ryunosuke might actually be the most moral of all the characters. In that, in being so unfeeling he ends up least hypocritical …  The Japanese title actually means Great Bodhisattva Pass and I think it’s significant in bringing up the film’s more religious, spiritual aspects. In a weird way Ryunosuke may be pure evil but he is pure, and thus becomes a karmic retribution machine for the universe. ❞

Tatsuya Nakadai is so good that I haven’t even mentioned that Toshiro Mifune is in this with one of the most bad-ass scenes of his career. And the ending is amazing and batshit crazy, and could reasonably be interpreted as being stuck in a purgatory of one’s own making.

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https://memora8ilia.com/index.php/2022/05/21/ryunosuke-tsukue-reminds-me-of-no-country-for-old/

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