cult flicks, your favorites

I don’t know what a cult movie is but I recently watched two videos

One was Into the Wild - awesome inspiring. More so because it is based in reality. What courage and spirit he had.
A movie for all hedonists, pessimists, whiny people - not that it might make much of a difference to them.

and the other was The Shawshank Redemption. Forrest Gump won the academy award that year. Now I’ve seen both videos but can’t really tell which one I might have given the award to. They’re both different and inspiring.

I didn’t actually want to see TSR for whatever reason I don’t like prison movies - some mental block in me I guess lol but I watched it anyway. It was in some ways so inspiring – in showing/teaching just how capable we are as human beings able to survive in the worse environments and times even though it was also so tragic and reminded me of how we humans at times or many of us can be so brutal and barbaric, corrupt and corruptible, and sub-human really.

I cried at the end, I cried during the movie but the tears at the end were tears of joy. Life doesn’t always give us happy endings. Not to think of my cup as half empty, but sometimes it just doesn’t so we’re grateful that we even have the cup. A few really good sips works well though. Well I won’t give away the ending just in case someone wants to see it. I do feel too that Morgan Freeman at the end chose the much better choice, though either choice might have been understandable to me based on his life. It also called to mind how institutionalized people can be in prisons or other such places.

Next to November 22, 1963 I loved that book, it is probably King’s second-best book (picture) for me. I don’t know how closely faithful the movie was to the book.

Plan 9 from outer Space.

thedissolve.com/features/movie- … st-the-ti/

I’ve been into classic Kung fu films from the 90s lately: Fists Of Fury, and The Man With The Iron Fists.

Someone told me awhile ago that the main character of Into the Wild reminded them of me. I still haven’t read it or seen the movie…maybe I will do that soon.

Character wise? I remember a thread you opened or contributed to pertaining to this beautiful kind of dark overcast sky which you loved - as I also love. I can see him loving that same kind of sky.
See the movie - it is awesome. He was awesome a bit lacking in practical wisdom at times but it was all a part of his journey, well, I won’t say anymore about it.

AMC has begun its FearFest between now and Halloween, so you can catch all the classic horror flicks of the last 40 years. Here’s AMC’s October schedule:

best-horror-movies.com/news? … tober-2015

These are mostly slasher films, which I don’t consider to be the best example of good horror. To me, a good horror movie is something like The Ghost and the Darkness (1996).

Peter Jacksons first movie sees to me the ultimate cult, and the title isn’t lying. I saw this when he had just made it [edit - more like 6 years after], I can remember wondering where he’d go from here. I don’t think it ever crossed my mind that he might become the highest grossing director of our time, but there was something inevitable to all of his shots.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YcWOCNijm2A [/youtube]

Bad Taste is something required a bit of a cult film, I think, that’s why I nominate the following:

Bad Lieutenant, Spaceballs, Ghostbusters II (this Vigo is terrifyingly), Home Alone (also the in-movie Angels with Filthy Souls) Disney’s The Black Cauldron, Kentucky Fried Movie, all Bruce-Lee movies, all Bond films with Sean Connery, The Hunt for Red October, Jacobs Ladder, Strange Days, Cape Fear, Basic Instinct, all movies by John mcTiernan, Tony Scott, John Landis, Ivan Reitman, everything with that guy who is miscasted as the computer genius in Jurassic Park and thereby saves that movie, gives it cult appeal.

Eraserhead. Probably because I knew Jack Nance.
This film by any measure did things no other film had done before. But I don’t think I can be objective.

As far as major visual and sequential impact, Pulp Fiction was and original masterpiece and is still peerless.

I found his first film online, or the part that didn’t ‘accidentally catch fire’.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X6MUbRZSg80[/youtube]

This film, I watched years after I first heard of it, which was during a psychedelic trip, where Sauwelios told me the plot to keep us both from burning out like lightbulbs in a thunderstorm.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=18YS-9nQWeU[/youtube]

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9j4wV1Ttd3E[/youtube]

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a1CCup5QRJw[/youtube]

Anyone seen this?

The Killer Inside Me

“This noir thriller from British director Michael Winterbottom, is sickeningly violent but undoubtedly well made. This is a seriously intentioned movie, which addresses and confronts the question of male hate and male violence. The movie conjures up the era and locale of 1950s Texas, and creates a film observantly derived from Hitchcock’s Psycho and Capote’s In Cold Blood, and perhaps the Coens’ Blood Simple and No Country for Old Men, with touches of Edward Hopper’s Nighthawks”.

Be warned: this really is a very violent movie, but superbly acted.

youtube.com/watch?v=BO9lzxOai10

Female Trouble with Divine. A particularly disgusting film with the late star of Hairspray.

I dunno if you can get this online. It’s very profound.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=djk12JJsVV0[/youtube]

Is that Faust in there?

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ga4ZO1hND7k[/youtube]

American Dream……… Wow and Wow.

That place would squeeze the heart till it stops beating.

Jakob this is the kind of vid you excel at, (I remember your Israeli vid for different reasons) captured the desolation and hopelessness that most of us who have never been there, never get to see.

and the background music.

Perfect for each shot.

Just got my breath back now……

Wow and wow.

Maiden - you have an eye for these things! It is a very labored video with a lot of time thinking about every shot, and the same goes for the Israel video. Thanks. I am happy this video found an audience, I gave up on there existing one for it quite soon after I made it.

If there is a ‘market’ for this style that would be interesting for me. It is extremely interesting to experience in this way, every transition is a value-assessment, an ‘appraisal’ of one shot by another. To keep that buildup going requires much of the viewer as well.

Im hijacking this thread but one more thing; I do not unequivocally share the sentiment of despair about it, but it is probably true that my instincts wish to convey this state, because it is an existential norm; I try to evoke the closeness to non-existence of existence, thereby making its effective ‘apparitions’ stranger and more alive; the apparition is always between two shots. The deer above the flag, that was a pivot from despair to hope - not intended but experienced as such. A simple soul I am, I like to follow my own story.

Girl on a bridge, Vanessa Paradis and Daniel Auteuil

youtube.com/watch?v=CKqQl3D4AzI

This scene packed with symbolism, a beguiling movie. Loved it.

Jakob, this part of you I understand and ‘get’.

I am probably at my most communicative when I deal with surprises and the unknown.
This is why I can only have geniuses and mad persons as friends. In love this gets violent.

That’s another thing very badly done in film.
Is there even a single good sex scene that is not pornographic?

Some exceptions. I’ve seen one, I must assume there are more. But in general I flinch and think I hope to god this is not how they do it in real life; The directors want to hide but don’t know what; they do not yet know how to put together a scene in the way a woman dresses. (except maybe John Woo)
Sex is still too dangerous for visual storytelling - it is still presented in a bearskin.