jake-gittes
Jake Gittes
jake-gittes

Thanks for the clarification, and I agree with this completely.

Yeah this looks like a prime example of an entirely well-meaning (and possibly cathartic for its creator) drama that’s not really after anything except easily provoked pity and outrage, right from the sadly ironic title pointing at a particular misguided attitude. I’ve seen you mention on Twitter or Letterboxd (or

No, I just thought basic HTML would work here? Everything actually looks fine to me, both the bold and the italics. 

I don’t think the movie indicates that the marriage <i>was</i> based on attraction, at least a mutual one. Nothing about Nicholson’s portrayal of Jack tells me that he’d ever be comfortable with a spouse who were his equal. He probably (and rightly) saw in Wendy someone who’d be impressed by his charm and attention

A lot of these sound promising, especially The Captain. 

Now I need to show it to as many people who have never seen it as I can. 

Best cinematic experience I’ve had in recent weeks was my redisovery of Claire Denis’ <b>Friday Night</b>, which I’d seen before, somehow completely forgotten, and this time around fell completely in love with. I think it makes an even better case than <i>Beau Travail</i> for Denis as a filmmaker of physical world and

One of Kubrick’s greatest talents, which I think not enough people fully recognize, was his way of combining different tones within one work so that they’re all valid and don’t cancel each other out. You can look at The Shining and be terrified, AND you can take note of how a lot of it is comical when you take a step

Glad The Commuter wasn’t forgotten but disappointed that Paddington 2 was.

That was on Twin Peaks.

I watched it dubbed so in terms of dialogue delivery something definitely could have been lost in translation. Gives me more of an incentive to revisit it later though. I was surprised by how funny I sometimes found the shorts even at their bleakest.

Thanks for the spotlight, these are all good-to-great and increase my appreciation of Aster after I liked but didn’t love Hereditary. Even if I don’t think that’s a great (full-length) film, I’m now more convinced than ever that he has one in him. Interesting to see the dark, twisted humor so present and so well-done i

Kind of, yeah. You got the family drama plus two different types of horror, and an ending that, in retrospect, kinda diminishes the family drama with its implications. And the horror hides itself so cleverly under the drama (like when Collette comments about the unfamiliar faces at her mother’s funeral, it doesn’t

That’s the classic that was most visible there for me too, but I think that movie is a good deal more meticulous and tightly structured. Its ending also works much better. Hereditary struck me as a little messy and overstuffed, although the dread-building in the second half is formidable.

I included a link to his tweet in my original comment, but apparently kinjamprove ate it. It’s the most recent in his timeline currently.

Looks like Ignatiy might.

That one I’ve seen! Keep forgetting that he made it. Kinski is quite a sight in it in all states of dress and undress and the Moroder score is good as hell. 

“You ever wear the one that says undercover?” is probably my favorite line in this.

Yeah I had a big-ass grin just reading the first sentence and the rest didn’t disappoint, nice work. 

I was getting ready to be born that September.