NP - Into the Woods - movie
David Morris
fqmorris at gmail.com
Fri Jan 2 13:13:18 CST 2015
I borrowed Obvious Child from the library. After 20 minutes I turned it
off. It's easier to eject a DVD than to leave a theater.
I really liked Blue Ruin, for reasons I can't divulge. It very subtly
defies expectations. Give it a chance.
Later today I'm going to see Wild. I hear it's very good.
David Morris
On Friday, January 2, 2015, <kelber at mindspring.com> wrote:
> I've always found it surprisingly difficult to walk out of even the
> crappiest movies. Sheer lethargy or excessive politeness? Or maybe it just
> seems snooty to walk out of a movie that other people seem to be enjoying?
> I recently sat through a movie I absolutely hated while texting a couple of
> friends about how bad the movie was. That movie - Obvious Child - has ended
> up on a lot of people's Best Of lists, solely, so far as I can figure,
> because it's pro-choice. I expect more from a movie - plot, decent
> dialogue, character development, believability - something! I was tempted
> to walk out of Interstellar, once it became clear that it was irredeemably
> bad. Don't think I could have forced myself into Into, or, for that matter,
> any of the Hollywood Blockbusters this year.
>
> It does seem a particularly bad year for movies. Much as I was
> underwhelmed by Inherent Vice, I'd probably rank it the second best, after
> Selma. Selma was inspiring and topical, and din't insult the intelligence
> by falling for the standard-issue Hollywood biopic cliches. Can't say the
> same for The Imitation Game, which made me cringe (though not nearly as
> much as Interstellar did). What it this thing where filmmakers now think
> it's reasonable to toss the same platitude at us multiple times, to the
> point of nausea or high blood sugar?
>
> I'm racking my brains to think of other movies I liked this year. I
> enjoyed Big Eyes, though it's forgettable. Much as I hated the
> poorly-motivated characters and the excessive misogyny go Gone Girl, it was
> at least entertaining. Boy was certainly a film-making coup, but, aside
> from the gimmick and it's being a believable story about likable people,
> it's not very memorable. Birdman was OK, though it didn't have anything
> fresh to say about Art vs Schlock, and the constantly moving camera started
> to nauseate me after a while. A very small, low-budget movie called It Felt
> Like Love made a good impression on me (though it had a 2-day theatrical
> run) because it's set in non-hipster Brooklyn, and told a timeless Brooklyn
> coming-of-age story.
>
> I haven't seen Nightcrawler or The Homesman - maybe I'd like them?
>
> Laura
> -----Original Message-----
>
> From: David Morris
>
> Sent: Jan 2, 2015 10:19 AM
>
> To: jochen stremmel
>
> Cc: P-list
>
> Subject: Re: NP - Into the Woods - movie
>
>
>
> I did eventually leave, after too much patience, when it became clear that
> it wasn't going to redeem itself.
>
> On Friday, January 2, 2015, jochen stremmel <jstremmel at gmail.com
> <javascript:;>> wrote:
> why didn't you leave?
>
> 2015-01-02 5:29 GMT+01:00 David Morris <fqmorris at gmail.com <javascript:;>
> >:
> Do NOT go see this! I cringed! I squirmed for its end to come. My brain
> hurt enduring this crap!
> David Morris
>
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