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#cinema masterpice
frankietherat · 2 years
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Who here has seen the masterpiece that is this forbidden film made by god himself called Goncharov? I have witnessed its beauty only once as of yet but I was speechless by how much of a feminist role model for independent women the wonderful goddess Katya is, the way she stabbed the man with so much power and then left him for ice pick joe to finish off was so beautifully written and shot. the way that ice pick joe said "me amour, the apple of my eye." before taking Gorchakov's eye out was utterly breathtaking. going from bright saturated colors shown in movies like Pearl to old-school noir color schemes, you must admit how brave the directors were, but it came out a cinematic masterpiece that no movie can outmatch. I thank the heavens and hell for allowing me to see this piece. for now, I am cursed with never experiencing such a movie again. it was utterly life-changing and urge all whom read my text to witness this ungodly cinema and to never blink whilst doing so, as for not to miss a second of the best movie to grace your conscience.
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adarkrainbow · 8 months
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Spooky season fairytales (6)
And we reach the penultimate post of this series! After looking at actual fairytale adaptations (well... roughly), for this post I want to love at fantasy movies that are not any adaptation of any specific tale or story... But which were made with the intentions of having a "fairytale feel" or a fairytale lore. Dark or creepy movies inspired by fairytales as a whole. Basically "dark fairytale fantasy".
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And of course I have to begin with the most FAMOUS dark fairytale movie of our century... Guillermo del Toro's "Pan's Labyrinth", in the original Spanish, "El Laberinto del Fauno".
Do I need to present this movie? Probably not, since it was one of del Toro's masterpices, but to simply put it... This is a dark, haunting, poetic but tragic movie following a little girl's life in the Spain of Franco. Said little girl meets in the ruins of an old labyrinth, guided by fairies, a faun, who reveals to her she is the lost princess of a fairy realm... But to regain her place, she will have to undergo fairytale-trials. All while the little girl enjoys her "changeling fantasy", we follow the harsh and horrifying everyday life of World War II Spain that unfolds around her: the girl's step-father is a Falangist captain who hunts down with cruelty the resistance in the area, while her mother is having a very complicated pregnancy. And as the real-world piles on the horrors - famine, execution, torture - so does the fairy-world becomes darker and darker, filled with monsters, ogres and blood...
Of course, Guillermo del Toro did other dark "fairy pieces" - such as Hellboy II, which is a dark and gritty urban-fantasy homage to the fair folk - and recently returned to the fairytale world with his acclaimed Pinocchio.
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1985's Legend, by Ridley Scott, is usually considered as one of the "great 80s fantasy movies", alongside pieces such as Ladyhawke, The Dark Crystal, Conan the Barbarian, Willow and more. However "Legend" is also, and this is less evoked, one of the prime examples of a movie belonging to the genre of "fairytale fantasy" - alongside stories such as Stardust or The Neverending Story.
After all, all the elements are there. The main hero is a brave young "wild man" of the woods, who must save a princess trapped by an evil monster, with the help of fairies and elves, and the whole quest goes through numerous folkloric motifs and characters - the unicorn, the water-hag, the fight of day and night, the endless winter... But speaking of "endless winter", the reason why this movie is featuring here is because of how dark it becomes. Truly. The main villain is even the literal embodiment of Darkness, an evil creature sporting the most iconic look of a devil in the history of cinema, and played by none other than Tim Curry himself. He sends hordes of goblins devour babies and kill unicorns throughout endless winter and ever-ending night... To reach him one must cross a monster-infected swamps leading to a dark palace of venomous charms, dancing statues and cannibal feasts... And even the elves and fairy sidekicks are truer to Brian Froud illustrations and the original "fair folk", being whimsical, capricious, easily angered and just as dangerous as the villains they're fighting...
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Coraline. Another great piece of "fairytale fantasy".
Coraline (the movie or the book it is based on, the two have several differences but complement each other very well) is the story of a young girl living your typical "travel to another magical world" plot, as she discovers a secret door allowing her to escape her dreary, boring and unpleasant life to find an alternate, whimsical, fantastical and charming version of her own family and neighbors. But of course, this being a Neil Gaiman story, things quickly grow strange and eerie, as talking cats, fairy-ghosts, shapeshifting witches and buttons sewn in place of eyes come to turn the dream into a nightmare, and then into a battle of wits to survive against a dark and old magic...
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Yet another VERY famous piece - there's a lot of famous pieces I am covering here, but hey, not my fault the good stuff is getting the recognition it deserves!
Over the Garden Wall, an animated mini-series that was created by the same man behind "Adventure Time", telling the story of two brothers as they try to find a way home while venturing into a bizarre and magical forest called "The Unknown". They are guided by a talking bird in hope of finding a good witch who will help them - all the while mysterious and dark figures such as the Woodsman or the Beast linger in the shadows and keep crossing path with them...
Over the Garden Wall is a perfect autumn watch, since it actually takes place during the autumn season, the first episodes exploring an Halloweenesque harvest festival, while the lasts take place in winter. More than just autumn imagery, the show relies heavily on the "vintage" and "old" imagery of early 20th, 19th and even 18th centuries America, building its wonders and magic with vintage Halloween cards, Colonial or Industrial-era fashions, Betty Boop or Silly Symphonies cartoons, the Dogville Comedies and the "Game of Frog Pond" board game... However, under its at first whimsical and fanciful appearance, the mini-series quickly reveal a haunting tale worthy of the darkest fairytales, exploring themes such as betrayal, despair, death and sacrifices.
In fact, "Over the Garden Wall" was inspired by numerous fairytales, hence its fairytale feel. Many, many people commented that, upon watching the series, they felt the exact same thing they experienced when, as a kid, they discovered new fairytales - I also felt it, and this proves the power of this series that truly captures the essence of what a fairytale is. On top of reusing fairytale tropes (two children exploring woods filled with girls turned into birds, good and bad witches, strange talking beasts...) and explicitely referencing some "fairytale-like" children novels (especially "The Wizad of Oz"), the very artstyle of the show was inspired by "fairytale art", ranging from Gustave Doré's illustrations of Perrault to Tenniel's Alice in Wonderland drawings, passing by old Andersen illustrations.
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Ah, finally a more obscure piece! At last for non-French people... La Cité des Enfants Perdus, The City of Lost Children. A 1995 movie by Jean-Pierre Jeunet. Now, Jeunet is one of those French moviemakers distinctively recognizeable thanks to his very unique style of movie making. You will recognize this when you know that he is behind the movies "Delicatessen" (the one about a former clown in a post-war world behind hired in a building dominated by a cannibalistic butcher) and the "Amélie Poulain" movie (about a quirky Parisian waitress who decides to change whimsically the life of those around her). Jeunet enjoys the bizarre, the unusual, strange technologies, extravagant characters, dark humor, absurd comedy, and oniric or fairytale-like atmosphere... And this all blooms in the darkest and eeriest way in this movie.
To put the story simply (which is a challenge since it is a complex movie)... Off the shores of a shadowy, dirty, corrupt fishing town, in a manor in the middle of the sea (on top of an abandoned oil rig), an old mad scientist regularly captures children. For you see the scientist is unable to dream, and tries to steal away the dreams of children - which never works, since being captured by a creepy old man makes the children have nightmares rather than sweet dreams. One day, the little brother of a simple-minded circus strongman is captured - and the strongman teams up with a little girl, a street-savy member of a group of street urchins, to try to get him back. The story is further muddled by the presence of a cult of "cyclops" in town that do the dirty work of the mad scientit for him, the threat of greedy conjoined sisters that run the gang the little girl is part of, and the strange entourage of the mad scientist himself (six identical brothers acting like children, a dwarf-wife, and a sentient, talking brain in a jar).
This movie truly feels like a dream - like one of those dark, strange dreams that never fully go into a nightmare while still walking at the edge, and the story, no matter how feverish it can get, still keeps certain cohesive elements to maintain its flow of sinister wonders (such as the theme of family, heavily explored). The movie never goes into actual magic - we are more into a proto-steampunk world crossed with the mad science of Gothic literature and horror movies - but its oniric, bizarre and borderline surreal treatment of the subject did earn this movie the classification of "science-fantasy" and "dark fantasy", as mythological, folkloric and fantasy archetypes can be clearly seen throughout the science-fiction setting (the "cyclops" for example, or the very idea of "a creepy old man stealing children's dreams").
Heck - this movie was one of the prime inspirations behind "Little Nightmares"!
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And finally, I cheat a little here, but I had to include it: Disney's Hocus Pocus. This is a classic of Halloween movies, a fun but dark horror-comedy for teens, (well rather like a full comedy but with elements that make it horrific here and there), campy in all the good ways, and with the greatest trio of witches ever depicted on stage since Shakespeare's Weird Sisters.
Now, the movie itself is not very much fairytale like. It is a Halloween comedy, an urban-fantasy story for teenagers, drawing upon the myth of the witch and the legends surrounding witchcraft. However, precisely because the movie explores the figure of the witch, there are several fairytale references here and there. While the Sanderson sisters were mostly build out of the Christian myth of the witch (using human-skin bound grimoires, having sold their souls to the devil, tied to black cats, summoning ghouls out of graves, hate salt...), there are also several parts of their characters tied to fairytale witches. Hansel and Gretel is the most obvious one - they are child-eating witches living into the woods who lure children to their home before "devouring" them (in souls if not body) - but Snow-White is also among the references (a very vain witch who is obsessed with staying the fairest/youngest and kills children to do so?). And of course, there's all the fairytale-witches tropes ranging from "turning people into animals" (here a cat rather than a frog) to the use of the number three.
Oh yes, and let's not forget the specific use of an oven...
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crstnlx · 4 years
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Parasite 기생충 (2019) dir. Bong Joon-ho
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selfcare-diary-blog · 6 years
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Stuff to do without internet
One of my August goals is it to get away more from my smartphone and the internet again. If you have similar plans and are like me you probably will get bored pretty easily without the internet. So here are some things to do offline.
Read books or some magazines, newspapers.
Go to the library
Write your own stories or poems
Start a diary/journal and write in it every evening.
Draw or paint, you don't need to make a masterpice
Sing or play an instrument
Just stop for a moment and think about your life. Where do you want to be in 2, 5 or 10 years? Who haven't you talked to in a while and why? What do you want to accomplish this year? Some people you would like to meet again or nearly forgot about?
Play videogames or watch Tv (I'm adding this to the list cause technically you don't need internet for them)
Learn. Maybe russian, juggeling or how to open your eyes under water. Really just learn something new.
Plan a family game night or play some board games with your friends.
Attend local festivals
Phone a friend or a relative. I bet your grandparents would love to hear from you.
Go to the cinema, park or just outside for a walk.
Deep clean your room and donate or throw away what you don't need anymore
Go Shopping
Volunteer or get a summer job
Try some new recipes
If you still live with your parents offer to do some more chores.
Grab some friends and go somewhere fancy to eat
Host a party
Exercise or simply ride your bike, go swimming, hiking etc. for fun.
Just go out and wander around town and see where it will get you.
Find a penpal to exchange snail mail with.
Meditate
Go to a concert
Visit a museum
Have a spa day and relax
Listen to some music or to the radio
Feel free to add your own ideas.
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whiterosebrian · 7 years
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Impression of The Thief and the Cobbler
The Thief and the Cobbler is something of an oddity in cinema. It had a notoriously long and convoluted production. Richard Williams set out to create a masterpice of animation, though his resources were limited and crew members came and went (or died). The result was nearly thirty years of work--but it still wasn't finished. At that point, some producers ousted him then cheaply and hastily completed it with heavy alterations, evidently to cash in on the Disney studio’s Aladdin. It was a critical and commercial failure.
Eventually some fans searched for whatever bits of film and artwork they could find. They then used that material to assemble a version much closer to Williams’s original vision. It has been reputed to be much better than what was released in the mid-nineties. That is why, when watching The Thief and the Cobbler for inspiration for my planned Dungeons and Dragons campaign, I streamed that version through YouTube.
It must be said that the story is as basic as can be. The movie has the kind of basic fantasy plot that can be expected from a traditional cartoon movie (though without the song-and-dance numbers). The same goes for the characters. The most interesting ones are the homely, slapstick-prone thief and Vincent Price’s treacherous vizier. Still, what Williams set out to accomplish was to make a masterpiece of pure animation in the classical style. What is presented here is indeed effective as a display of animation as storytelling and spectacle.
The animation, of course, is incomplete in many spots (and the editing is unsurprisingly choppy by as a result), but still it can be extremely fluid and outright spectacular and sumptuous. When you see the really complex sequences, keep in mind that this project was started decades before any kind of computer graphics existed, so everything here is made from just pencils, ink, and paint. The art style is always abstracted and intricately detailed at once with rich colors and fancy designs (obviously inspired by classical Middle Eastern paintings) and highly expressive drawings, and the animation constantly plays with perspective and form. The bulk of the storytelling, in fact, is done through said images and movements.
Overall, The Thief and the Cobbler would have been worth a look even if I weren’t looking to feed my imagination for a role-playing game.
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crstnlx · 4 years
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Parasite 기생충 (2019) dir. Bong Joon-ho
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