i’m a total mark for Death Proof. i think it’s way better than Django.
yeah, i think this one is coming down to a matter of personal taste. i think both those films are great, of course, but TWBB, The Master, Inherent Vice & Phantom Thread are all films i can watch endlessly. i’ve watched the latter three at least ten times & i don’t even wanna know how many goddamn times i’ve watched TWBB at this point. despite its length, TWBB has become my go-to comfort movie whenever i’m feeling lethargic, or hungover, or coming down off a long trip.Boogie Nights and Punch Drunk Love are my two favourites of his.
His recent stuff falls into the “I admire them more than I enjoy them”, imo.
I thought even Clerks 2 was bad
yeah, i think this one is coming down to a matter of personal taste. i think both those films are great, of course, but TWBB, The Master, Inherent Vice & Phantom Thread are all films i can watch endlessly. i’ve watched the latter three at least ten times & i don’t even wanna know how many goddamn times i’ve watched TWBB at this point. despite its length, TWBB has become my go-to comfort movie whenever i’m feeling lethargic, or hungover, or coming down off a long trip.
The funny thing is I love Django Unchained- for me, it's maybe 3 on my overall list of QT films but I know many people dislike it or at least don't hold it as highly.
I have a love/hate type of feeling on Death Proof. There's so much good there- Russell's villain, for instance, is one of QT's definite iconic characters. Great performance and well-realized character. The scene where he picks up McGowan is very intense and brutal. Just another example of QT's strength of ramping up tension so effectively. You realize how desperate a situation Rose is truly in and then Stuntman Mike just breaks out that line, "This car really is Death Proof but you have to be sitting in my seat" SLAMS the brake. Crazy stuff. Still, I think it really starts to falter in the second half. First, I think the crew of girls at the beginning- Ferlito, Poitier, Ladd was more interesting from a character perspective than the ultimate protagonists. And yet they are taken out in short order. I couldn't really get drawn in with Rosario and her crew there and that was an issue for me.
But even though I think it loses a lot of steam for me at the point that they take over the film, I find the Zoe Bell stunt absolutely phenomenal (and just the notion of Zoe, a great stunt performer being able to be featured like that in a film where the villain is a stuntman- I like that type of meta stuff QT delivers). Also, when the women turn the table and Mike is all banged up and injured, Russell delivers this Looney Tunes-esque expression of pain that I cannot keep a straight face at. Hilariously over the top.
So yeah there's plenty of good there. I just don't really like the whole product.
BUT pair it with Planet Terror and those epic fake trailers and you have an 8.5/10 experience.
yeah, i think this one is coming down to a matter of personal taste. i think both those films are great, of course, but TWBB, The Master, Inherent Vice & Phantom Thread are all films i can watch endlessly. i’ve watched the latter three at least ten times & i don’t even wanna know how many goddamn times i’ve watched TWBB at this point. despite its length, TWBB has become my go-to comfort movie whenever i’m feeling lethargic, or hungover, or coming down off a long trip.
Kevin Smith started being more interested in being a personality than a writer
I always loved those two movies. Although there weren't enough feet for my liking. 4 Rose Mcgowan gun legs out of 5 Rose Mcgowan gun legs.
And, much like M. Night, the dude seemed to have become preoccupied with making a certain type of film that would cater to the audience he cultivated. For M. Night, it was that Twilight Zone-esque atmosphere and the twist at the end. Worked great in Sixth Sense. Was awesome in Unbreakable. I liked it a lot with Signs as well. But, the thing was, those were technically solid, effective movies throughout and the twists or shocks merely complemented the quality. Once The Village hit, it wasn't horrible but it was diminishing returns. It was, quite frankly, dull.
But after that was the real problematic stretch. Lady in the Water- pretentious and poor. The Happening- very unsatisfying and silly. Never saw After Earth but I've heard it was similarly weak.
He did, to his credit, seem to bounce back with The Visit and Split. I liked both of them. But then he went to the well once too much with that Unbreakable/Split world. Glass was a wasted opportunity. And, again, I think it was more of his preoccupation with- this is the mythos...this is what people want to see. And making a good movie took a backseat to establishing some universe.
And Smith it's sort of similar. I feel like he tried to make the same type of movie often and that it ended up hindering his overall canon. He created this multi-movie world that people enjoyed but he became so preoccupied with it and all the little asides and nods to the fans that he lost what made the stuff enjoyable the first time around when it was fresh. The funny thing is he could probably apply his sensibilities and humor well to telling other stories but he tends to go back to the well of the View Askew stuff because it's probably the closest thing to a sure thing for him in terms of fan interest.
Again, we know the guy can write and direct good material. Clerks and Chasing Amy are proof of that. I'd like to see him branch out a bit. Jersey Girl at least did that.
Pretty much agree on all points with the following notes...
The Visit was a real showcase of Shyamalan's limitations as a director to me. Where he was once seemingly prodigiously good at casting and directing children, we ended up that claw your eyes and ears out performance from mini Grandmaster Flash. A lot of that is on the writing and directing though... It was a return to form of sorts with suspense and atmosphere though.
As for Split... Watchable, but I was surprised that it was so well received by the public. That crammed in scene with Bruce Willis at the end was laughably bad in terms of writing. And then what it set up in the next film was utter tripe.
Kevin Smith... I had something to say on that but it has slipped my mind.
Oh yeah, just that the only time Jay and Silent Bob work well is when they are the seasoning on the steak (Chasing Amy, Clerks) and not the steak itself. I don't know if it was ego or what, but he moved entirely away from using them as punctuation and instead made himself and Mewes the protagonists of the movies. They just aren't interesting or funny when they're on screen for an hour and a half. It's like if American Pie suddenly made every movie all about the Sherminator. They actually did make that mistake with the Stifler, who was hilarious as the sixth or seventh lead, but then they started relying on him to carry worse and worse stories.
I think Kevin Smith only had a few heartfelt things to say on film in this life, and he said them with Clerks and Chasing Amy. After that he just started filling out movies with pop culture references and that's about as empty as it can get. He briefly had a bit more to say in Jersey Girl, and then he just reverted to pop references, fake philosophical babble and slapstick gags.
Has basically the career trajectory of Shyamalan. Came out charging with two decent movies in his first three and then went off a fucking cliff. His next best movie is probably Jersey Girl.
He milks the Jay and Silent Bob characters harder than Luke milks his sea monster and he still hasn't had them do anything worthwhile since the 1990s.
well yeah, if you forgot who wrote DogmaI think Kevin Smith only had a few heartfelt things to say on film in this life, and he said them with Clerks and Chasing Amy. After that he just started filling out movies with pop culture references and that's about as empty as it can get. He briefly had a bit more to say in Jersey Girl, and then he just reverted to pop references, fake philosophical babble and slapstick gags.
yeah, i think this one is coming down to a matter of personal taste. i think both those films are great, of course, but TWBB, The Master, Inherent Vice & Phantom Thread are all films i can watch endlessly. i’ve watched the latter three at least ten times & i don’t even wanna know how many goddamn times i’ve watched TWBB at this point. despite its length, TWBB has become my go-to comfort movie whenever i’m feeling lethargic, or hungover, or coming down off a long trip.