There are great parallels between the 19th
century American West with its lawlessness, gunslingers, and vigilante justice
and feudal Japan and its share of samurai warriors. Codes of honor are similar
as are the general sense of open and unconquered land, small villages
vulnerable to the strength of an oppressor, simple farmers trying to scrape by.
The Japanese samurai films of the fifties borrowed and lifted tropes from the
American western genre. Then a funny thing happened and the westerns started
mimicking the samurai films. Seven
Samurai was and still is one of the greatest of its kind. It was popular
(as much as foreign films could be popular at the time) in the U.S. and it was
ripe for picking by a Hollywood studio. And so the 1960 semi-classic The Magnificent Seven came to fruition.
A blog mostly dedicated to cinema (including both new and old film reviews; commentary; and as the URL suggests - movie lists, although it has been lacking in this area to be honest), but on occasion touching on other areas of personal interest to me.
Showing posts with label Charles Bronson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charles Bronson. Show all posts
Friday, July 18, 2014
Monday, September 2, 2013
25 Years Ago This Month: September 1988
Of course you can see in the September releases that the big summer blockbusters have finished and the studios are trotting out the stuff they think will contend for awards (at least the first of them anyway). So that's how you end up with...
Michael Apted's adaptation of Dian Fossey's story, Gorillas in the Mist, starring Sigourney Weaver as the doomed zoologist murdered in her cabin in the mountains of Rwanda.
Richard Dreyfuss starred alongside Raul Julia and Sonia Braga in Moon Over Parador, a comedy about an actor hired to play the part of a dictator of fictional Latin American country Parador after the death of the actual dictator. Obviously made to resemble Augusto Pinochet, he ended up looking like a cross between the Chilean dictator and Gaddafi.
Michael Apted's adaptation of Dian Fossey's story, Gorillas in the Mist, starring Sigourney Weaver as the doomed zoologist murdered in her cabin in the mountains of Rwanda.
Richard Dreyfuss starred alongside Raul Julia and Sonia Braga in Moon Over Parador, a comedy about an actor hired to play the part of a dictator of fictional Latin American country Parador after the death of the actual dictator. Obviously made to resemble Augusto Pinochet, he ended up looking like a cross between the Chilean dictator and Gaddafi.
Monday, August 1, 2011
Classic Movie Review: The Great Escape
It’s hard for me to get behind a movie that paints Nazis as benevolent and forgiving. John Sturges’ classic war film The Great Escape would have us believe that the real evils in the European front of WWII were the exclusive purview of the Gestapo. The Luftwaffe, on the other hand, are depicted as kindly, obedient and good-natured soldiers and officers just doing their jobs. So when British officers attempt escape from a prison camp, the response of the Kommandant is generally along the lines of, “Aw shucks, you guys. Are you at it again? Solitary confinement for you.” But the Gestapo officers are established right away as torturers, the subjects of the wary eyes of the Luftwaffe officers, who know they’re also being watched.
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97th Academy Awards nomination predictions
Best Picture Anora The Brutalist A Complete Unknown Conclave Dune: Part Two Emilia Pérez A Real Pain Sing Sing The Substance Wicked Best Dir...
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This film will open commercially in the United States on 22 April 2011. Immediately after being born, an infant child is tattooed ...
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The financial crisis that started in 2008 is far too complicated to explain in one 2 hour dramatic film. The experts on the subject can h...
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Wes Anderson’s filmmaking style has evolved over the years to such extremes of whimsical fantasy that to revisit his second feature, 1998...