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  #6981  
Old 7th August 2018, 09:22 PM
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Invasion / blue velvet is basically a tie.
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  #6982  
Old 13th August 2018, 04:57 PM
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FILMS YOU WISH YOU COULD SEE FOR THE FIRST TIME… AGAIN
  1. The Exorcist – undoubtedly the most powerful and meaningful cinema visit of my life, the midnight showing what I first saw this film was unlike anything which has gone before or has come since. I would love to go back to the cinema that night and go in completely prepared for what I was about to watch and then come out just over two hours later and look at the night sky knowing my life would never be the same again.
  2. The Usual Suspects – this is the obvious one which came to mind purely because, like any film with a 'twist' ending, you can't watch it again and be caught by surprise by the ending, mentally rethinking everything you've seen over the past two hours.
  3. Fight Club – I only read the book after watching the film and, like the reasoning above, it's now impossible to watch the film (or read the book) with such a sense of wonder and bewilderment about the interactions between Tyler Durden, the narrator, Marla Singer and the other characters. The superb ending will never have the same impact again.
  4. Deep Red – I can watch this happily over and over again because of the interactions between David Hemmings and Daria Nicolodi, the superlative score and audacious direction, but knowing the killer's identity takes away some of the traumatic tension, sense of agency, and danger.
  5. Leon – this is a film I watched repeatedly when in hospital and after coming home, loving so many aspects, but I don't think I'll ever get back the 'wow' factor that the relationship between Leon and Mathilda, the final action sequences, and the emotional impact of the ending had on my first viewing.
  6. Psycho – it was a really difficult decision whether to go with this or Les Diabolique as both are very similar films in the construction, the way the audience and characters are manipulated a master director at the peak of their powers and with a couple of astonishing shocks on the way, but this is one of my favourite horror films and probably my favourite from Hitchcock, so it got the nod.
  7. Oldboy – once you've seen this and know exactly what's going on during the first act when Dae-su Oh is imprisoned without any particular reason and then strikes up a friendship, then sexual relationship, with a woman he meets in a sushi bar. There is no way to watch that in the same way when you know what is going on, and why. The ending will always have an incredibly powerful emotional impact, but nothing like on that first viewing. Also, the sheer bravura from Chan-wook Park to make this film and design such sequences as the subway hammer fight scene will never have that jawdropping quality that it did the first time.
  8. Gladiator – perhaps a strange one, but there are several moments in this film – the opening battle scene, for one – where I was (figuratively) on the edge of my seat and watching in amazement at the sheer spectacle on the screen in front of me, something aided by the stirring score, both magnified because of the screen size and volume in the multiplex cinema. The impact of Maximus removing his helmet and showing his face to a bemused and stunned Commodus is lessened every time I watched this, as are the action sequences, so this is one I'd really like to watch for the first time again.
  9. Suspiria – another film which can 'get by' as a horror masterpiece simply on spectacle, so the chance to go back in time and watch it when I was genuinely lost by the narrative and as bewildered as Susy would be something I would gladly seize.
  10. The Matrix – I suppose this goes in the same category as Gladiator because there is no way I can watch the 'bullet time' sequences and the whole section in the lobby and then in the helicopter and have the same reaction is the first time it completely changed my view of what was possible in a film.

Nearly making it, but not quite, are:
Pan's Labyrinth – although this is a film I love to watch, it can never make me cry the way I did when I first saw it in the cinema, I can never see the 'pale man' or the faun with the same astonishment and even fear as when I saw it the first time, returning to the cinema the next day to watch it again.
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre – the latest pure horror film ever made is still a gruelling experience no matter how many times you've watched it (for me, it's probably nearly 30) but I don't think any remastered version or a new, bigger TV will be able to match the first time I saw it on VHS when it was unlike any film I had seen before and before I'd listened to any commentaries or seen any documentaries. Although they add to my understanding of the film, they somehow take away from the impact and magic.
The Wicker Man – much of what I said about The Texas Chain Saw Massacre applies to this gem from 1973, where most of the strangeness goes away with repeated viewings, and certainly the ending's impact is lessened with every viewing.
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  #6983  
Old 13th August 2018, 06:05 PM
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ROBERT REDFORD FILMS
  1. All the President's Men (actor)
  2. Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (actor)
  3. The Sting (actor)
  4. Jeremiah Johnson (actor)
  5. Quiz Show (director)
  6. The Great Gatsby (actor)
  7. Ordinary People (director)
  8. A Bridge Too Far (actor)
  9. The Natural (actor)
  10. Spy Game (actor)
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  #6984  
Old 14th August 2018, 11:31 AM
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Following Demdike's purchase and review of Bring It On Again, a film he was surprised to find someone else likes, and trebor working his way through the Friday the 13th films, particularly those which were critically mauled and are not generally thought of very highly by horror aficionados, I thought it might be fun and revealing to revisit a topic we did in May 2016.

It seems most of us here have some sort of display for our entire collection, or a sizeable part of it, so the criteria for the films in this category could include that you wouldn't give them pride of place in your living room/man cave/home cinema, preferring to keep them hidden, a film which you watch on the sly and feel slightly embarrassed about really enjoying, something you would feel slightly silly about admitting you like if you meet a group of people (work colleagues or potential in laws, perhaps) for the first time, or would only stop to watch while channel surfing if you were on your own!

As every list is going to be different and, if the previous discussion is anything to go by, there will be genuine surprise from some people about some choices so a line or two explaining why each film is on your list would be very welcome.

GUILTY PLEASURES

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  #6985  
Old 14th August 2018, 12:24 PM
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1. American gigolo.
2. Pretty woman.
3. Mean girls.
4. Clueless.
5. Legally blonde.
6. Dirty dancing.
7. Romy and Michelles high school reunion.
8. Lone wolf mcquade.
9. An Officer and a gentleman.
10. Roadhouse.

i guess i would class these. but i don't think i should have to feel guilty about owning them even if some people might think so.
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  #6986  
Old 14th August 2018, 01:20 PM
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The more I've been looking at my Guilty Pleasures list, the more I realise very little has changed in the past two (and a bit) years, so it's probably for the best if we have an entirely new topic in addition to that one. You can do both if you want, or only the new one.

We have previously looked at films from a particular year, but I think this one has been done and there are some excellent horror (in its broadest sense). Feel free to look at gialli, Gothic horrors, cannibal movies and everything in between.

HORROR FILMS FROM 1972

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  #6987  
Old 14th August 2018, 01:26 PM
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I'm just attempting to write a review for the Gothic thread of a film from 1972.
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  #6988  
Old 14th August 2018, 01:29 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Demdike@Cult Labs View Post
I'm just attempting to write a review for the Gothic thread of a film from 1972.
Great minds think alike!
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  #6989  
Old 14th August 2018, 01:51 PM
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The second topic is quite difficult. i can only think of Dracula AD which could also apply to the guilty pleasures as well

I will have to have a think
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  #6990  
Old 14th August 2018, 02:02 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Paul Zombie View Post
The second topic is quite difficult. i can only think of Dracula AD which could also apply to the guilty pleasures as well

I will have to have a think
This list might be of some help:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_o..._films_of_1972
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