Sunday, November 23, 2008
Earth
Monday, October 06, 2008
K-PAX (2001)
Here is a quote out of the many in the movie --
Prot: I wanna tell you something Mark, something you do not yet know, that we K-PAXians have been around long enough to have discovered. The universe will expand, then it will collapse back on itself, then will expand again. It will repeat this process forever. What you don't you know is that when the universe expands again, everything will be as it is now. Whatever mistakes you make this time around, you will live through on your next pass. Every mistake you make, you will live through again, & again, forever. So my advice to you is to get it right this time around. Because this time is all you have.
Saturday, September 06, 2008
Dance like a man
Thursday, August 21, 2008
Scaphandre et le papillon, Le (2007)
A very inspiring movie. It depicts the struggle to connect, to the world and to our own soul. Capturing this as an image is done very cleverly in this movie with a brilliant cinematography and wonderful dialog that inspired from the book itself.
Before I confuse you more, the story(it is a real life story) in short goes like this. It's about a 40 something man, an editor of ELLE, who gets locked up in his body, a medical condition called, "locked-in-syndrome". This is described to be the closest to being buried alive. His brain fully functions but the only way he can communicate is by blinking of his left eye. The only part of his body that he could move. And with that he manages to write a book, of his frivolous life before and of his dreams he creates in his head being locked in.
The movie is shown from the view he gets of this one eye that he could blink, or rotate but restricted beyond. Imagine see the world with one eye when you cant move your body or neck. We see how the people come in and leave while he struggle to be in sync with the reality following them through his restricted gaze. And when that is broken he falls back into his own world of imagination and memory. The dialog is equally brilliant. It borrows the intense words from his book, "The diving bell and the butterfly" that he is writing. And with a background of the repetition of the french letters based on frequency of usage E, S, A, R, I, N... it constantly reminds us the difficulty with which such intense ideas are expressed. The sound track is wonderful too... I loved the song "All the world is green". Though the story sounds very sad, its narrated in a high spirit so don't delay in watching it thinking it will be too gloomy.
Friday, August 08, 2008
It's a Wonderful Life (1946)
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Once upon a time in China 3
Sunday, July 20, 2008
Mar adentro (A Sea Inside)
Mar adentro (A Sea Inside) is the real life story of Ramon Sampedro, a smart, witty, flirty Spaniard who is paralyzed below neck for roughly three decades. Fed up of his disability and dependence on his brother’s family, Ramon has been legally fighting the right for Euthanasia or to legally end his life. For his court case he asks a lawyer named Julia, who is also suffering from a degenerative disease to help him. He thinks that a lawyer who might understand his pain might be able to represent him better. Julia agrees and visits him to prepare his case for legal battle. She is touched by his creativity, imagination and amazing sense of humor and soon they fall in love with each other. Ramon still wants his death and Julia still has to help him. The story also involves his brother’s family who takes care of him and a woman named Rosa who becomes his friend.
I have always believed that Comedians are best actors of all to be considered for serious roles. No other actor could uphold this better than Javier Bardem who plays Ramon. He is such a genius that he can literally make you laugh and cry at the same moment that too just by using his face and lines. The director and writer Alejandro Amenabar also deserves a special mention .He doesn't asks for the pity of his audience, the path that many other such stories take. In fact Ramon loses his calm and control in just one scene in the whole movie. Some scenes like how Ramon imagines the beach which is off limits to him are visual treats as well.
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
Chungking Express
...giving voice to our irrational thoughts,
Cop223: We're all unlucky in love sometimes. When I am, I go jogging. The body loses water when you jog, so you have none left for tears.
Cop223:We split up on April Fool's Day. So I decided to let the joke run for a month. Every day I buy a can of pineapple with a sell-by date of May 1. May loves pineapple, and May 1 is my birthday. If May hasn't changed her mind by the time I've bought thirty cans, then our love will also expire.
...giving form to the spirits within, the way Faye Wong dances for the "California Dreaming" going on and on and loud, to block all the thoughts, and hand-held camera work, enigma.. the Blond-raincoat-and-shades-wearing-Asian-girl: Somehow I've become very cautious. When I put on a raincoat, I put on sunglasses too. Who knows when it will rain, or when it will turn out sunny?
...giving music that takes you right into the scene, Hindustani raagas, Reggae, California Dreaming all so well mixed and just right for the scene.
And here's Quentin Tarantino on Chungking Express
Wednesday, June 04, 2008
The Bitter Tea of General Yen (1933)
Monday, June 02, 2008
Psycho (1960)
------------------------------------------------------------------
This is the conversation between Marion and the salesman when Marion trades her car with the one in the showroom. Remember Marion is in a real hurry .. :)
SALESMAN:
Well, it's the first time a customer ever high-pressured the salesman! Uh-figure roughly--your car plus seven hundred dollars.
MARION:
Seven hundred?
SALESMAN:
Ah, you always got time to argue money, huh?
------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------
This is the conversation between Norman Bates and his mother when Bates tries to arrange a dinner for Marion.
WOMAN'S VOICE:
No! I tell you no! I won't have you bringing strange young girls in here for supper--by candlelight, I suppose, in the cheap erotic fashion of young men with cheap erotic minds!
NORMAN:
Mother, please!
WOMAN:
And then what, after supper? Music? Whispers?
NORMAN:
Mother, she's just a stranger! She's hungry and it's raining out.
WOMAN:
(mocking) 'Mother, she's just a stranger.' As if men don't desire strangers. Ah! I refuse to speak of disgusting things, because they disgust me! Do you understand, boy? Go on! Go tell her she'll not be appeasing her ugly appetite with my food, or my son! Or do I have to tell her 'cause you don't have the guts, boy? Huh, boy? You have the guts, boy?
NORMAN:
Shut up! Shut up!
------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------
This is the dialog that Marion has with the Bates Motel owner while having her dinner. By now Marion has stolen the 40000$ from her working place and is fleeing away from the police and private detectives. This conversation makes you feel that Bates is the Psychooooooooooooo.. :)
NORMAN:
It's all for you. I'm not hungry. Go ahead. (delightedly watching her eat) You--you eat like a bird.
MARION:
(nodding to the stuffed birds) You'd know, of course.
NORMAN:
No, not really. Anyway, I hear the expression 'eats like a bird'--is really a fals- fals- falsity. Because birds really eat a tremendous lot. But I don't really know anything about birds. My hobby is stuffing things--you know--taxidermy. And I guess I'd just rather stuff birds because I hate the look of beasts when they're stuffed--you know, foxes and chimps. Some people even stuff dogs and cats--but, oh, I can't do that. I think only birds look well stuffed because--well, because they're kind of passive to begin with.
MARION:
It's a strange hobby. Curious.
NORMAN:
Uncommon, too.
MARION:
Oh, I imagine so.
NORMAN:
And it's not as expensive as you'd think. It's cheap really. You know--needles and thread, sawdust. The chemicals are the only thing that cost anything.
MARION:
A man should have a hobby.
NORMAN:
(sitting back) Well, it's--it's more than a hobby. A hobby's supposed to pass the time--not fill it.
MARION:
Is your time so empty?
NORMAN:
No, uh--well, I run the office, and uh, tend the cabins and grounds, and--and do little errands for my mother--the ones she allows I might be capable of doing.
MARION:
Do you go out with friends?
NORMAN:
(pause) Well, uh--a boy's best friend is his mother. (Marion tries not to react.) You've never had an empty moment in your entire life, have you?
MARION:
Only my share.
NORMAN:
Where are you going? (when Marion doesn't answer right away...) I didn't mean to pry.
MARION:
Um--I'm looking for a private island.
NORMAN:
(leaning forward) What are you running away from?
MARION:
(taken aback) W-why do you ask that?
NORMAN:
(shaking his head, relaxing back into his chair) No. People never run away from anything. The rain didn't last long, did it. You know what I think? I think that we're all in our private traps--clamped in them. And none of us can ever get out. We--we scratch and claw, but only at the air--only at each other. And for all of it, we never budge an inch.
MARION:
Sometimes we deliberately step into those traps.
NORMAN:
I was born in mine. I don't mind it anymore.
MARION:
Oh, but you should. You should mind it.
NORMAN:
Oh, I do (laughs) but I say I don't.
MARION:
You know, if anyone ever talked to me the way I heard--the way she spoke to you--
NORMAN:
Sometimes--when she talks to me like that--I feel I'd like to go up there--and curse her--and-and-and leave her forever! Or at least defy her. But I know I can't. She's ill.
MARION:
She sounded strong.
NORMAN:
No, I mean--ill. She had to raise me all by herself, after my father died. I was only five and it must've been quite a strain for her. I mean, she didn't have to go to work or anything like that. He left her a little money. Anyway, a few years ago Mother met this man, and he talked her into building this motel. He could've talked her into anything. And when he died too, it was just too great a shock for her. And--and the way he died--(laughs) I guess it's nothing to talk about while you're eating. (Marion breaks her enthrallment, looks at the food in her hand and smiles.)
Anyway, it was just too great a loss for her. She had nothing left.
MARION:
Except you.
NORMAN:
Well, a son is a poor substitute for a lover.
MARION:
Why don't you go away?
NORMAN:
To a private island, like you?
MARION:
No, not like me.
NORMAN:
I couldn't do that. Who'd look after her? She'd be alone up there. The fire would go out. It'd be cold and damp like a grave. If you love someone, you don't do that to them even if you hate them. You understand that I don't hate her--I hate what she's become. I hate the illness.
MARION:
Wouldn't it be better--if you put her--someplace--?
NORMAN:
(Norman's demeanor darkens. He leans forward.) You mean an institution? A madhouse! People always call a madhouse 'someplace,' don't they. 'Put her in--someplace.'
MARION:
I-I'm sorry. I didn't mean it to sound uncaring.
NORMAN:
What do you know about caring. Have you ever seen the inside of one of those places? The laughing and the tears--and the cruel eyes studying you. My mother there! But she's harmless! Wh-- she's as harmless as one of those stuffed birds!
MARION:
I am sorry. I only felt--it seems she's hurting you. I meant well. (Marion is more than a little spooked by his personality transformation.)
NORMAN:
People always mean well! They cluck their thick tongues and shake their heads and suggest, oh so very delicately--! (He sits back. The storm is over. Gently:) Of course, I've suggested it myself. But I hate to even think about it. She needs me. It-it's not as if she were a--a maniac--a raving thing. She just goes a little mad sometimes. We all go a little mad sometimes. Haven't you?
MARION:
(her concern relaxed) Yes. Sometimes just one time can be enough. Thank you.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Thursday, May 29, 2008
Adam's æbler aka Adam's Apples
Sunday, May 25, 2008
Casino
Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Leben der Anderen, Das a.k.a. Lives of Others
2007 Academy award winner for Best foreign film...
The story is about strict surveillance executed in East Germany before the collapse of Berlin wall.
About how one of the officer who was to listen, transcript every movement of a writer begins to admire the writer as he sees the "system" he believes in is being misused by the few powerful.
Wont say more about the story. As the movie roles on, for me it actually allows me to think through, feel and own the acts of the characters, like I am in their skin in their story.
Viewing the whole movie I cant think of even one frame or word or expression being better or different, it is so finely done.
One thumb rule I am beginning to follow is, "Most Academy award winners for Best foreign film are a must-see!"
Sunday, May 04, 2008
Rebecca
Marnie
The lady vanishes
The 39 steps
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
A Peck on the Cheek
This is a story about the search for the birth mother of a cute-naughty girl Amuda, with her loving and foster parent. The movie shows a nice juxtaposition of motherly love, love for nation, fear and terrorism as they search for Amuda's birth-mother. With all the intense terrorism and blasts there is a nice tone of humor in the portrayal of Amuda's present family and their love story. Words are less and best when used, like in all Maniratnam's movies that stand apart from the mostly verbose Indian movies.
Sunday, April 27, 2008
Paths of Glory
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
One Hour Photo
Friday, April 18, 2008
Anita and Me
Bend It Like Beckham is an entertainer but this one is a classic. The movie touches various topics: racism, growing-up, diaspora and friendship all with a nice sense of humor. The thick Black-country accent is hard to follow but going through the story from the child perspective helps us hold our attention.
I always love movies on this theme. I feel a natural curiousity to understand how different cultures are read or perceived out of their context. Other movies on Indian(east) diaspora are: Bend it like Beckham, Namesake, Mitr: The Friend, American Desi. If interested in this genre do check out Russel Petter's Stand Up Comedy( yes, you can you can find it on YouTube :) .
Anita and Me stands out for sure from the list above,
- in its slightly French-movie(cute like in Amelie) like narration,
- set up in 70's and
- it surely dealt it at a greater depth than superficial stereotype humor.
Drunken Master (Jui kuen)
Jacky Chan is brilliant and so is the action choreography, storyline is bit loose. If you are just into the action and sweat , just jump to the middle of the movie and start watching.
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Crash
Watching this film I felt, that Racism doesn't exists only in how the "other" treats you but also in how "we" perceive ourselves. Like fear doesn't exists without our acknowledgment of it.
Wednesday, April 09, 2008
Awakenings
Monday, April 07, 2008
King Kong (1933)
Oh no, it wasn't the airplanes. It was beauty killed the beast.is the last dialogue of this classic version of King Kong. And this dialogue alone describes the whole wisdom of this movie and the reason why this movie is one of the greatest movies ever made. Here BEAST becomes the metaphor for senses and BEAUTY refers to the sense objects. So this classic version is built on the very basic moral fundamental that even if a king craves for sensual objects outside the realm of rationalism, he is subject to destruction in no time. Just a few days before, I saw the newer version of King Kong and it gave me a mild impression "Wow nice graphics" and nothing else. In the newer version the protagonists become friends of the King Kong which is so unrealistic, considering the highly insecure nature of the present day people. After watching this newer version I was so reluctant to see the classic version thinking that it would be same bullshit. But the classic version escaped all these silly hypocrisies and went onto destroy the beast mercilessly and hence entered the list of beautiful classics...
Tuesday, April 01, 2008
Letters From Iwo Jima
21
Coming back to 21, it is decent... can be shorter. Felt like a mix of Good will Hunting and Ocean's 11
The twist in the tale wasn't mind boggling enough for me. After watching A Beautiful mind, me caught on to Go(a board game), hoping to try Blackjack http://www.hitorstand.net/game_m.html
Friday, March 28, 2008
The prestige
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
The Spiderwick Chronicles
Anyways I braved to go and see Spiderwick and it is good. It's good for the mix of good and bad portrayed in a balance, fairies and the goblins, both look really striking and good in contrast. Makes me want to come back home and visualize these out-of-the-natural beings and forms. What kind of an imagination do each of us have to draw to life creatures we not seen? We humans are pretty smart to give form to God close to our own image... proclaiming our superiority. I would add for caution in lot of cases though not all.
Like someone long time back asked me, how would Martians(if they existed) look? Will we even recognize them as living? would we classify them as plants or animals? I think building the nomenclature and classification so that it scales to the unknown is a great problem... ohhhh wait... where am I going? to information architecture? Back to Spiderwick, its always amazing to imagine and give form to the unknown.
Thursday, February 14, 2008
À la folie... pas du tout
One more good example of non-linear story telling. A story told in 2 perspectives. Each half makes you hate and love the 2 characters. And then from the peak there is a reversal these emotions as you begin to see the other side. Audrey Tautuo's great acting makes it possible to believe in such strong contradictions. The story starts to fall in place with the start of the second half, but the imagination isn't over till the end. Thoughts can never be ruled, not by others, and not even by our own selves!