KINO THREAD

What kino have you watched today?

Just finished this, dragged a little in the middle but otherwise a really solid film with amazing visuals. Especially the beginning with old faust

Other urls found in this thread:

youtube.com/watch?v=cqHjbowiLPQ&list=PL8GXME0nl1x7hbvd2OYnz7f7O5dMSpFyS&index=1
slapstick.tcm.com/
twitter.com/SFWRedditVideos

i fucking hate this board, yeah let's not discuss film let's just meme the same shitty memes over and over LE BLACKED XD XD 4U LMAO

Literally every other board has better film discussion than Sup Forums

Does anyone even watch films on this board? Or is it just youtube "celebrities" and superhero movies for the lowest common denominator?

>let's just meme the same shitty memes over and over

big talk from a man that starts a "KINO THREAD"

but yeah murnaus faust is really good. i got the moc dvd a while back and it looks really nice. should give it a rewatch when i feel like silents again

hahaha this thread is superb

Do you speak German? If not you can't get Faust.

Bane?

last kino i done seen
9/10 would miss my hometown and kill my gf again

He's a fucking legend!

the teutonic race is incapable of complex thinking

Visconti?

R8 my taste you plens

1. Battleship potemkin (kino)
2. Toby dammit (cinema)
3. Face of another (cinema)
4. In bruges (movie)
5. Only god forgives (cinema)

Pretty accurate

Potemkin is a movie.

>wants to be taken seriously
>LE KINO KINO KINO

t. redditor

...

His girl friday was better imo

I'll have to rewatch this one.

Pic related is my favorite Grant rom com.

200% reddit

>not skipping this turd and going to the superior svankmajer kino

...

OGF is a kino

...

I watched that yesterday. It's great.

hahaha that invisible man is a madman love it

2001=empirically best Kubrick
Lolita=my favorite Kubrick

lolita = 7/10
2001 = 8-9/10

...

what should i watch to get started on Denis

dunno bro this was the first film from her that Ive watched

Yeah, haha. My favourite scene is the one where he robs the bank and starts throwing money in to the street. Hilarious.

Nenette et boni and chocolat

I prefer "L'Aveu".

Beau Travail

Gorgeous piece of art, my fav B&W film after Raging Bull

Master Dreyer
watch the master of the house

Will do. Thanks for the rec.

This movie is really impressive. Really fun time.

faust is shit desu. I should know, I have to study it in school for the second time now. you can't know it because you can't read the book

I think I saw you in another thread, not sure what it was about though.

I think it was yesterday where some burger faggot wrote faustian to sound smart

Cat people, just finished it.

It'd rate it film, tentative cinema but it felt a bit procedural. Of course the tropes were less obvious and overdone in 1942.

>I should know, I have to study it in school for the second time now
Who's Faust?

get the fuck out

Not today, the other day.

>story about an alchemist selling his soul to the devil for access to all the unknown knowledge
>you have to be German to understand

German people are shit next to Canadians

Murnau is a fantastic director. Faust was heart wrenching, the ending with her wandering the snows with her baby is so fucking dark yet the cinematography is very beautiful and harrowing.

Sunrise for a slightly more happier film.

Should really watch Tabu.

my darling clementine is probably my favorite black and white film. that or sunrise from Murnau

Rewatched the Grey, Tony Scott's Unstoppable and my first Benning which I loved. Captivating 'interviews'

where? havent found good dvd with full eng subs.

I think the first hour of Lolita is perfect dark comedy, 10/10. I think it goes downhill after the girl's mom dies. I like Peter Sellars just as much as the next guy, but I think he plays too many characters in this, it just seems ridiculous. I love him when he's just being Quilty, and I like that scene in the hotel where his back is turned to James Mason, but the scene where he shows up at the house and I think was doing that German accent was too much.

I think it's on fandor

"Whose Faust?" is what I meant, not a native english speaker

My latest kino was the russian film "Elena" . Very good

Got around to seeing this and it was much better than I expected. Hurt to watch in places, in a good way

Hey, good choice. Also watch "Leviathan" by the same guy, if you haven't already. He's one of my favourite Russian directors currently working.

i watched ashes and diamonds after going to a q&a with coppola and him proclaiming it was his favorite film of all time. i thought it was pretty great. very bergman-esque. not sure why it's not more revered. it is pretty subdued, however. not flashy at all

I love that one. I watched it after finding out it was one of Scorsese's top 10 favorites.

I watched "The Handmaiden" - not nearly on the level of his best but still a very solid movie. Visuals were striking. Gave me a stiffy too. Best movie of the year?

> bergman-esque
Watch Five easy pieces with Nicholson. One of the very few american films that has impressed me.

I've heard this by name before actually. watchlisted. thanks bro. I love Bergman's influence on world cinema. I think he more than any other director has has a lasting impression. one of the reasons why I love Woody Allen (kinda heresy to say on this board but w/e)

Woody's great. I'm looking forward to his new Amazon show. I have a good feeling about it. It's only six episodes I think. I'll probably watch the whole thing in one day.

>Woody's great
Get the fuck out of here you twee pseud

1. Ingmar Bergman
2. Fritz Lang
3. Robert Bresson
4. Greg Lansky
5. F.W. Murnau
6. Andrei Tarkovsky
7. Kenji Mizoguchi
8. Hiroshi Teshigahara
9. Carl Theodor Dreyer
10. Larisa Shepitko

>One of the very few american films that has impressed me.
lol

Americans have no deep culture so it's harder for them to create high art movies

Bob Fosse is underrated in general. I will spam this until people understand his brilliance.

I'm surprised that there are people who know these people on this board.

>I'm surprised there are people who know of some of the most famous and highly regarded directors of all time on this board
kys

You literally see nothing but them spammed in 3x3 threads and "who is your favorite director" shit.

holy shit I know what I'm watching

Teshigahara amazing pick good list

>holy shit I know what I'm watching
It's got Woody back on camera again, and it also stars Elaine May and Miley Cyrus. Yeah, one of those things is not like the others, but I trust Woody.

...what the fuck. jesus May hasn't worked in years last thing I saw of hers was Ishtar. and Cyrus... wow that's a different story

can't say I'm not intrigued

Speaking of this movie...
>Bogdanovich's next film was the romantic comedy They All Laughed (1980), which starred Dorothy Stratten, a former model who began a romantic relationship with Bogdanovich. Stratten was murdered by her estranged husband. Bogdanovich took over distribution of the film himself.

>On December 30, 1988, the 49-year-old Bogdanovich married 20-year-old Louise Stratten, Dorothy's younger sister, whom he had begun dating when she was only 14, two years after Dorothy's death.

How did he get away with it?

Never heard about some of them. Who is Greg Lansky? Google only leads me to some interacial porn site

A great film, in fact two great films, as the angles and takes in the domestic and export versions are different enough to qualify as seperate works. Which version did you watch?

>Google only leads me to some interacial porn sit

It led you back here?

Watching anatomy of a murder right now

Jimmy Stewart is based as always, and that victim goddamn

RIP best adaptation

youtube.com/watch?v=cqHjbowiLPQ&list=PL8GXME0nl1x7hbvd2OYnz7f7O5dMSpFyS&index=1

I like the part where nobody can bring himself to say "panties" during the trial.

He was rich and the family already knew him. It was probably a Michael Jackson situation without the backlash.

The truthfulness of that would be impossible now.

It's just interesting how he had sex with a younger girl than Woody, yet nobody care.

She was very funny in Woody's Small Time Crooks.

We don't know that. The whole thing seems very sad, two mourners coming together for comfort. The text he wrote for Dorothy's gravestone was beserk.

I've been round here for a while and most I see is experts on actress's foot sizes.
> spammed in 3x3 threads
I didn't realize that they knew what they were posting though.

The Blacked guy at 4. is not the shocking part, the shocking part is that someone who rated Bresson that highly would still put him below Bergman.

>experts on actress's foot sizes.

This kind of technical expertise requires us to indulge in only the finest of arts in our off time.

This movie is incredibly mysoginist. A woman who did nothing wrong gets her entire family (including his baby) murdered just because she fucked with Faust

>I like Peter Sellars just as much as the next guy, but I think he plays too many characters in this, it just seems ridiculous.
Gotta agree with this.

Acting otherwise in that film was top tier, Sue Lyon and James Mason when they're talking about Shaving. The theatrics of Shelly Winters.

And the chick who played Vorian Darkbloom -- wow, haunts me
>She looks like Kubrick's first wife.

Tell me more...?

>Tell me more...?
You should see the movie. I'm not the guy you're responding to, and I don't think I would have called it Bergman-esque, but it was a fantastic film. I should see it again soon.

Bump because while shit, this thread at least has the potential to go places.

Yesterday I watched Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans for a class. Sunrise and Faust are both great, but my favorite Murnau is The Last Laugh.

Literally the only good thing about this poster is Brian Eno's name.

Paris, Texas

I'm taking this free slapstick comedy class online. It's in conjunction with the movies they're showing on TCM this month. I think you can still sign up if anyone's interested. I'm really enjoying it.

slapstick.tcm.com/

Sell it to me a bit more.
Is it the love story, the acting and characters that draw you in?

Haven't seen this film in years, all I remember is that slow motion super-8 scene with the girl spinning around. I liked that.

>Is it the love story, the acting and characters that draw you in?
Yeah sure. The lead actor is often called "The Polish James Dean" and he plays a political revolutionary who has to figure out what to do with himself and the girl he loves. You don't need us to vouch for it. Coppola and Scorsese have both talked about how much they love it.

Cool, thanks for the recommendation guys!!
I've gotten two recommendations that interest me in 5 minutes... what happened to Sup Forums? I like this.