alexandral: (Art - Alexander Rodchenko - mother)
I have watched two films yesterday, enjoyed both, but thought both were flawed.





“Repo Men” (a film about two “organ repossession” men) have left me slightly more disappointed because it started truly great: dark humour, macabre situations, characters of moral greyness (or even blackness) that felt real , interesting POV, but as it went along the film has become cheesy, acquired clichéd romance and ended extremely predictably. But what has to be said is that Jude Law is marvellous. I have always been a fan, but this is the first time that I got that “OMPH!! This man makes my every hormone sing” feeling. I must embark on huge Jude Law watch-fest as soon as I can!



“Black Lighting” was a flawed movie from the start, as it took and borrowed from every single superhero movie known to a man (especially from “Spider-man”), but nonetheless I liked it quite a bit. I find that Timur Nuruakhitovich Bekmambetov’s movies often win with me because they are very cultural context heavy. They can look like films about crazy flying cars, but they are films about Russia, and this is what “gets me”. Unfortunately all the cultural context tends to evaporate with subtitles.
alexandral: (Generation Kill - Doc)
It seems to be generally accepted that War is very important topic, but what can I do with myself? I was fed war movies since the age 0 (in former USSR) and I have grown to be not very keen on the topic as an adult.

The main problem I have with the topic is that any fiction about war usually doesn’t have too much space for women, it is all about men, men, guns, more men and more guns. These men usually keep killing each other for various reasons, and I usually object to the reasons and the killing. I am supposed to feel how heroic they all are and how wonderful the male bonding is, but I usually want to tell them all "stop fighting, guys! Stop!"

Plus usually any war fiction takes a certain side in the conflict depicted, which is sometimes difficult to accept too. We as viewers are supposed to feel the rightness of the cause of the "right" side, but sometimes there is no right side and sometimes the "right" side is also not quite right.

PS: There are few exceptions , of course, especially for olden day wars (before they invented guns, when war was fought beautifully with swords). :D I adored "Generation Kill".

This rant has been forming for few moths: this year is anniversary of the Korean war and there are many Korean war dramas and movies. And on the side note: there is this new highly anticipated Korean war movie, "71-Into the Fire". You know, one of the leads, Kwon Sang Woo age 33, is supposed to play 17-year guy in it?? Why????? They didn’t have any 17 year olds???? He will look like a spy. :D
alexandral: (Art - Hammershoi - Light)
Some people never stop amusing me, and Korean singer and actor Rain is one of them. For his new album, he has released some promo pictures, appearing with "Clockwork Orange" eyelashes and hairstyle (but lacking the hat). The thing, of course, is that "Clockwork Orange" is banned in South Korea (and further investigation revealed that "The Shining ", "Reservoir Dogs" , "Hannibal", "Heavenly Creatures", "Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me", "The Thing" are/were also banned in South Korea). Banning certain films in one or another country is an interesting phenomena. I am fine with "Clockwork Orange" being banned, it was banned almost everywhere, it seems, but what was wrong with "Shining" (it was un-banned in 2004, it seems)???? Surely it is not more scary than "A tale of two sisters", for example?


The question remains - is the similarity intentional or not?



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January 2012

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