Rust and Bone? Trust and… well… same.

Unlikely alliances often form in the aftermath of a personal tragedy, and in this case they prove to be “keepers”. We were blown away by Rust and Bone, even though the critics seemed bent on discrediting our Jacques for being Hollywoodly formulaic*; I guess now that he has four features (all of which we have shown with pride here) under his belt this is what he deserves? Marion Cotillard and Matthias Schoenaerts shone in this movie. If you weren’t here, and if you haven’t seen it, PLEASE do.

A few of our dearly loved, and their sig-othsâ„¢ couldn’t make it on Thursday, so we made them dinner and watched Rust and Bone again on Saturday night. Was it as good the second time? Let me put it this way… we almost watched it again on Sunday night. Vachement belle! Excuse my French.

*Well, there was one scene, you know, the one with the ice on the pond…

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Brick. Slick. Quick chick.

We kept the action turned up again this week with Rian Johnson’s clever, modern noir, Brick. Brick has a loyal following, and was described by more than one of our guests as “one of my favorites”. Sure, it gets a bit ridiculous at times, but who cares? It’s great entertainment. There are so many memorable lines, but one that just won’t leave me, is Laura’s (Nora Zehetner), “Keep up with me now.” I don’t know why.

On another note, this Thursday would have been my dad’s 96th birthday. Although it’s already been 10 years since he passed, I still miss him.

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Howabout Walkabout?

Part 2 of our surrealist mini-season, Nicolas Roeg’s weird and wonderful Walkabout, pulled in a great crowd and moved Norris up to 3rd place in the Successful Suggesters list (getting to 2nd place will take some doing, however!). Walkabout is a movie that lingers in the memory, in no small part because of the crazy camerawork with sudden cutaways to close-ups of animal inhabitants of the outback.

I’ve seen Walkabout a few times, but this was the first time on Blu-ray. Maddeningly, the “brand new” Blu-ray disc started acting up just past the half-way mark, so we had to eject, wash, dry, put back, etc. This is so unfair. Anyway, people assured me that it didn’t detract from their MovieNight experience… were they just being nice?

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Barbara. Sprechen sie deutch?

Christian Petzold’s excellent Barbara was a riveting MovieNight experience. I say riveting, but there is one caveat (by the way, is there ever more than one caveat?). As you might know, Barbara is currently playing at Angelica and, as you might also know, we love to be able to bring you great current movies when we can get our hands on an imported DVD. When we previewed the PAL disc, there was noticeable and distracting “combing” (when the edges of an object onscreen seem to get fragmented into horizontal lines, rather like the teeth of two combs interacting). Our workaround was to rip the disc and show it with a computer using the excellent video player application VLC. The image looked really beautiful, as the film-maker had intended… a bleak world portrayed in vivid color. The caveat? We were unable to figure out how to keep the subtitles loaded when each new segment began. So every twenty minutes or so, I had to pause the movie and turn the subtitles on. Annoying, yes, but our lovely guests seemed un-preturbed. Indeed, there was a round of applause for Barbara. Yay!

I’ll have to ask Igor for some VLC advice. I’m guessing he’ll know.

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That Obscure Object of Desire? It’s MovieNight, obviously.

Our Valentine’s special, about a wealthy man driven to distraction by some great, surrealist cock-teasing, wrought by interchangeable beauties brought another surprisingly good turnout. Our parlor was filled with either couples or singles who came alone… therefore all qualified for the 2-for-1 drinks special! Buñuel’s That Obscure Object of Desire was highly entertaining and provoked an unexpected “Which one do you like?” debate… the two Conchitas were both stunning, but were perceived quite differently… one, a hot-blooded Latina, and the other, a perfect porcelain icicle. The debate continues.

Ironically, although I consider myself to be something a movie buff (no shit), it somehow escaped me that Fernando Rey, who played the lead role, was also “Frog 1” in The French Connection. Norris pointed that out to me about 20 minutes in, and that kept a smile on my face for the rest of the movie. Duh.

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