News:

And we're back!

Main Menu

TV/Movies Megathread

Started by Eddie Teach, March 06, 2011, 09:29:27 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

Syt

We are born dying, but we are compelled to fancy our chances.
- hbomberguy

Proud owner of 42 Zoupa Points.

celedhring

Heh, it's formally banned but block booking is still a thing to this day.

HVC

Look at that exchange rate. The UK should really think about bringing back the Empire :lol:
Being lazy is bad; unless you still get what you want, then it's called "patience".
Hubris must be punished. Severely.

Valmy

Quote from: HVC on October 21, 2025, 10:47:27 AMLook at that exchange rate. The UK should really think about bringing back the Empire :lol:

If they get back on the gold standard they had in 1925, with current prices, each pound would be worth about $4,000 or something.
Quote"This is a Russian warship. I propose you lay down arms and surrender to avoid bloodshed & unnecessary victims. Otherwise, you'll be bombed."

Zmiinyi defenders: "Russian warship, go fuck yourself."

garbon

Quote from: HVC on October 21, 2025, 10:47:27 AMLook at that exchange rate. The UK should really think about bringing back the Empire :lol:

We can't see whatever image is posted so we good. :D
"I've never been quite sure what the point of a eunuch is, if truth be told. It seems to me they're only men with the useful bits cut off."
I drank because I wanted to drown my sorrows, but now the damned things have learned to swim.

The Brain

Women want me. Men want to be with me.

crazy canuck

Quote from: crazy canuck on October 20, 2025, 07:49:09 PM
Quote from: grumbler on October 17, 2025, 09:49:33 PM
Quote from: crazy canuck on October 17, 2025, 09:17:38 PM
Quote from: grumbler on October 17, 2025, 08:32:25 PMProduced by a Hungarian-Canadian and a Hungarian, for the Hungarian government-owned National Film Institute Hungary and the German firm Beta Film Gmbh. It has fuck all to do with Canada, as I am sure that your very thorough Google search informed you.

So I guess the Canadian who was interviewed on CBC who said he made it was just lying.  Thank God I have you to set me straight.

I suspect that the issue isn't that he was lying, but rather that you weren't paying attention. This isn't the first, nor will it be the last, time you can thank Hod I set you straight.

You that is possible

Turns out I did in fact hear it correctly. 

For people who want to hear from the Canadian who produced the show.  How he read the book the show is based on and then took 12 years to make it, along with him talking about his long career of making movies, here is the link.

It's an impressive story of Hungarian immigrant whose parents fled Hungary making it big here.

https://www.cbc.ca/listen/live-radio/1-50-q/clip/16173405-how-banned-sex-scene-led-robert-lantos-build





Awarded 17 Zoupa points

In several surveys, the overwhelming first choice for what makes Canada unique is multiculturalism. This, in a world collapsing into stupid, impoverishing hatreds, is the distinctly Canadian national project.

Sheilbh

Very much enjoying the Celebrity Traitors :lol: :blush:
Let's bomb Russia!

Jacob

Quote from: The Brain on October 21, 2025, 01:23:40 PM"Take back coltrol."

I thought it was "take back [ctrl] + [alt] + [delete]"?!?

Sheilbh

So this sounds fascinating and entirely up my street :lol:
QuoteThe Last Sacrifice review – how a gruesome rural murder embedded folk-horror in the British psyche

Rupert Russell's fascinating documentary is a sophisticated analysis of how real life and fiction merged in post-empire Britain in the 1960s and 70s
Phil Hoad
Thu 23 Oct 2025 11.00 BST

Centred on the unsolved 1945 murder of Warwickshire farm labourer Charles Walton in Lower Quinton, this fascinating and feverish documentary starts under the true-crime umbrella. But it quickly expands, exploring the killing's influence on the emerging folk-horror film genre, particularly 1973's The Wicker Man, and almost reaching Adam Curtis-type grand sociology in mining these pop-cultural ley lines for what they say about the British psyche.

After Walton was found on Meon Hill with a pitchfork pushed through his head and a billhook in his neck, rumour soon spread that his murder was ritualistic. When the Warwickshire police called in crack Scotland Yard inspector Robert Fabian to lead the investigation, he was comprehensively stonewalled by the villagers. The notorious case set a blueprint for the you-ain't-from-round-'ere tone of 60s and 70s rustic horror: the likes of The Plague of the Zombies and The Blood on Satan's Claw. In parallel, there was a real-life hippy-era increase in witchcraft and paganism, influenced by and influencing the films.

Director Rupert Russell (son of Ken) makes a convincing case that the particulars of the Walton case, and the way its bloodstain permeated out into postwar culture, reflected a particular British insularity, unruliness and furtive violence that still persist today. Even if the killing wasn't occult, what counted was the belief that it was. And the subsequent pagan business in Notting Hill squats and on cinema screens was on some level re-enacting atavistic compulsions newly seductive in a diminished, post-empire Britain. "Better the devil you know," as one of the ghoulishly lit interviewees says here.

It is a sophisticated analysis, clued in to how real life and fiction combine to stir up the silt of the imagination in ways propitious to manifesting the supernatural. At one point, sightings of a supposed vampire in Highgate Cemetery inspired the 1972 Hammer film Dracula AD 1972; only it turns out that what the terrified Londoners may have seen was an earlier Hammer production shooting in the graveyard. In this attunement to how art shapes the mind, and in its own incantatory stream of imagery, Russell's film comes close to participating in this magic circle itself.

Caught in this delirium, it never goes back to Lower Quinton to introduce some reality into the subject. Leave it to one housewife, asked why she is uneasy about the coven down the road, to introduce a note of sobriety as British as the teatime paganism: "Lack of knowledge – if you don't know anything about a subject, you get nervous. You get frightened."

The Last Sacrifice is at the Irish Film Institute, Dublin, on 26 October, then touring.
Let's bomb Russia!

celedhring

Friend of mine saw it at a fest last year and he loved it.

The Brain

Quote from: Sheilbh on October 23, 2025, 05:40:03 PM"Lack of knowledge – if you don't know anything about a subject, you get nervous. You get frightened."

Very true. For me it's K-pop.
Women want me. Men want to be with me.