Our reviewers select and review the best independent and foreign films on amazon.com, cd universe, and netflix

Our reviewers select and review the best independent and foreign films on amazon.com, cd universe, and netflix
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Bobby Talks Cinema

The Great Movie Quote Race

When you have any website with “Movie” in it, you’re fair game for totally irrelevant sites trying to build their Google search standing. “Movie” is so common a search word that all kinds of businesses hope to lead the innocent into their maw. If I search for “cable movies” I might land on CableTVProviders.net. If I search for “college movies” I might land on Bestonlinecolleges.com.

Or at least that is the hope. Galley slaves in obscure countries spend countless hours on computers searching and contacting sites like MovieWithMe.com  and suggesting articles like “10 Most Quotable Movies of All Time” would be “an interesting story for your readers to check out and discuss on your blog.”

What they seek is a link back that will boost their site ranking and give them an edge in search engine optimization. Google is continuelly fine tuning its search algorhythms to avoid this. The bigger question is why site owners pay good money for results that have bounce rate that is sky high (users go away as fast as they can click).

Of the two stories roseK112 and yelin.george thought would be interesting for us to check out, “10 Most Quotable Movies of All Time” is the most interesting, and most comprehensive. The movies are well chosen, even if if the quotes are not. Sample from A Few Good Men, “You can’t handle the truth.”   This is brought to us by CableTVProviders: a site that tells us channels and program line ups in our area.

“The 10 Most Overused Movie Quotes” on Best Online Colleges singles out the same “You can’t handle the truth” from A Few Good Men as one of the most over used. I would think a site that peddles college course info would suggests more than limp alternatives for overused lines. The suggested replacement for Jerry McGuire’s “You had me at hello” is “Stop talking, you won.” Is literature still taught in college?

My real curiosity is, who wrote these lists?” Where were they stolen from? Neither is credited to anybody. My disdain is reserved for the sites themselves. They are content farms with threadbare content. The more they impede our search objectives, the more frustrated and untrusting of search we become. Google is history. Intelligent search is the next big thing. I can’t wait

Link to this Post: http://www.moviewithme.com/blog/archives/2131

The White Ribbon (review)

The White Ribbon (Germany 2009, 144 min. dir: Michael Heneke, cast:Christian Friedel, Ernst Jacobi,Lionie Benesch, Susanne Lothar, Urlich Tukur, Ursina Lardi, Detlev Buck).

Director Michael Heneke is not good on conclusions. The Piano Teacher, Funny Games, and Cache are fascinating to watch but frustrating. So it is with The White Ribbon.

A small German town witnesses a horse and riser felled by a cruel trip wire, a woman falling to her death on a rotten plank, a man hanged upside down in the mill. What does it all mean? God’s warning about the war to come that will change life here forever? The scenes are brilliant, the intellectual postulations lofty. I only wish Michael Heneke would bevel his story with a finer corner at the end.

His trademark has become the fade out and credits while his audience is left to puzzle the meaning. You can’t but be caught up in the story, the setting, the characters and fine performances by all. As if to emphasize the small rooms and camped world of the story, Heneke rarely moves the camera. Take a look at the scene where Eva’s father (Detlev Buck) grills the school teacher (Christian Friedel) about his intentions to marry his daughter. We rarely cut between faces and reactions, but the charged emotions fly around the room.

Shooting in black and white adds to the period feel, as does the weary voice of the teacher as an old man (Ernst Jacobi) telling us his recollections of the events we witness.

I’d love to put Heneke in a room with a writer and see who comes out alive. It might be another hanging or garroting by trip wire.

Link to this Post: http://www.moviewithme.com/blog/archives/2121

Movie Villains and Online Degrees

The old screenwriter rule that the size of the heavy is the size of the hero is the measure of any bad guy. As this list of 10 Movie Villains Whose Actions Were Totally Justified states it, “the bad guy actually has pretty good reasons for doing what he’s doing.”

It’s a fair list though I would have added Co. Hans Landa from Inglourius Bastards. Movie writing of villains is an art because we have to believe that someone’s motives are understandable, even if his or her actions are tragic. Col. Landa even takes the time to explain his motives, one of the best scenes in the film. And the Joker in Tim Burton’s Batman is equally articulate about his reasons for revenge -something that was lost in the sequels when he became just another boring sadist.

The word villain derives from the latin term villanus. Someone who worked on a villa, or farm. Crude farmhands had no couth. So it is curious that the site , Online Degree, specializing in filtering college degree programs online ,should be interested in villains. Unless they are subtly saying that the way to avoid being a rough farmhand for the rest of your life is to earn a degree and be a hero.

Within the “Computers & IT” selections for “Find My Schools” the site lists just about everything except Search Engine Optimization. Since they are engaging in SEO by trolling for links with unrelated novelties like best movie villains, it seems they should boast about it as a speciality. After all, I’m writing about it, so they have succeeded in getting at least one small link that has nothing to do with  college degrees. But don’t they know the best movie makers all dropped out of school?

Link to this Post: http://www.moviewithme.com/blog/archives/2110

Netflix begets Quickster

Reed Hastings’ email notice (Sept. 19) to all subscribers that Netflix is splitting into two companies has two overlooked components. The first is that Reed Hastings made the email his own. That suggest that either he, or Netflix, consider Reed such a well-known star that the customers follow his words as closely as Brad and Angelina. Maybe so.

The second component is that running a streaming video company is not the same as running a DVD rental company delivered over the the internet. Once Netflix is freed from DVDs, it is also freed from other people’s content and pricing models set from the rental business (so many per month, time limits, all you can eat).

Look forward a few years to tiered subscriptions offering premium content, special VOD offerings, original programming, advertising, and public affairs. Sounds a lot like a TV or cable network, doesn’t it? In fact the name “Netflix” may be just as anachronistic in five years as “HBO” is now. HBO, Home Box Office, started as a movie service to bring you films over cable. Now most people know it for original series and specials.

Martin Peers writes in the Wall Street Journal, “If anyone should pay attention, it is executives in big media companies that own cable-TV channels. These have become a license to print money, thanks to a business model that charges consumers for a package of channels whether they watch them or not.”

This is the real story. Any executive reading the Netflix announcement should take a new look at Hulu. Hulu is for sale and could become the rival to Netflix in the new world of multiple platforms, instant entertainment, and consumer friendly pricing.

The dowdy aunt is cable TV. Too expensive, two restrictive, too controlled. An industry that celebrates the iPad only as a new TV remote that can do what their set top boxes can’t is missing the bigger picture.

Link to this Post: http://www.moviewithme.com/blog/archives/2107

14 Movies Every French Major Must See

Beating the odds on Google search has become a complex pastime calling for expert help creating questionable content. From time to time MovieWithMe receives an email from some underpaid internet field hand asking for a post or a link to a blog article they feel is relevant to our users. I’m tempted to reply in Hindi (using Google translator, of course) since I suspect many of the names like Tim or Mary are actually nom d’internet chosen by Mugdha or Gupta.

The latest asks for us to post “14 Movies Every French Major Must See.” The choices are what you might expect of anyone who has leafed through an issue of Cahiers du Cinemas. But I was heartened they included Taxi and La Femme Nikita among the classics. They also squeezed in Le Placard; a perfectly mediocre movie.

The site that has this profound interest in the language skills of French majors is called BestCollegesOnline.com. It provides a way to scan through college sand courses. They also offer “14 Movies Every Journalism Major Must See,” ” 8 Acclaimed Screenplays that were born on College Campuses,”  and “Ten Incredibly Beautiful High Schools that put yours to Shame.”

All of this is useful information for someone, though I’m not sure it makes much difference if you are looking for college credit online. My fourteen movies for French majors would probably concentrate not on classic titles but on pronunciation. Most French movies use too much slang and mumbling that students can not understand. Who knows that shpa really means je ne sais quoi or that un bur is and Arab from North Africa. Few contemporary French films use the classic language, but those few are the ones students should see and hear.

Meanwhile I hope Gupta enjoys this post in case he ever plans to learn French.

Link to this Post: http://www.moviewithme.com/blog/archives/2100

Palindromes (review)

Palindromes (USA 2004, 100 min. dir: Todd Solondz, cast: Ellen Barkin, Richard Masur. Matthew Fabur).

Locked away in some dusty attic is the small dollhouse in which Todd Solondz played out his childhood fantasies. There are droll dolls, pervert dolls, and dead dolls. No wonder his first film was Welcome to the Dollhouse (1995).

The meaning of Palindromes is frozen among cobwebs in one of the dusty doll rooms; as if it were a single cell in the director’s mind. This is to say you can’t understand a Todd Solondz movie unless you know the inside of that dollhouse, and nobody has been there or ever will be except for Todd.

The best the rest of us can do is sniff at the scent of genius and an order of depravity as we watch movies like Palindromes. But we must always remember that the whole is not the some of its parts, the whole is a hole. The parts are all. Some are delightful, some confounding, some are stupid.

The theme of Palindromes is a pubescent high school girl played by various actresses who wants desperately to get pregnant. You can read the rest of the plot at Wikipedia.

Cousin Mark (Matthew Faber, my favorite character in the film) says that life is like a palindrome where everything is only self-referential. “It doesn’t matter if you gain 50 pounds or lose 50 pounds or you have a sex change: what have you, all these shapes and sizes in the center; is a part of ourselves that is palindromic by nature.”

He alone really understands the dollhouse. The rest of us are tour visitors wandering from room to room in hope we’ll either found the toilet or the exit. Either way, it’s a journey worth making at least once.

Link to this Post: http://www.moviewithme.com/blog/archives/2092

For My Father (review)

For My Father (Israel 2008, 100 min. dir: Dror Zahavi, cast: Shredi Jabarin, Hili Yalon, Shlomo Vishinsky).

A too sensitive suicide bomber is in Tel Aviv is to blow himself up in the Carmel market but he’s delayed by a bad detonator button. The pause is long enough for several Jews to complain, “You think you’ve got problems?”

Dror Zahavi plays it straight in what also could be flipped into a Woody Allen comedy. Tarek (Shredi Jabarin) is dropped off by his buddies at the Tel Aviv’s big Friday market. If he doesn’t detonate, his handlers do it by remote cell phone control. When the button one his explosive vest doesn’t work, he takes the button to an electrical store for quick repairs, assuring his handlers he’s got the situation under control and they don’t need to trigger the remote. Electric merchant Katz (Shlomo Vishinsky) tells him the button is caput. The good news is he can order a replacement but it won’t be delivered until Sunday because of the Sabbath.

That gives him two nights and a day to wander around, save lovely Keren (Hili Yalon, also see her in Lemon Tree (Movie with Me) from being beaten up by Hassidic toughs because she looks slutty (they want to take her back to her Orthodox family). He also gets a dose of Jewish wisdom and fatalism from Katz and friends. Meanwhile we learn Tarek was an aspiring soccer champion but turned bitter when his father was beaten up by Israeli border guards.

There is enough breast beating here to make everyone hang their head. The showdown comes Sunday in the market when Katz, who is on to Tarek’s mission, tries a soul searching approach to stop him, just ahead of the police sniper team’s bullets.

The hand wringing would have worked in a comedy, although I guess a comedy about suicide bombers is not exactly commercial for Jewish film festivals where films like this usually make their money. As a drama, it still has its moments and manages to delve into the mind of the terrorist. See Sontash Sivan’s The Terrorist (Movie With Me) for comparison. His film is about a pregnant suicide bomber with the Tamil Tigers and takes a much more personal, complex approach.

But For My Father has its moments and makes its point. For those with the stomach to mix sociology with suicide, it is a good meal.

Link to this Post: http://www.moviewithme.com/blog/archives/2056

10 Most Overused Movie Songs

The most overused phrase in filmmaking is “the music will carry it.” Whatever doesn’t work in shooting or editing gets a second chance when the perfect musical score deftly underscores emotions. The best composers know how to do this without telegraphing emotions. Classic film music techniques include creating a theme for every major character plus a broader thematic statement encompassing the whole movie. More contemporary scores from gifted composers like Stewart Copeland (drummer with The Police) mix classic techniques with rock innovation.

You might question why a blog post called “The 10 Most Overused Songs in Movie History” originated on a site called Online Certificates. The purpose is to get you online dental or medical or fitness certification online. But the authors have peppered their site with interesting “best” articles like “10 Unfinished Pieces of Art,” and “20 Best American Cities for Music Buffs.”

I guess the rational is health certification isn’t exactly fun time, so you might as well read something interesting while you fill out the questionnaires. Among the most overused (a subjective judgment, I assume) are O Fortuna by Carl Orloff, Sweet Home Alabama (Lynyrd Skynyrd), and In the Hall of the Mountain King( Edvard Grieg). I think Carl Orff’s Musica Poetica that Terry Malick used in Badlands and has been overused ever since is an equally good list entry. But I won’t quibble with most of the others. You can see the whole list at: The 10 Most Overused Songs in Movie History. Take a look.

Link to this Post: http://www.moviewithme.com/blog/archives/2047

District 13: Ultimatum (review)

District 13: Ultimatum (France 2009, 101 min. dir: Patrick Alessandrin cast: David Belle, Cyril Raffaelli, Elodie Yung ).

Inside District 13 life seems a lot livelier than outside. Do we want to get in more than they want to get out? The answer says where the world has gone between the 2004 movie and the 2009 sequel.

What would it be like to see the two District 13 movies twenty-five year from now? Would a police state look nicer? The stunts and fights might be retro, but the reaction to the social and political history might surprise us.

For those not up on French action movies, District B13 (2004, and on Movie With Me), and District 13: Ultimatum share a premise: crime among the Arab and black immigrants of suburban Paris has gotten so out of control the police have sealed off the borders. The residents are on their own.

In 2004 this theory of walling off war zones was in vogue. Read what the Americans did in Al Anbar Province, Iraq. By 2009 the seepage of polyglot culture into the main stream confused all boundaries. Music and models are a good place to start. Is there any part of music that can claim even a home base in one country or culture? Fashion models are exotic because they where burkas or tattoos.

So it is much tougher to see the world of Damien the cop (Cyril Raffaelli) and Leito the wily immigrant (David Belle) as polar opposites. Luc Besson hints at this in his screenplay by making the bad guys international developers, led by a company called “Harriburton,” who want to blow up District 13 and make it into an Ivry-sur-Seine (a modern planned community east of Paris where architects and accountants live).

The message is not only that the residents of District 13 are being screwed, but also what they have is more exciting than the planned community that will replace it.

Not that District 13: Ultimatum skimps on the stunts and the chases. Besides David Belle’s amazing escape scene above the rooftops of District 13 (an homage to the first movie), this one’s got car chases through the corridors of the Prefect de Police, and to beat all: Elodie Yung as Tao, the tattooed nearly bare breasted seductress who lets down her hair and uses the imbedded blade as a bola to slice the bad guys. Wow.

Link to this Post: http://www.moviewithme.com/blog/archives/2034

GARAM HAWA (1973)

Title : Garam Hawa
Year : 1973
Directed By M. S. Sathyu
Starring : Balraj Sahni, Farukh Sheikh & more.

“Garam Hawa” is a gem which has to be there in the top brackets of any kind of list compiled about the movies made on the subject of India’s Partition. Also considered as one the Top 10 Movies made in the Hindi Film Industry till date, “Garam Hawa” is among the favourites of many renowned stalwarts of Bollywood, who still remember the aura it created at the time of its release in 1973.

For me, it is one of the best works conceived around the subject of India’s partition in 1947. The film is based on the story of famous Urdu Writer Ismat Chugtai and captures the moments of those tough times in just the right spirit without going into any blood-shed or extreme violence. Truly speaking, the director and writer show the trauma of that era more through their characters and their breaking relationships than by showing some bloody scenes of deadly riots full of mutual hatred.

It has Balraj Sahni, the most natural Indian actor of all times playing the lead character, caught within the communal tension and his performance is undoubtedly among the Best Ever performances of Hindi Cinema. In fact why he is known as the most natural actor, is righty proved by this film without any doubt.. Thoughtfully directed by M. S. Sathyu, the film gives you a chance to feel the violent conflicts between Hindus & Muslims, before & after the partition, as a first-hand experience. Each character in its script is affected in his own way by the hard & unexpected decision took by the leaders of that time. And as you see it, the terrifying moments are bound to make you go numb and speechless for few minutes.

Undoubtedly one of the most intense movies on this topic which makes you sit back and think about the situation our ancestors had to face at that particular point of time. In a very sensitive and subtle way it captures the dilemma every Hindu, Muslim and Sikh had at that time, about whether to move away or not. And further it has a well shot climax which is a complete chapter in itself to study, leaving many open questions for the viewer to think it over.

More on http://bobbytalkscinema.com/recentpost.php?postid=postid041209010024

DVD available: http://www.amazon.com/Garam-Hawa/dp/B000FVE49W/ref=sr_1_1?s=movies-tv&ie=UTF8&qid=1312966885&sr=1-1

Link to this Post: http://www.moviewithme.com/blog/archives/2015
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