[-] Emperor@feddit.uk 9 points 2 hours ago

Most 4k hasn't been meddled with the way Cameron did it.

[-] Emperor@feddit.uk 11 points 4 hours ago

And now everyone is locked into the PS store, unless they buy an external drive.

That's how they get you.

[-] Emperor@feddit.uk 7 points 4 hours ago

What are your requirements?

  • Multiregional?
  • 4k?

The first one was important to me in the UK as you often have to import discs but, if you are in the US it might not be a big deal. It might be worth having anyway in case you run into thr issue down the line.

14
submitted 9 hours ago by Emperor@feddit.uk to c/movies@lemm.ee

It's around here that a normal review would subtly transition to a summary of the plot. Unfortunately, Megalopolis is such a rambling, boring slog, I'm not sure I grasped the story writer and director Francis Ford Coppola actually had in mind.

...

Inaccessible to the point of satire, Megalopolis also tarnishes Coppola's legacy. This is no Godfather. It is not The Rainmaker. It's not even Jack. It is, however, among the worst big-budget productions ever made — a late-career echo of Heaven's Gate, the sprawling vanity project by The Deer Hunter director Michael Cimino that was so monumentally awful it ruined Hollywood's trust in auteur directors for decades.

With mostly his own money at stake, Coppola's latest may not have as big an effect on the future of film. But navel-gazey to the point of irresponsibility, sanctimonious to the point of insulting, Megalopolis is still a cautionary tale — though not about the entropic nature of empires and civilization. It's a warning about what too much money, too much self-seriousness and too little editing can do to an artist.

37

In a commentary track on Frankenhooker's DVD release with Frank Henenlotter (co-writer/director) and James Lorinz (actor), the problems the movie faced when going up against the MPAA were brought up. Henenlotter recalled a phone call with Richard Heffner who told him “Congratulations, you are the first film rated ‘S,’” When asked what that meant, he was told that 'S' stood for "sh*t." Henenlotter expressed that he was deeply hurt at the time, feeling that it was not their place to provide commentary on what they felt about the movie. This started a feud over the rating of the movie, and producer James Glickenhaus made it publicly known that he was fighting back.

The movie eventually got an X rating (which was in use before being phased out the same year, 1990, in favor of NC-17). Henenlotter and his team refused the rating and released the film uncut and unrated, which came with its own problems with distribution. Frankenhooker would eventually gain an R rating when they cut some of the scene of exploding sex workers to six minutes from its original seven; again reflecting how petty and shallow the MPAA can be in their decisions.

...

Frankehooker, along with Henenlotter's Basketcase and Brain Damage, have earned a substantial cult following. It is easy to see why, with all the movies blending dark humor chocked with memorable lines of dialogue, gore-soaked horror, and over-the-top creature effects. For Frankenhooker, you have the wonderfully charismatic Patty Mullen as the titular monster roaming the streets of New York asking random strangers if they "Wanna date?" There is also the infamous scene where multiple sex workers blow up after taking "super crack." To name but a few of the scenes that have made Frankenhooker a fan favorite.

[-] Emperor@feddit.uk 2 points 10 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago)
[-] Emperor@feddit.uk 3 points 10 hours ago

Vague connections to She (1965), nothing to do with She (1984).

[-] Emperor@feddit.uk 10 points 15 hours ago

A fucking spook cut-out trafficking mercenaries from Afghanistan to Ukraine

Or just another one of the oddballs, liars and sociopaths who are the focus of the article.

[-] Emperor@feddit.uk 3 points 17 hours ago

Yeah, I can't see me watching that extended cut any time soon, I might have to leave rewatching the film for a while, a long while.

[-] Emperor@feddit.uk 9 points 17 hours ago

Not a sequel to Her.

[-] Emperor@feddit.uk 3 points 17 hours ago

I think that's an orangey mauve isn't it?

In the standard web interface it's an ! in a diamond.

[-] Emperor@feddit.uk 2 points 17 hours ago

Yeah, my home Instance doesn't allow NSFW material so I could neither create such a post myself or even view it without logging into another account (not ideal for a moderator).

Best bet is just putting [SPOILER] in the headline (without any spoilers images) and/or use spoiler tags appropriately in the text depending on what the OP wants to post about.

[-] Emperor@feddit.uk 7 points 18 hours ago

I don't think you can do that in Lemmy.

Guidelines for spoilers in this community are in the sidebar.

13
submitted 18 hours ago by Emperor@feddit.uk to c/movies@lemm.ee

The People’s Choice Award from the just-wrapped 2024 Toronto Film Festival has gone to The Life of Chuck, first runner-up is Emilia Pérez, and second runner-up is Anora. The Documentary Award goes to The Tragically Hip: No Dress Rehearsal, and the Midnight Madness winner is The Substance.

Both runners-up Emilia Pérez and Anora were big winners at Cannes in May (the latter taking the Palme d’Or), but Mike Flanagan’s Stephen King adaptation The Life of Chuck was a TIFF world premiere and a surprise winner of this award.

Tom Hiddleston stars in the film based on King’s novella about three chapters in the life of an ordinary man named Charles Krantz. It is an unusual winner here for this award as it currently is looking for distribution and has no set release date, which means it could be the first People’s Choice winner in recent memory to not be currently considered a contender in the 2024 awards-season race. It has been called “an apocalyptic version of It’s a Wonderful Life,” and no doubt this award will speed up a distribution deal for the movie, which is atypical of King’s bread and butter but closer in spirit to the likes of movies like Stand By Me and The Shawshank Redemption, which both went on to Oscar nominations for Best Picture.

[-] Emperor@feddit.uk 6 points 19 hours ago

It was something we decided was for the best as some kind be clickbaity but they are also a good way of sparking discussion (especially as everyone here can come up with better), so this approach gives us the best of both worlds.

21
submitted 19 hours ago by Emperor@feddit.uk to c/movies@lemm.ee

The Archival Producers Alliance (APA), a volunteer group of more than 300 documentary producers and researchers formed in response to concerns over the use of generative AI in nonfiction film, developed the guidelines over the course of a year, after publishing an open letter in the Hollywood Reporter demanding more guardrails for the industry. The guidelines, announced at the Camden Film Festival, are not intended to dismiss the possibilities of a technology that is already shaping all forms of visual storytelling, but to “to reaffirm the journalistic values that the documentary community has long held”.

“In a world where it is becoming difficult to distinguish between a real photograph and a generated one, we believe it’s absolutely pivotal to understand the ways generative AI could impact nonfiction storytelling,” said Stephanie Jenkins, APA’s co-director, in a statement.

Dozens of prominent documentary film organizations endorsed the guidelines at launch, including the Documentary Producers Alliance (DPA) and the International Documentary Association (IDA), as well as over 50 individual film-makers such as Michael Moore, Ken Burns and Rory Kennedy.

“Documentary is a truth-seeking art practice, but the nature of truth has always been mutable,” Dominic Willsdon, executive director of the IDA, said. “GenAI will bring all sorts of new and profound mutations, some fruitful, some harmful.” APA’s guidelines “can help the documentary field navigate this first phase of wider AI adoption”.

Rather than rejecting the use of generative AI outright, the group encourages consideration based in four overarching principles: the value of primary sources, transparency, legal considerations and ethical considerations of creating human simulations.

7
submitted 20 hours ago by Emperor@feddit.uk to c/homevideo@feddit.uk

One of the most charming anime of the 80s is Giant Gorg. and we are finally getting a remastered Blu-ray release of it this November.

Written and directed by the hugely talented Yoshikazu Yasuhiko, it deals with the plucky Tagami Yu following in the footsteps of his dead father. He ends up on a newly arisen island in the South Pacific. Full of ancient secrets and a massive corporation that wants those secrets for itself.

...

I reviewed the DVD release back in 2016, and in the time since Japan did an amazing Blu-ray remaster of the anime (shown below). It’s this remaster that is finally coming Westward in November.

Set over 26 episodes, this is one of those anime that should be binge watched. Much like Future Boy Conan, Giant Gorg is a unique and special anime that has a kind of rare narrative pacing that isn’t seen in more modern shows.

...

Even if you picked up the Giant Gorg DVD release a while back, this Blu-ray remaster is something else entirely and is an essential purchase as far as I am concerned.

Released on November 26, you can pre-order the Blu-ray from Crunchyroll’s online store for the currently reduced price of $37.46.

25
submitted 21 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago) by Emperor@feddit.uk to c/movies@lemm.ee

cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/17484663

The 2020s have already been great for folk horror, but the current folk horror revival really got its start in the previous decade. The niche subgenre, which had been around since the 1960s and 1970s, didn't get a name until actor Mark Gatiss of Sherlock fame used the term "folk horror" in 2010 to describe a trio of influential films in his BBC documentary series, A History of Horror. Suddenly, a generation of writers and filmmakers who had grown up on the old British films and television programs were inspired to revisit the rural terrors of their youth.

Folk horror, which was initially recognized as a British phenomenon, became closely associated with imagery from the British Isles, such as stone circles, druids, and the green man. However, the modern folk horror revival has been more inclusive, as filmmakers from around the world draw inspiration from their countries' history and folklore. From Indonesia to Austria, these are the best folk horror movies of the 2010s.

  1. Midsommar (2019)
  2. Kill List (2011)
  3. The Witch (2015)
  4. The Borderlands (2013)
  5. The Wailing (2016)
  6. The Ritual (2017)
  7. Impetigore (2019)
  8. La Llorona (2019)
  9. Hagazussa: A Heathen's Curse (2017)
  10. A Dark Song (2016)

Warning: the image used dod The Ritual is a massive spoiler - go watch it first, it's worth going in blind.

See also:

21
submitted 21 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago) by Emperor@feddit.uk to c/horror@lemmy.ml

cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/17484663

The 2020s have already been great for folk horror, but the current folk horror revival really got its start in the previous decade. The niche subgenre, which had been around since the 1960s and 1970s, didn't get a name until actor Mark Gatiss of Sherlock fame used the term "folk horror" in 2010 to describe a trio of influential films in his BBC documentary series, A History of Horror. Suddenly, a generation of writers and filmmakers who had grown up on the old British films and television programs were inspired to revisit the rural terrors of their youth.

Folk horror, which was initially recognized as a British phenomenon, became closely associated with imagery from the British Isles, such as stone circles, druids, and the green man. However, the modern folk horror revival has been more inclusive, as filmmakers from around the world draw inspiration from their countries' history and folklore. From Indonesia to Austria, these are the best folk horror movies of the 2010s.

  1. Midsommar (2019)
  2. Kill List (2011)
  3. The Witch (2015)
  4. The Borderlands (2013)
  5. The Wailing (2016)
  6. The Ritual (2017)
  7. Impetigore (2019)
  8. La Llorona (2019)
  9. Hagazussa: A Heathen's Curse (2017)
  10. A Dark Song (2016)

Warning: the image used dod The Ritual is a massive spoiler - go watch it first, it's worth going in blind.

See also:

10
submitted 21 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago) by Emperor@feddit.uk to c/folkhorror@feddit.uk

The 2020s have already been great for folk horror, but the current folk horror revival really got its start in the previous decade. The niche subgenre, which had been around since the 1960s and 1970s, didn't get a name until actor Mark Gatiss of Sherlock fame used the term "folk horror" in 2010 to describe a trio of influential films in his BBC documentary series, A History of Horror. Suddenly, a generation of writers and filmmakers who had grown up on the old British films and television programs were inspired to revisit the rural terrors of their youth.

Folk horror, which was initially recognized as a British phenomenon, became closely associated with imagery from the British Isles, such as stone circles, druids, and the green man. However, the modern folk horror revival has been more inclusive, as filmmakers from around the world draw inspiration from their countries' history and folklore. From Indonesia to Austria, these are the best folk horror movies of the 2010s.

  1. Midsommar (2019)
  2. Kill List (2011)
  3. The Witch (2015)
  4. The Borderlands (2013)
  5. The Wailing (2016)
  6. The Ritual (2017)
  7. Impetigore (2019)
  8. La Llorona (2019)
  9. Hagazussa: A Heathen's Curse (2017)
  10. A Dark Song (2016)

Warning: the image used dod The Ritual is a massive spoiler - go watch it first, it's worth going in blind.

See also:

8
submitted 22 hours ago by Emperor@feddit.uk to c/noyank@lemmy.ml

cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/17484037

Following a group of small-town, DIY Indian filmmakers, Reema Kagti‘s “Superboys of Malegaon” is a moving crowd-pleaser that constantly reaffirms its importance through its central theme. Although the film, which is based on real events, often tries to cover too much ground, it continually circles back to the idea that people must see themselves reflected in art, not just out of want, but out of deep desire stemming from need, in order to live with dignity.

...

In adding years of context to each decision leading up to this superhero spoof, Varun Grover’s script also adds indelible (and tragic) context to the documentary, as well as the parody film it portrays, while transforming the film’s own tale of scrappy creativity into a spiritually moving look at the meaning of cinematic images, and the immortality they offer. Its shattering climax makes for a wonderful complement to Spanish maestro Victor Erice’s recent comeback, “Close Your Eyes,” which is no easy feat.

16
submitted 22 hours ago by Emperor@feddit.uk to c/movies@lemm.ee

Following a group of small-town, DIY Indian filmmakers, Reema Kagti‘s “Superboys of Malegaon” is a moving crowd-pleaser that constantly reaffirms its importance through its central theme. Although the film, which is based on real events, often tries to cover too much ground, it continually circles back to the idea that people must see themselves reflected in art, not just out of want, but out of deep desire stemming from need, in order to live with dignity.

...

In adding years of context to each decision leading up to this superhero spoof, Varun Grover’s script also adds indelible (and tragic) context to the documentary, as well as the parody film it portrays, while transforming the film’s own tale of scrappy creativity into a spiritually moving look at the meaning of cinematic images, and the immortality they offer. Its shattering climax makes for a wonderful complement to Spanish maestro Victor Erice’s recent comeback, “Close Your Eyes,” which is no easy feat.

10
The 10 best films of TIFF 2024 (www.worldofreel.com)
submitted 1 day ago by Emperor@feddit.uk to c/movies@lemm.ee

The 49th Toronto International Film Festival is winding down, and the audience winner will be announced tomorrow. What film will win the prize? My money is on either “Anora” or “Conclave.” Other possibilities include “The Life of Chuck,” “Emilia Perez,” “Saturday Night” and “The Wild Robot.”

Having seen close to 40 films in 7 days, I managed to find 10 that stood ahead of the pack and are worthy of being called one of the year’s best.

Of course, I’m not counting the essential titles I saw at Cannes, which also screened at TIFF, and they include Sean Baker’s “Anora,” Coraline Fargeat’s “The Substance,” Jacques Audiard’s “Emilia Perez,” “Alain Guiraudie’s “Misericordia,” Mohammad Rasoulof’s “The Seed of the Sacred Fig,” Boris Lojkine’s “The Story of Souleymane,” Ali Abassi’s “The Apprentice,” Leonardo Van Diji’s “Julie Keeps Quiet”, and Arnaud & Jean-Marie Larrieu’s “The Story of Jim.”

Having to cut it down to just 10 films wasn’t easy, I could have included Ron Howard’s “Eden,” far and away the darkest and most twisted film of his career. Paul Walter Hauser is great as a sad sack loser of a gameshow contestant in Samir Oliveros’ “The Luckiest Man in America.” I should also mention Morgan Neville’s Pharrell Williams doc “Piece by Piece,” which was a visually inventive treat.

It turns out that half my list is composed of films that premiered at Venice. Not a surprise. TIFF world premieres tend to be films that couldn’t get into Venice and/or Telluride. With that said, these are the 10 that stood out.

  • “April” (Dea Kulumbegashvili)
  • “The Brutalist” (Brady Corbet)
  • “Conclave” (Edward Berger)
  • “Queer” (Luca Guadagnino)
  • “The Room Next Door” (Pedro Almodovar)
  • “Babygirl” (Halina Reijn)
  • “Hard Truths” (Mike Leigh)
  • “Presence” (Steven Soderbergh)
  • “Saturday Night” (Jason Reitman)
  • “Friendship” (Andrew DeYoung)
82
submitted 1 day ago by Emperor@feddit.uk to c/movies@lemm.ee

With Hollywood budgets being what they are, a budget under $10 million is practically tiny. Despite this, many films have gone on to make a killing at the box office from budgets that barely scratch the surface of their competition.

So, here are 14 smaller-budget movies that made the big bucks at the box office:

  1. Juno
  2. Mad Max
  3. Paranormal Activity
  4. Little Miss Sunshine
  5. El Mariachi
  6. The Blair Witch Project
  7. Annabelle
  8. Super Size Me
  9. Rocky
  10. My Big Fat Greek Wedding
  11. The Devil Inside
  12. Halloween
  13. Moonlight
  14. Napoleon Dynamite
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