Saturday, January 26, 2008

Weekend in Hollywood

We woke up, bought groceries and made a trip to the Amoeba on Sunset. I found some great lasers: Pulp Fiction, 2001: A Space Odyssey, Lawrence of Arabia (all three on hard to find Criterion Collection CAV discs), Psycho (on Universal's Signature Series, another rare one) and a great compilation of Ed Wood films containing Plan 9 from Outerspace, Jail Bait, and Night of the Ghouls. In total they added up to $23.77 because the cashier forgot to charge me the $3.99 for the Ed Wood compilation. Or maybe she didn't, either way should you really have to pay to see some Ed Wood films? I had $14 is store credit from some DVDs I sold back a few weeks ago in Berkeley. That brought the cost to $9.77 for seven films, about $1.40 each from an original $3.40, which I still would have paid. Excluding the Ed Wood compilation, the packaging and special features on the rest of the lasers are great and not available on DVD.

In order to avoid traffic for the afternoon commute, we decided to watch No Country For Old Men again. I feel the same about it; it is a well made film but I'm not impressed with it at all. Not once was I emotionally engaged with the story or characters. This year presented a far superior film of a murderer, the police pursuit to catch him, the surrounding community, and the lives of those left affected. It is a shame that Zodiac has received no recognition. In general I favor the Coen Brothers over Fincher, but for these two individual films competing for accolades in the same year, and when the scale has tipped so heavily in favor of No Country, I have to side with Zodiac. It is sadly, the forgotten great film of 2007. Every year has one.

Afterwards we went to the LACMA to see Thelma Schoonmaker present Michael Powell's Bluebeard's Castle followed by Powell and Pressburger's The Tales of Hoffmann. I was really in awe to see Schoonmaker in person, she's played a huge creative role behind some of my most favorite films. These were the first Powell film's I've seen, a privelege since Bluebeard's Castle has never been screened publicly in the U.S. I was very impressed with The Tales of Hoffmann, but I can't say that I loved both films. I look forward to exploring other film's by Powell and Pressburger. I own Peeping Tom and Judy has 49th Parallel and The Red Shoes. Schoonmaker said that Powell and Pressburger's The Thief of Bagdad will be released soon on Criterion. Her announcement was complimented with a new post at On Five discussing the transfer of Thief that I discovered when I got home.

2 comments:

Cracks in Everything said...

In regards to Zodiac, you mean a great film from 2007 (not 2008) right?

Richard said...

thanks Rich. corrected