Friday, June 24, 2022

Two Sci-Fi Movies

I put the following pair of movie posters together a while back for cousin Mike:

These are the first two movies from Duncan Jones, David Bowie's son. His third movie is a World of Warcraft movie, called "Warcraft" I think, and his fourth is called "Mute," a sci-fi thing where the main character can't talk, and the whole thing looks so much like Netflix's show Altered Carbon that after all the gin I drank I got confused and started expecting Altered Carbon plot points to pay off. It wasn't bad, despite my confusions.

But these two, Moon and Source Code, are quite good and silly enjoyable. Sam Rockwell stars as basically the only character in Moon, and the plot thickens to the point that trying to describe it essentially spoils it.

Source Code stars Jake Gyllenhaal as what amounts to the last few days of a consciousness trapped in a computer program, as he spends his time trying to find a bomb on a train, a terrorist attack that's also---somehow---been trapped as the titular source code in a computer somewhere. I'm not saying it makes a ton of sense, but it was cool enough: Jake Gyllenhaal redoing the train ride and incrementally getting closer to discovering the bomb, before getting blown-up over and over. And of course falling in love with the girl sharing his train booth.

They're both good and I recommend them.

Sunday, June 19, 2022

Updated: 11 Movies by Linkovich Chulmousky

Here you go, Dan:


I have some ideas, but I'll reserve them for the comment section.

Thanks for your hard work!

Wednesday, May 11, 2022

33 Movies and Some Notes

 In my head I never tried to focus on a "favorite" movie of all time, or whatever. I always had a list, a "List of Five" as it were. (What if we had more fingers?)

There were three movies on my List of Five that were "older" and a fourth that was newer, and these four never fluctuated, and they are all present in my first picture, my First Eleven:


The fifth movie in my List of Five kept changing, depending on my mood or whatever I watched that week (or month), but the point is that spot was a little more fluid. It was always between three different movies.

Then I saw "The Third Man", and my List of Five got upended. I couldn't drop any movie from my pantheon, but I needed to add The Third Man. Life was hard at this point.

It was here that the challenge came up on FB, the naming of ten movies that were too important or too influential for your own viewing habits.

Oh snap, I thought, this is perfect: I've got my ziggurat with four necessaries, the three floaters could all be there, The Third Man can be there, and that leaves the next two most important movies for me, and my List of Ten was done.

Soon after I watched the Battle of Algiers, and I added the image to my First Eleven, and I got to 11, and the idea to start my own Prime Movie Challenge was formed.

So, my First Four:
  1. Citizen Kane
  2. On the Waterfront
  3. Chinatown
  4. I (Heart) Huckabees
And the fifth spot on the original List of Five went to one of the following:
  1. Bulworth
  2. Children of Men
  3. The King's Speech
The Third Man monkey-wrenched this generally stable five-spot ziggurat. The next two that had outsized influence over me were:
  1. Pulp Fiction
  2. The Matrix
And then The Battle of Algiers rounds out the First Eleven.

As far as that picture goes: I (Heart) Huckabees; Pulp Fiction; The Third Man; Children of Men; Bulworth; The Matrix; On the Waterfront; Citizen Kane; The Battle of Algiers; The King's Speech; Chinatown.

My Second Eleven had some movies that I consider super close to the heart as well as some bones being tossed, but lovingly so.


I think I mentioned all of these films in the response to a post, but here we go.

Top row: Dazed and Confused, Last of the Mohicans, Tombstone, Zodiac
Middle row: Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, Gravity, Cool Hand Luke
Bottom row:Into the Spiderverse, The Wild Bunch, Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle, The Black Power Mixtape

I still had a bunch of movies I really liked, so I made another 11, a third 11, and wanted it to capture some of the few I couldn't believe I missed and a few others I realized how much I liked. I think I may have mentioned the list in another post comment, and here we go again.


Top row: Dog Day Afternoon, Godfather II, The God's Must be Crazy, Ghostbusters
Middle Row: Empire Strikes Back, Dead Poets Society, Vertigo, Dr. Strangelove
Bottom Row: Temple of Doom, Die Hard, Goodfellas

I was planning on writing a bunch of explanations, like a personal history of my movie tastes or some other boring bullshit, and I probably still will in the future, but mostly for myself. I'd wanted to say more about each of these movies, and see if I could even put together another list, but then I noticed I'd started this post (with the three pictures already added and half of it already written and chilling as a draft) and decided to just finish it, post it, and save the long-winded blah blah blah for later. (Too late.)

Saturday, February 12, 2022

11 Movies by Linkovich Chulmousky

I think something is wrong with this site... Pat, if you see this... I have created a new 11 shot movie list deal, but this site won't let me upload the presentation slide I built.  Something is wrong... maybe?