William Friedkin

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I can't seem to find any thread devoted to this guy (except a TS: Exorcist vs The Shining and a Wang Chung soundtrack thread) nor much talk about him.

I've only seen two of his, French Connection and To live and Die in LA and have enjoyed them both a great deal. Somehow I have managed not to see The Exorcist even though that is probably his most seen movie. I really want to see Sorcerer as it is based on one of my favorite movies as well as it often being praised as his best. I'm about to see Bug, his latest, in a day or two.

What other movies of his should I seek?

Jibe, Monday, 26 February 2007 13:59 (seventeen years ago) link

Cruising is good for a laugh.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Monday, 26 February 2007 14:29 (seventeen years ago) link

six months pass...

The revival of Cruising has already gotten one enthused gay ILXor labeled a homophobe.

Dr Morbius, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 14:32 (sixteen years ago) link

Point me in the direction of that there thread.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 14:44 (sixteen years ago) link

No, this was on a real website! by an irate reader!

Dr Morbius, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 14:47 (sixteen years ago) link

this is a real website. It exists.

kenan, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 14:55 (sixteen years ago) link

Bug is good.

Eazy, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 14:55 (sixteen years ago) link

How did a thread about Friedkin die so quickly?

kenan, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 15:01 (sixteen years ago) link

I think The Exorcist is pretty great, and on the most recent DVD release there's a kind of hilarious intro by Friedkin from what appears to be his living room, and he's wearing a Cosby sweater. The only other one I've seen by him, To Live And Die In L.A. is kind of dated and awkward, with laughable fight sequences. Also, you see Grissom from C.S.I.'s wang.

Alex in Baltimore, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 15:08 (sixteen years ago) link

I was frankly expecting to be called a homophobe by more than one person. I guess my theory that the gay community has simply forgotten to get offended by Cruising is basically true.

Eric H., Wednesday, 5 September 2007 15:14 (sixteen years ago) link

This part – he Larry Craig incident is only the latest example; countless editorials surmised that airport bathrooms will continue to bear the brunt of unwiped spooge trails until homos are allowed the rights intended them by our nation's forefathers to violently thrash the springs of their marital beds, that sex between two men (or two women, though you wouldn't know it even exists listening to media talking points) would be dirty until the act of filing taxes jointly validated it for everyone – is really OTM, and what probably leads fellow faggots to wonder why men like Larry Craig couldn't find his very own Jake Gyllenhaal.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 15:18 (sixteen years ago) link

can we get a link to this real website?

kenan, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 15:20 (sixteen years ago) link

http://www.slantmagazine.com/film/film_review.asp?ID=3169

Comments on the blog post here:

http://www.slantmagazine.com/blog/default.asp?display=140

Eric H., Wednesday, 5 September 2007 15:23 (sixteen years ago) link

Eric, popular memory no longer stretches back to pre-Apatow Canon times. (Or among fags, Margaret Cho's first standup special.)

I have never seen Cruising but remember all the activist rage against it. The Village Voice's pre-Musto gossip columnist, Arthur Bell, was a leader of it, encouraging disruption of the shooting (with ehistles, I think).

Dr Morbius, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 15:29 (sixteen years ago) link

Haha, Alfred ... I think that was also one of the things I wrote vaguely tongue-in-cheek. To be fair to the guy who called me a homophobe, I am as skeptical of the marriage-will-validate-homosexuality line of thought as I am of the idea that homosexuality is wrong. I did make a choice to write it both ways, tho.

Eric H., Wednesday, 5 September 2007 15:30 (sixteen years ago) link

Yeah, but activists don't understand tongue in cheek – they got their tongues up their asses.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 15:33 (sixteen years ago) link

jeez, Morbius, we get it, Judd Apatow is responsible for the decline of Western civilization, you don't have to remind us in every thread.

Alex in Baltimore, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 15:35 (sixteen years ago) link

no, his followers are responsible for symptomatic of it (I haven't seen a single one of his films, even the ones he gets credit for that he didn't make, but he has some of the most annoying acolytes since Jesus's).

Dr Morbius, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 15:37 (sixteen years ago) link

oh for fuck's sake.

That one guy that hit it and quit it, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 15:38 (sixteen years ago) link

oh, wrinklemorbs.

jon /via/ chi 2.0, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 15:42 (sixteen years ago) link

anyway, back to Friedkin -- I remember his adap of Pinter's The Birthday Party being very solid.

Dr Morbius, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 15:45 (sixteen years ago) link

I saw To Live... for the first time a few months ago...I suppose nex to McG or Brett Ratner the work of Friedkin looks like Fritz Lang.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 15:47 (sixteen years ago) link

*next

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 15:47 (sixteen years ago) link

Assorted other Cruising pieces:

http://daily.greencine.com/archives/004379.html

If they HAD been playing the Germs in those West Village bars, I might've become a leatherboy.

Dr Morbius, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 19:26 (sixteen years ago) link

So they were seriously playing shit like the Village People in those bars?

Eric H., Wednesday, 5 September 2007 20:09 (sixteen years ago) link

annoyed I missed both this and Massacre at Central High at the Castro recently

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 20:11 (sixteen years ago) link

oh wait Cruising is NEXT week! hooray!

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 20:12 (sixteen years ago) link

Shakey, the NYC weeklong theater gig is 'digitally presented,' so you might wanna check w/the Castro and wait for the DVD (later this month?).

I dunno Eric, by the time I wandered that far down Christopher St I think the Anvil and Ramrod were gone.

Dr Morbius, Wednesday, 5 September 2007 20:16 (sixteen years ago) link

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z4nAkM-Qm-I&NR=1

gershy, Sunday, 9 September 2007 05:10 (sixteen years ago) link

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=noWm_IKq5oI&mode=related&search=

gershy, Sunday, 9 September 2007 05:11 (sixteen years ago) link

Does Cruising feature Mr. Tom Cruise?

Aimless, Sunday, 9 September 2007 15:56 (sixteen years ago) link

dvd release reviewed by slate
http://www.slate.com/id/2173734/

gershy, Wednesday, 12 September 2007 05:29 (sixteen years ago) link

Mark Harris demurs:

I'll grudgingly celebrate the movie's return to visibility, since it represents the flashpoint at which gay people learned to fight homophobic stereotypes in pop culture with everything in their arsenal — to be out, loud, proud, pissed-off, and media-savvy. If the film, now frozen in its historical moment, scarcely seems worth the anger it generated, that's only because we've come a long way, not because anybody judging the movie got it wrong the first time. The Cruising protesters were not anti-First Amendment fascists, nor were they (as some younger gay moviegoers might imagine) sex-phobic prudes who wanted to hush up anything that might make us look bad to straight folks. They were fighters — and some were also non-fighters who suddenly discovered the fighter within. Cruising's technical adviser Sonny Grosso claims, somewhat incredibly, that he had ''never seen…ferociousness'' like that expressed by the film's picketers (really? This from the NYPD detective on whose life The French Connection was based?) If that's true, bravo to the haters. Over the decade that followed, that ferocity ended up mattering far more than anything in Cruising. ''What you've done in New York,'' a Paramount executive told the late journalist Arthur Bell, who helped to spur the protests, ''is raise consciousness.'' That's worth commemorating, even if Cruising isn'

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Monday, 17 September 2007 18:42 (sixteen years ago) link

four months pass...

Bug has a pretty terrific Ashley Judd performance and a very solid first 40 minutes, staginess and all -- but when it goes from paranoia to arty-exploitation in the last 20, it lost me.

Great Friedkin interview on the DVD tho -- he talks about The Exorcist opening in a mere 26 theaters nationwide for a months-long engagement, and how he checked out each of them individually for projection and sound, and then phoned them each night to monitor quality control.

Dr Morbius, Friday, 25 January 2008 15:14 (sixteen years ago) link

Edelstein sez he heard snickering and booing at a critics group meeting (NSFC?) when he mentioned Ashley Judd.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Friday, 25 January 2008 15:29 (sixteen years ago) link

well, when she's required to become a scream queen at the end it melts away a lot of what she earned earlier (kinds like Day-Lewis in his bowling alley).

Dr Morbius, Friday, 25 January 2008 15:32 (sixteen years ago) link

I guess it speaks to something in my character that I had no problem with either film's ending.

Simon H., Friday, 25 January 2008 15:37 (sixteen years ago) link

Does Bug have any actual entomological features?

Abbott, Friday, 25 January 2008 17:15 (sixteen years ago) link

some in the film are convinced so

sexyDancer, Friday, 25 January 2008 17:38 (sixteen years ago) link

One of my work journals ran an article about the delusional bug-infestation disease.

Dr Morbius, Friday, 25 January 2008 17:39 (sixteen years ago) link

The stories/rumors of his behavior on the "Exorcist" shoot are crazy: Firing guns on the set, slapping actors immediately before takes, verbally abusing Linda Blair, etc.

Savannah Smiles, Friday, 25 January 2008 18:03 (sixteen years ago) link

he's generally a douche, but a smart one: his DVD commentaries are invariably better than the movies; and his utter lack of humor helps him.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Friday, 25 January 2008 18:05 (sixteen years ago) link

bug needed a glenallen hill cameo

omar little, Friday, 25 January 2008 18:10 (sixteen years ago) link

four months pass...

http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1199/896757272_f602ae9148.jpg

omar little, Monday, 16 June 2008 01:18 (fifteen years ago) link

four months pass...

I hold in my hand the imminent DVD of The Boys in the Band, campers.

Dr Morbius, Tuesday, 4 November 2008 21:36 (fifteen years ago) link

three months pass...

so Friedkin utterly redid the look of French Connection for the BluRay disc, and his DP Owen Roizman is pissed:

http://hollywood-elsewhere.com/2009/02/atrocioushorrif.php

Dr Morbius, Thursday, 26 February 2009 21:28 (fifteen years ago) link

Sounds awful.

Alex in SF, Thursday, 26 February 2009 21:40 (fifteen years ago) link

one year passes...

I didn't think twice about the Bluray transfer for French Connection when watching it recently. It's always looked like shit, and it still does.

Anyway, SORCERER IS THE SHIT.

Matt Armstrong, Friday, 30 July 2010 08:14 (thirteen years ago) link

SORCERER IS THE SHIT.

uh huh

a CRASBO is a "criminally related" ASBO (contenderizer), Friday, 30 July 2010 10:06 (thirteen years ago) link

L.A. Confidential endorses the police vigilantism, I'd say.

the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 9 August 2023 18:30 (eight months ago) link

L.A. Confidential endorses the police vigilantism, I'd say.

James Ellroy is a fascist.

but also fuck you (unperson), Wednesday, 9 August 2023 18:32 (eight months ago) link

xxp (Forgot to add that in later years, Friedkin no longer believed in Crump's innocence, so yes, pretty wild how much he changed.)

xp Re: L.A. Confidential, it never felt like an endorsement to me, but one reason I grew to like it less was that it seemed like cynical defeatism to me. (Referring to Hanson's film and his interpretation of Ellroy's work.)

birdistheword, Wednesday, 9 August 2023 18:34 (eight months ago) link

FWIW, Ellroy absolutely hated Hanson's film but wasn't forthcoming until after he died.

birdistheword, Wednesday, 9 August 2023 18:35 (eight months ago) link

Re: L.A. Confidential, it never felt like an endorsement to me, but one reason I grew to like it less was that it seemed like cynical defeatism to me.

I don't wanna derail the thread, but I'm glad you mentioned this scene. I've been meaning to watch L.A. Confidential again, in part to see if my impressions were correct. Unless my memory's wrong, Exley and Bud White don't reckon with any moral qualms about dangling the Evil Gay D.A. out the windows: the camera framing and the editing whip the audience up; we're on their side. Then the film moves along to the next plot point.

the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 9 August 2023 18:44 (eight months ago) link

It's one of the sad things about the movie to me, at least how that moment was digested in pop culture - it genuinely reflects how much American culture values revenge.

I don't want to push back against this too much because I do agree copaganda has a real effect on ppl's opinions, but at the same time as someone who consumes a lot of Italian and Hong Kong action cinema I'm pretty confident in saying revenge is appreciated by audiences around the world, as is violence in general. Depending on time period and geographical area, I imagine the audiences would have cheered equally loud if the same exact scenario had played out amongst cowboys or post apocalyptic road gangs or, perhaps most tellingly, criminals. Likewise I wonder how much of that advisor's objection was genuine moral disgust and how much was "this makes the cops look bad". Anyway I've heard quite a few defenses of French Connection as a film that shows cops being the violent, racist pieces of shit they are - but I guess it's still up to the viewer whether that then registers as "yeah this seems bad" or "hell yeah it's great they are like that" and Friedkin may have believed the latter.

Daniel_Rf, Wednesday, 9 August 2023 19:08 (eight months ago) link

No worries, and apologies for the multiple posts, various distractions keep popping up and that ended up breaking up my response into these very brief posts I'd have to spit out really fast.

I was actually talking about a different scene - when Exley shoots Smith in the back. Looking this up, in their first scene together, Smith asks him: "Would you be willing to plant corroborative evidence on a suspect you knew to be guilty, in order to ensure an indictment?" "Would you be willing to beat a confession out of a suspect you knew to be guilty?" "Would you be willing to shoot a hardened criminal in the back, in order to offset the chance that some... lawyer..." etc. Of course Exley's responses to all of these is "no" and then schematically, Exley betrays all of these principles one by one. Shooting Smith in the back was like the final betrayal of these principles, and the tragic implications seemed to be clear. Even if one justified it because it was how they took down Smith's cartel, one would have to ignore how they successfully framed the African-American characters for a previous massacre by using the same tactics of planting evidence, physical interrogation, and killing a suspect. (Exley is guilty of that, much to his horror, earning the nickname "Shotgun Eddie.") It suggests a thoroughly corrupt system that's unavoidable and inescapable, and it feels apiece to the future that's off-screen: it can only lead to the LAPD detailed in OJ: Made in America. I've got mixed feelings about how much merit the film has for putting that across, and Alfred raises an excellent point too - IIRC being gay in the film (and I imagine the novel too) isn't defined as anything but aberrant and shameful.

birdistheword, Wednesday, 9 August 2023 19:13 (eight months ago) link

dangling the evil gay DA out the window was a cousin to Longshanks throwing his son's gay lover out the window in Braveheart. i don't remember the novel well enough to know this for sure, but i'm pretty sure the DA wasn't gay in the novel, nor did Dudley Smith die. the novel is less streamlined noir and more an overheated ambitious Ellroy narrative; he was moving towards his Underworld USA trilogy style fast.

related: TLADILA is almost comically homoerotic in parts, and with zero gay panic. the two main dudes are vv comfortable w/teasing each other.

omar little, Wednesday, 9 August 2023 22:07 (eight months ago) link

James Ellroy is full of shit and will say anything to get ink in the press. He knew he couldn’t have written a script as good as Helgeland & Hanson’s. Also, he hasn’t written anything of note in at least 20 years

beamish13, Wednesday, 9 August 2023 22:10 (eight months ago) link

i'll give him 14 years, Blood's a Rover was vv good. i don't know about his books since, but their cultural impact has been zero.

omar little, Wednesday, 9 August 2023 22:13 (eight months ago) link

Watched To Live and Die on YT yesterday. Really great, and just has a slight edge on French Connection.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 10 August 2023 10:08 (eight months ago) link

"you're working for me now" - cut to credits with Wait playing over the magic hour freeway driving footage - is my favourite ending to any film ever, I have to watch the credits all the way through every time

or something, Thursday, 10 August 2023 12:12 (eight months ago) link

Blood’s a Rover? The novel-length version of A Boy and his Dog? #onethread

Tommy Gets His Consoles Out (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 10 August 2023 12:54 (eight months ago) link

I felt sure that there was a Robin Wood review of To Live and Die where he talked about it being a progressive critique of capitalism - money as a fake object etc - but I couldn't find it on a google hunt just now. Wood does offer a tentatively positive review (from a gay liberation perspective) of Cruising in his 'The incoherent text' essay, where he concludes:

Cruising, shot in 1979, already seemed an anachronism when it was released in 1980: in the midst of the parade of demoralising 'moral' reactionary movies heralded in the late 70s by Rocky and Star Wars, it sticks out like a sore thumb.

Ward Fowler, Thursday, 10 August 2023 13:34 (eight months ago) link

I took a film class at Brown called “Forgery and Simulation” and To Live And Die was on the curriculum, along with Body Heat, F is for Fake, and Badlands

Tracer Hand, Thursday, 10 August 2023 13:56 (eight months ago) link

Sounds good. Am also reminded of Noel Burch's essay 'Notes on Fritz Lang's First Mabuse', where among other things he notes that "Mabuse uses real bank-notes for writing paper, and counterfeit notes for money."

Ward Fowler, Thursday, 10 August 2023 15:07 (eight months ago) link

Friedkin used to tell the story — it might be on the TLADILA commentary track — about Treasury agents coming to him and asking that some shots be taken out of the counterfeiting montage, and others be re-sequenced, because he'd basically shown people how to counterfeit money. Probably bullshit, but who knows?

but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 10 August 2023 15:18 (eight months ago) link

"I felt sure that there was a Robin Wood review of To Live and Die where he talked about it being a progressive critique of capitalism - money as a fake object etc - but I couldn't find it on a google hunt just now."

As one of the characters points out he has no idea why he is selling his skills, when those skills are to make cash.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 10 August 2023 15:41 (eight months ago) link

xpost

"William Friedkin, in his memoir "The Friedkin Connection," says that the fake money they made was so good that, after some of it left the set, he eventually heard from the Secret Service and a US Attorney. After he avoided a confrontation with them, Friedkin states, "When the film came out, there were news stories about people trying to make counterfeit money after seeing the step-by-step process in our film. I took some of the twenties, those printed on both sides of course, put them in my wallet, and spent them, in restaurants, shoe-shine parlors, and elsewhere. The money was that good."

Number None, Friday, 11 August 2023 15:38 (eight months ago) link

The news prompted me to finally watch Sorcerer last night, what a blast.

a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Saturday, 12 August 2023 12:43 (eight months ago) link

Yeah. It's too bad there's no oral history of it. This is a serviceable piece on how they did the bridge scene though. https://filmschoolrejects.com/how-they-shot-the-bridge-scene-in-sorcerer/

Tracer Hand, Saturday, 12 August 2023 12:59 (eight months ago) link

Seeing "Sorcerer" in a theater (2014, after its digital restoration) is one of my favorite movie-going experiences - that bridge scene is SO tense, lots of people were audibly freaking out (but aware of the nervous humor in such an over-the-top tense situation)...I love that I got to share that feeling with a theater full of strangers.

I later made a friend because of "Sorcerer" - I was checking out at a record store, and the cashier was commenting on a Tangerine Dream album I was getting, mentioning how they also did the "Sorcerer" soundtrack. And I was like, "I love that Friedkin movie" - then we chatted about "The Wages of Fear" - ah, two music/film nerds, nerding it out...

ernestp, Saturday, 12 August 2023 15:03 (eight months ago) link

...and thanks for that article about the bridge scene! Holy crap!

ernestp, Saturday, 12 August 2023 15:09 (eight months ago) link

https://www.theguardian.com/film/2023/aug/13/my-friend-billy-mark-kermode-remembers-exorcist-director-william-friedkin

Can't say I like Kermode much but this is a pretty nice tribute.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 13 August 2023 22:47 (eight months ago) link

one month passes...

Reading the Devil’s Advocates monograph on Cruising and it’s quite good, as (obv) is the film itself

50 Best Fellas (Eric H.), Sunday, 17 September 2023 20:17 (seven months ago) link

Just looked it up--would definitely read that, although Amazon copies are a little pricey.

clemenza, Sunday, 17 September 2023 20:45 (seven months ago) link

I managed to snag it when the price dropped significantly a few weeks back. But yeah, the books in that series are way spendy (but often great)

50 Best Fellas (Eric H.), Sunday, 17 September 2023 21:06 (seven months ago) link

I always forget Touch of Evil's Valentin de Vargas plays the judge in TL&DILA.

hat trick of trashiness (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 17 September 2023 22:44 (seven months ago) link

I saw Sorcerer last week, and yeah, the bridge scene is incredible. Going to a Cruising screening tonight.

jmm, Monday, 18 September 2023 15:52 (seven months ago) link

Just saw TL&DILA for the first time this weekend. What a wicked, lurid, amoral movie. After 1994, these kind of movies seemed to have ceased to exist as they all became Tarantino-ed.

il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Monday, 18 September 2023 16:15 (seven months ago) link

Good point, you might be right.

xyzzzz__, Monday, 18 September 2023 16:51 (seven months ago) link

Yeah you know that is a good point, everything after a certain era got really jokey and a bit more gleefully, winkingly amoral rather than simply matter of fact. These guys aren't reveling in their respective schemes, Peterson is this pathologically overconfident psycho and Dafoe is all business (tho he's extremely sexualized obv), and there's nothing spelled out and no audience handholding. I'm trying to think of a movie from the last 20 years that tries to mine similar territory, and I can't really think of it. A cop thriller where it's not even that the leads are antiheroes, and you side with them because they get the job done, they're presented fully as the good guys (maybe Dirty Harry types to the extent that they're on the edge) and you wind up realizing they are the true villains and destructive forces.

omar little, Monday, 18 September 2023 17:01 (seven months ago) link

Keeping in mind that I really like Tarantino a lot, but he's one of those who is virtually impossible to successfully emulate and so he's the only one who's truly good at that specific thing he does. And his influence resulted in almost exclusively trash.

omar little, Monday, 18 September 2023 17:03 (seven months ago) link

Abel Ferrara has a similar vibe to TL&DILA, but he obviously predates Tarantino. Trying to think of something else post 1994.

il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Monday, 18 September 2023 17:05 (seven months ago) link

End of Watch had it both ways: All Cops Are Good and They Are Also The Biggest Street Gang In LA

an icon of a worried-looking, long-haired, bespectacled man (C. Grisso/McCain), Monday, 18 September 2023 17:09 (seven months ago) link

Listening to Siskel & Ebert episodes from the early '90s, I was shocked to think that this was my world for a long time: choosing from forgettable thrillers and shit SNL comedies. Stuff like Malice and Guarding Tess hit #1 at the box office.

hat trick of trashiness (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 18 September 2023 17:11 (seven months ago) link

Also one year before Tarantino: Mike Figgis' Internal Affairs.

clemenza, Monday, 18 September 2023 17:14 (seven months ago) link

Disclosure, With Honors, On Deadly Ground, The Specialist

omar little, Monday, 18 September 2023 17:15 (seven months ago) link

There's a Friedkin program going on here at the Waterloo rep: The Exorcist/French Connection/Sorcerer. Hour-long drive, not sure if I'll rouse myself for anything.

clemenza, Monday, 18 September 2023 17:16 (seven months ago) link

All those Joe Eszterhas things.

hat trick of trashiness (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 18 September 2023 17:17 (seven months ago) link

Maybe I'm misremembering how the storyline goes, but I recall Q&A maybe having some very very superficial similarities with TLADILA. Just in terms of the nolte character, and how his storyline plays out. I forget if he was quite obviously a villain at the very start.

omar little, Monday, 18 September 2023 17:17 (seven months ago) link

I took a date to see a preview screening of Jade. That one didn't go as well as I hoped.

omar little, Monday, 18 September 2023 17:18 (seven months ago) link

xp - my favorite tidbit about With Honors was where they had to dress up the University of Illinois campus to look like Harvard:

The exterior of Winthrop House appears, but the interiors pictured are not that of actual Harvard houses, and the last scene of the movie was shot at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The buildings and surroundings were dressed up to look as if it were Harvard and many of the people in the final scene are Illinois students. The graduation scene was shot while the local climate in Illinois had not allowed for the trees to bloom leaves and so artificial branches and leaves were stapled on.

Maxmillion D. Boosted (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Monday, 18 September 2023 17:18 (seven months ago) link

I think Q&A--which didn't hold up all that well last time I saw it; some of it is really heavy-handed--is closer to Internal Affairs, with the Gere/Nolte characters very similar.

clemenza, Monday, 18 September 2023 17:20 (seven months ago) link

Yeah obv TLADILA is more of an action film, which maybe makes the story arc even more startling to an extent.

I think the Johnnie To film Drug War shares its cynicism and bleakness and brutality, and the ostensible hero being a destructive force is there too. But it's not the same type of movie at all, it's more an indictment of the system and the drug war.

omar little, Monday, 18 September 2023 17:28 (seven months ago) link

Watched The Exorcist for the first time this weekend. It was quite an achievement from a technical standpoint but I didn't find it scary at all; I guess I'm 100% not a Catholic anymore. (The scene where the doctors tell Ellen Burstyn that Catholics still believe in exorcism, like they're trying to keep from laughing in her face, was pretty amazing.)

read-only (unperson), Monday, 18 September 2023 17:31 (seven months ago) link

think sicario attempts some level of the amoral ambiguity of TLADILA?

close encounters of the third knid (darraghmac), Monday, 18 September 2023 18:12 (seven months ago) link

There's a Friedkin program going on here at the Waterloo rep: The Exorcist/French Connection/Sorcerer. Hour-long drive, not sure if I'll rouse myself for anything.

― clemenza, Monday, 18 September 2023 17:16 (fifty-six minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink

id drive an hour and back for any one of them on the big screen tbh

close encounters of the third knid (darraghmac), Monday, 18 September 2023 18:15 (seven months ago) link

My local theatre's doing Sorcerer, Cruising, TL&D, Killer Joe, The Guardian, and The Exorcist - I'm hoping to go to them all.

jmm, Monday, 18 September 2023 18:17 (seven months ago) link

They also showed The Wages of Fear the same week as Sorcerer, which... cool idea, but I couldn't fathom wanting to watch that story again so soon.

jmm, Monday, 18 September 2023 18:23 (seven months ago) link


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