originally posted by Hoke:
For Spartacus, I believe Kubrick was more of a salvage expert than a director
Let's not start this one again.
originally posted by Hoke:
For Spartacus, I believe Kubrick was more of a salvage expert than a director
originally posted by Joe Perry:
originally posted by Hoke:
For Spartacus, I believe Kubrick was more of a salvage expert than a director
Let's not start this one again.
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Scott Kraft:
I thought Kindahwas Boston for kinder.
It's NE Yiddish for kids.
Mark Lipton
My, I feel as if I've been lectured to by McCain, with three condescending first name addresses.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
My, I feel as if I've been lectured to by McCain, with three condescending first name addresses. No I don't accept the definition of a director as the one who initiates a vision since, if I did, I'd have to rule out most of the studio directors of the 20th century, among whom, Ford, Hitchcock and Hawks, who adjusted scripts but didn't write them.
In the case of Spartacus, you have as a source a florid, left wing Howard Fast novel, with a lead actor for whom overacting is breathing and florid is far too restrained a word. And you have before you a movie that relentlessly knows how it will end, with far more meticulous pacing than say Ben Hur, and doesn't give an inch, with a performance from Douglas that has a minimum of cleft twitching and some moments of interesting reserve. If that's merely salvage work, I'll take it any time. I don't know what was by Mann, what was by Trumbo and what was by Fast, because I'm just a mere aesthete, but I know that Spartacus doesn't look like other movies made from Fast novels, or other movies made by Mann and certainly doesn't look like Lonely are the Brave, to choose a Kirk Douglas movie that people unaccountably take seriously.
originally posted by Joe Dressner:
Heck, Hoke, this reads like one of your wine arguments.
Can't you take it down a notch.
Dang!
originally posted by Chris Coad:
My, I feel as if I've been lectured to by McCain, with three condescending first name addresses.
Interesting that you should mention this, as I was just talking with Lisa about how last night Obama was all "John" this and "John" that, but McCain didn't once use Barry's name, despite the drama coach's repeated efforts to get them to talk directly to one another. Not sure of the tactic there, but it stood out, at least to me.
originally posted by Joe Dressner:
Heck, Hoke, this reads like one of your wine arguments.
Can't you take it down a notch.
Dang!
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
IAnd in both of them, one can see Barry Lyndon, a movie that I am in the minority in thinking of as one of his best achievements.
originally posted by Levi Dalton:
I'm pretty sure Coad told me recently that he is a big Eyes Wide Shut fan.
But maybe I have that wrong.