At
The Cinema
In this story of young love set in 1950s
Belgrade,
four young boys -- Pop, Sasa, Glenn and Kicha -- share the same
interests: big band music, rowing, American cigarettes and a sweet girl
named Mirjana, who serves as their rowing team's captain. Years later,
after their lives take a different turn, they convene again only to
discover that one of them is the father of Mirjana's daughter. Jovan
Acin writes and directs. |
A rare movie, made in Yugoslavia. In 1953, Tito had
just broken with Stalin and installed
his own brand of Communism. Anyone who had not supported Tito was
a reactionary, and treated accordingly. Physicians were forbidden
a private practice, and the state's agents could confiscate property at
will. You know the drill. We're about to experience it
ourselves.
One of the characters, the "villain" in fact, is an ambitious party
worker now plagued by tattoos of
the now verboten Stalin on each arm. His apolitical comrades,
who
despise him, take to calling him "Joe," which activates his "bully"
button.
The ingénue, Mirjana, drives the movie. Thanks to today's
greatest video of all time, its easy to describe her charm. She is Michelle
Jenneke.
I really liked this movie. (English subtitled)
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(L'apollonide: Souvenirs de la
Maison Close)
Director Bertrand Bonello makes life in an upscale Parisian bordello at
the beginning of the 20th century the focus of this drama, which
revolves around the working girls who ply their trade there, including
one who's been disfigured by a client.
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Yes,
there are at least 5 minutes of this 125 minutes film where nobody is
naked, but that's not a reason to like or dislike it. I'll describe it as where The Unforgiven meet Toulouse-Lautrec, the French artist
who loved Paris's prostitutes, and used them as subjects for many of
his paintings.
What I found fascinating was the intimate look at the life of a
bordello prostitute at the turn of the 20th century. You have to
like
all the girls, but the customers
are a weird lot. I did like it, though. And despite all the
naked flesh, I didn't find it at all, er,
stimulating. In fact, the "laughing girl's"
travail (the Unforgiven
reference) took care of that instinct early on. (English
subtitled) |
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In his fact-based drama, Iraqi lieutenant
Yahia is
forcibly drafted into being a body double for Uday Hussein, Saddam
Hussein's depraved elder son.
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This
was the most riveting of the three. The first thing I did
afterward was check pictures of Uday's corpse to make sure the sumbitch
was
really dead. A true story of Saddam and his psychopathic
sons. Thank you President George W Bush.
Riveting.
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I was not prepared for Devils' Double. I avoid R movies but watched it upon recommendation. The Birthday scene was a bit much, However, for all the stuff we broke in Iraq, it was worth it to get rid of this family.
ReplyDeletethoR~
Rid of Saddam? He was our useful idiot out there!
ReplyDeleteIraqis are a whole nation of Saddams!
Now the shit muslims are unleashed...
the shrubs whacked Hussein just to please the Saudis...
now them Saudi monkeys wish Saddam was still there
so they would not have to blow up hundreds of people every day...
Was it Sun Tzu or his grandson Sun Bin that said:
"Never interfere when your enemies are destroying each others"...
I quite enjoyed the video of the hurdles. The young lady was as joyful and pretty and dancing and jumping and and where are my blood pressure pills and nitro??
ReplyDeleteBuzz D.
I miss the '80s when Iran and Iraq were going at it for eight years. We should have armed both sides...
ReplyDeletewe did
ReplyDelete