The true killer in Skinamarink is the abject boredom. It's another movie that would have been a decent 10 or 15 minute short film turned into a feature.
+2
Raijin QuickfootI'm your Huckleberry YOU'RE NO DAISYRegistered User, ClubPAregular
The true killer in Skinamarink is the abject boredom. It's another movie that would have been a decent 10 or 15 minute short film turned into a feature.
You shut yer yap!!
Actually that may be 100% accurate. I haven’t seen it yet.
Skinamarink comes to Shudder next month and I really hope more people here watch it. Among the more divisive, difficult (in terms of experimental, not in terms of extreme, content) watches; happy to see it succeeding so far
As already mentioned this is next week. Gonna just repeat all of this and add the trailer and a complimentary tweet for both it and another thing I loved, The Outwaters (which comes to theaters Feb 9)
The Razzies have updated their eligibility rules. You now have to be 18 to be nominated for a razzie.
Still feels like a dumb relic of the 90s
More media comes out in a given year than one could possibly hope to keep abreast of, it's so dorky to get all hung up on hating a misfire. Just skip those two hours and go watch literally anything else, it's never been easier to avoid bad media
The dog should be wearing a Big Johnson shirt with a pun about fishing
I knew a guy in high school whose entire personality was Big Johnson shirts. Whenever he’d get a new one he’d strut into class and loudly point out “Got a new one, check it out” with the exact same energy as the Christmas Story dad and his leg lamp.
We never had the Big Johnson shirts but we did have Trippin' Waldo, which was like him doing drugs or being drunk in a scene of people.
So i tried googling it and i stumbled across this beauty.
The Razzies have updated their eligibility rules. You now have to be 18 to be nominated for a razzie.
Still feels like a dumb relic of the 90s
More media comes out in a given year than one could possibly hope to keep abreast of, it's so dorky to get all hung up on hating a misfire. Just skip those two hours and go watch literally anything else, it's never been easier to avoid bad media
It absolutely seems like a close cousin to the “there’s no good music anymore” sentiment. In both cases, bitching about how every piece of media that comes out now “sucks” just tells me you don’t really put any effort into paying attention. It’s not a condemnation of modern media, it’s an embarrassing admission.
Everything looks beautiful when you're young and pretty
+26
Raijin QuickfootI'm your Huckleberry YOU'RE NO DAISYRegistered User, ClubPAregular
They’re just mean. It used to be a lot more fun to be mean sometimes.
Now though…the world sucks enough without people being mean to each other that shouldn’t be.
I believe it was that intrepid hip hop group, The Black Eyed Peas, who asked the question….where is the love?
I know for a fact that Skinamarink is gonna fuck my shit up and I absolutely cannot wait.
+2
Zonugal(He/Him) The Holiday ArmadilloI'm Santa's representative for all the southern states. And Mexico!Registered Userregular
edited January 26
As my students in WA State History had finished up with their final on Tuesday, I used yesterday & today to show them Dante's Peak.
Having not seen that movie in the past two decades I'm happy to report: it rules!
A truly bonkers disaster movie!!
Zonugal on
+10
Bloods EndBlade of TyshallePunch dimensionRegistered Userregular
The razzies meant more in an era where every other youtube channel wasn't some variation of "why this movie is a war crime and here is a 3xs long video essay about it"
And they didn't mean much then!
The Razzies could be interesting if there was editorial intent behind the choices that they used to lampoon things, but as far as I'm aware anyone can buy their way into voting and it just ends up being dingleberries using that to hammer on their pet peeves. Like if Something Awful made movie awards and people cared for some stupid reason.
my personal Razzie goes to any movie that sets the action is a ridiculously expensive mansion instead of just a normal house or apartment for no reason
like 90% of current slasher movie do this; these kids' parents make multi millions of dollars a year
The Razzies have updated their eligibility rules. You now have to be 18 to be nominated for a razzie.
Still feels like a dumb relic of the 90s
More media comes out in a given year than one could possibly hope to keep abreast of, it's so dorky to get all hung up on hating a misfire. Just skip those two hours and go watch literally anything else, it's never been easier to avoid bad media
Wait, you're supposed to avoid bad media? Oh man, I've got a bunch of people to apologize to on Discord.
I'm trying to figure out why the Menu is sort of my breaking point for "wow, movies hate rich people now" and I think it's that the thing it's making fun of is something that only rich people give a shit about.
For what it's worth, I thought Everything Everywhere was very good but similarly not real life changing
That said, I understand that there are pretty specific cultural elements there that elevate the movie a great deal for a lot of people in a way that I have no personal context for, so on some level maybe it was a foregone conclusion that it would not hit as hard for me personally
Anyway, this is the first time I've seen Ke Huy Quan since the friggin Goonies, and he was probably the standout of the movie for me.
I mean, it's the only time you would have seen him. He specifically has been not acting for three decades.
But anyway, I don't really think that EEAAO needs you to have a cultural stake in the movie to work on a fundamental level. I'm basically at the opposite end of the "lived" experiences of this movie. White/Male/Straight/Computer based home job. I think the strength of the movie is how, due in part to its maximalist nature, it completely absorbs you and creates an overwhelming sense of connection. I guess I am a parent? But idk, this movie hit my soul and it's not like I have the cultural background to resonate in most of its main, on the surface, touchstones, but i was openly weeping at the end.
Which is what good art should do, it should grab you by the shoulders and shake you around, even if you previously didn't have a connection to the subject.
I haven't revisited it yet, but my current impression of Everything Everywhere All at Once is *consistent with my first one.
I went in knowing the basic premise, but made an effort because I've always enjoyed seeing Michelle Yeoh onscreen. The movie seemed like it would be neat, but my main driver was enjoying her past work, and it piqued my curiosity that she seemed so moved in interviews.
So here's where I mull over more of how and why I responded.
Everything Everywhere All at Once didn't impact me as hard because of my connections to it, cultural and personal.
I have some family-sense of Asian cultures because my dad was stationed overseas and brought back a fondness, & curiosity in all things is a shared familial trait.
For a long time, I assumed it was a default military family thing to seek pluralistic culture, and to have a mix of ethnicities as friends. I've since met some very insular folk, and segregated spaces, which always seems a wasted opportunity -- nationalism is a poison, what can ya do. I'd still say the military affords opportunity abroad to folk more likely to respect and enjoy different cultures, but this is not the time for my nuanced take on the military industrial complex, socioeconomics, and patriotic culture.
So let's put it down to my parents being kind people, Dad being Indian (feathers), and needing to find connection as perpetual minorities, in combination with the pleasure of discovery and making new friends.
All that is to say, we are multicultural by habit & seek variety as our 'normal' -- my friends have always been from varying backgrounds. And so foodways and small traditions and phrases of several cultures are part of my family culture despite belonging to several kinds of outgroups.
I mix & belong but I am not of.
As a result, I have some touchstones in 'panAsian' cultures, and while I understand the shorthand when deployed, I didn't grow up with Asian parents or the referenced assumptions those kids share. So I can relate to the girlfriend, as someone who is more familiar with the edges of those specific cultural expectations and mostly not subject to them. It's a generalized experience when rubbing up against other cultures. Like her, it impacts me largely by way of people I care about; it's informative, but it's secondhand, or at least not mine to the same scope or range.
It's been months since I've seen it, so I can't reference anything directly, but I was a film major, and a fan of Asian cinema. There's a lot of homage within the creativity, which is fun and pleasing. But for me, they're Easter eggs rather than feeling seen. By contrast, "Reservation Dogs" has those moments -- so I get it, but I also know that EEAAO is not for me in all its nods. (While also being 'for' everyone, because the appeal is still universal on a number of other layers.)
In its emotional journey, the plot follows deeply familiar traces.
I don't know when depression became part of my life, but I have long thought of myself as an optimistic person. For a time as a young adult, I lost that to major depression, and even after being in remission for years, still struggle to bring that inner self to my conscious thoughts and act on those impulses.
So, the execution on character arcs are meaningful to me, but after years of work to reclaim myself, I am in a good enough place that it was not a revelation.
+2
3cl1ps3I will build a labyrinth to house the cheeseRegistered Userregular
I'm trying to figure out why the Menu is sort of my breaking point for "wow, movies hate rich people now" and I think it's that the thing it's making fun of is something that only rich people give a shit about.
Well, also,
the movie explicitly says "service workers are important and treated poorly, rich consumers are unimportant shit weasels actively making the world a worse place" like, in as many words, via dialogue.
+8
Andy JoeWe claim the land for the highlord!The AdirondacksRegistered Userregular
Regal Theaters is showing the Best Picture nominees, so I'm going to see The Fabelmans on Sunday.
I'm trying to figure out why the Menu is sort of my breaking point for "wow, movies hate rich people now" and I think it's that the thing it's making fun of is something that only rich people give a shit about.
Well, also,
the movie explicitly says "service workers are important and treated poorly, rich consumers are unimportant shit weasels actively making the world a worse place" like, in as many words, via dialogue.
There are a lot of people who are also insufferable about eating at restaurants that are not rich.
Not at the level of the movie but I think it's pretty recognizable.
The Razzies have updated their eligibility rules. You now have to be 18 to be nominated for a razzie.
Still feels like a dumb relic of the 90s
More media comes out in a given year than one could possibly hope to keep abreast of, it's so dorky to get all hung up on hating a misfire. Just skip those two hours and go watch literally anything else, it's never been easier to avoid bad media
Wait, you're supposed to avoid bad media? Oh man, I've got a bunch of people to apologize to on Discord.
Apologize all you want, you'll find no forgiveness there or here.
I'm trying to figure out why the Menu is sort of my breaking point for "wow, movies hate rich people now" and I think it's that the thing it's making fun of is something that only rich people give a shit about.
Well, also,
the movie explicitly says "service workers are important and treated poorly, rich consumers are unimportant shit weasels actively making the world a worse place" like, in as many words, via dialogue.
There are a lot of people who are also insufferable about eating at restaurants that are not rich.
Not at the level of the movie but I think it's pretty recognizable.
I don't want to go on and on about this because, for one, I don't really think people have to experience something to get value out of a movie making a point about it, but I do feel like the screenwriter went and had a weird experience, and then after he wrote his screenplay someone came in and said, "hey, sprinkle in some stuff about how rich people are assholes, that's really hot right now." It's not a universal thing but I do feel like we're getting a lot more "I don't really know how to write about poor/middle class people because the way the industry works right now is that the only people who get real jobs in entertainment anymore are nepotism hires and people who can afford to take unpaid internships so they have to write about rich people stuff and the only way to get that through is to mention that, actually, rich people are bad? and also throw a poor person in there, but we'll just throw a couple lines of dialogue about how they're foster kids or something"
Volcano is one of those movies I'll just find myself watching again and again.
It's so good!
I am in the business of saving lives.
+1
StraightziHere we may reign secure, and in my choice,To reign is worth ambition though in HellRegistered Userregular
I guess I just don't think fine dining is something that only rich people care about?
I dunno, I know plenty of people who know about these sorts of restaurants without like, going to them. There's a whole celebrity chef culture out there, it's like, the whole premise of modern Food Network.
And like, the movie is talking about that stuff too, all of that is a vital part of the premise.
Posts
https://www.amazon.com/gp/registry/wishlist/1JI9WWSRW1YJI
holy hannah
You shut yer yap!!
Actually that may be 100% accurate. I haven’t seen it yet.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/registry/wishlist/1JI9WWSRW1YJI
https://www.amazon.com/gp/registry/wishlist/1JI9WWSRW1YJI
https://www.amazon.com/gp/registry/wishlist/1JI9WWSRW1YJI
As already mentioned this is next week. Gonna just repeat all of this and add the trailer and a complimentary tweet for both it and another thing I loved, The Outwaters (which comes to theaters Feb 9)
Steam
Still feels like a dumb relic of the 90s
More media comes out in a given year than one could possibly hope to keep abreast of, it's so dorky to get all hung up on hating a misfire. Just skip those two hours and go watch literally anything else, it's never been easier to avoid bad media
We never had the Big Johnson shirts but we did have Trippin' Waldo, which was like him doing drugs or being drunk in a scene of people.
So i tried googling it and i stumbled across this beauty.
Giving a Worst Actor Razzie to George W Bush or Trump is like... Absolute peak ineffectual liberal masturbation
She’s just a kid so they got a lot of flak for it so that’s why they instituted the new policy.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/registry/wishlist/1JI9WWSRW1YJI
https://www.amazon.com/gp/registry/wishlist/1JI9WWSRW1YJI
Steam
It absolutely seems like a close cousin to the “there’s no good music anymore” sentiment. In both cases, bitching about how every piece of media that comes out now “sucks” just tells me you don’t really put any effort into paying attention. It’s not a condemnation of modern media, it’s an embarrassing admission.
Now though…the world sucks enough without people being mean to each other that shouldn’t be.
I believe it was that intrepid hip hop group, The Black Eyed Peas, who asked the question….where is the love?
https://www.amazon.com/gp/registry/wishlist/1JI9WWSRW1YJI
Having not seen that movie in the past two decades I'm happy to report: it rules!
A truly bonkers disaster movie!!
And they didn't mean much then!
i never saw dante's peak, only ever saw the other volcano disaster movie that came out at the same time, appropriately titled volcano
like 90% of current slasher movie do this; these kids' parents make multi millions of dollars a year
Wait, you're supposed to avoid bad media? Oh man, I've got a bunch of people to apologize to on Discord.
I went in knowing the basic premise, but made an effort because I've always enjoyed seeing Michelle Yeoh onscreen. The movie seemed like it would be neat, but my main driver was enjoying her past work, and it piqued my curiosity that she seemed so moved in interviews.
So here's where I mull over more of how and why I responded.
Everything Everywhere All at Once didn't impact me as hard because of my connections to it, cultural and personal.
So let's put it down to my parents being kind people, Dad being Indian (feathers), and needing to find connection as perpetual minorities, in combination with the pleasure of discovery and making new friends.
I mix & belong but I am not of.
As a result, I have some touchstones in 'panAsian' cultures, and while I understand the shorthand when deployed, I didn't grow up with Asian parents or the referenced assumptions those kids share. So I can relate to the girlfriend, as someone who is more familiar with the edges of those specific cultural expectations and mostly not subject to them. It's a generalized experience when rubbing up against other cultures. Like her, it impacts me largely by way of people I care about; it's informative, but it's secondhand, or at least not mine to the same scope or range.
It's been months since I've seen it, so I can't reference anything directly, but I was a film major, and a fan of Asian cinema. There's a lot of homage within the creativity, which is fun and pleasing. But for me, they're Easter eggs rather than feeling seen. By contrast, "Reservation Dogs" has those moments -- so I get it, but I also know that EEAAO is not for me in all its nods. (While also being 'for' everyone, because the appeal is still universal on a number of other layers.)
In its emotional journey, the plot follows deeply familiar traces.
I don't know when depression became part of my life, but I have long thought of myself as an optimistic person. For a time as a young adult, I lost that to major depression, and even after being in remission for years, still struggle to bring that inner self to my conscious thoughts and act on those impulses.
So, the execution on character arcs are meaningful to me, but after years of work to reclaim myself, I am in a good enough place that it was not a revelation.
Well, also,
There are a lot of people who are also insufferable about eating at restaurants that are not rich.
Not at the level of the movie but I think it's pretty recognizable.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/registry/wishlist/1JI9WWSRW1YJI
Apologize all you want, you'll find no forgiveness there or here.
I don't want to go on and on about this because, for one, I don't really think people have to experience something to get value out of a movie making a point about it, but I do feel like the screenwriter went and had a weird experience, and then after he wrote his screenplay someone came in and said, "hey, sprinkle in some stuff about how rich people are assholes, that's really hot right now." It's not a universal thing but I do feel like we're getting a lot more "I don't really know how to write about poor/middle class people because the way the industry works right now is that the only people who get real jobs in entertainment anymore are nepotism hires and people who can afford to take unpaid internships so they have to write about rich people stuff and the only way to get that through is to mention that, actually, rich people are bad? and also throw a poor person in there, but we'll just throw a couple lines of dialogue about how they're foster kids or something"
It's so good!
I dunno, I know plenty of people who know about these sorts of restaurants without like, going to them. There's a whole celebrity chef culture out there, it's like, the whole premise of modern Food Network.
And like, the movie is talking about that stuff too, all of that is a vital part of the premise.
Well @asofyeun, if you have access to Hulu, you should make yourself a bowl a popcorn and watch Dante's Peak because it is grade-A dumb fun.
Yes, that's exactly what I'm talking about
Like, I know Alinea chefs have competed on Chopped, and Alinea ain't far off from the restaurant from The Menu