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message 1:
by
Meg
(new)
Oct 27, 2008 06:25AM

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david cronenberg
akira kurosawa
alfred hitchcock
all of these directors have made quite a few films, so there would be lots to chose from, giving people a wide range of subjects.


sad kurosawa wasn't in the poll....
december would be a great month for ozu or kurosawa.
so far it's looking like hitchcock is in the lead...that doesn't depress me at all.

I saw The Birds when I was very very young, too young to see it, and was terrified of birds for years.

At first I thought Hitchcock, I have seen everything. But, I never had real discussions about him so that could be fun. He was such a master. Then I thought, I hope a lot of people in the discussion will be from people not from the USA because that will change our discussion and perceptions. I seem to be getting on threads about nonAmerican directors. I am pretty much not into our American films as of late and forget our masters.

did we end up choosing hitchcock? is that the final decision? i thought the vote was out until tomorrow.
rob, i would be happy to suggest some david lean films. there are a few classics that most folks have seen, like Lawrence of Arabia and Doctor Zhivago. But his early stuff that he did in England are the ones I really enjoy.
For starters, since you like darker gothic narratives, I would recommend his adaptation of Dickens' Great Expectations. If you like that, and are interested in finely acted, well scripted (yet doomed) romance, one of my personal faves is Brief Encounter. Noel Coward wrote it, and Lean directed it. There's a lot to like about that film.

it is pouring rain here at the moment. i walked to the store a while ago and was almost run over by some drunk guy that sped past me and then into a parked car, driving it right up on the sidewalk and over a no parking sign....he backed up, smashed into the car again until it was forced into the garden of this house, backed up, and then sped off.
you gotta love oakland....especially on holidaze like this.

Rob, hope you like Lean's GREAT EXPECTATIONS: I believe I posted my review here a months or two ago. I suppose it's really Dicken's GREAT EXPECTATIONS adapted by Lean...but you get my drift. It's fantasticly shot and I compared the deep focus cinematography to Toland's on CITIZEN KANE.
