Friday, March 22, 2013

I Don't Understand Her Either, Ron

 

 

7 comments:

Erik Johnson Illustrator said...

I rented "Rashoman". I think I had it mistaken for another film though. I knew it was an old Japanese film, but did not know it was set during feudal times. The box I got said they witnesses we telling their story to "a policeman", so I thought it was going to have (at the time) contemporary setting. A rainy precinct in Tokyo, with a world weary officer piecing together the truth behind this puzzling murder case. I guess I was expecting more of a foreign film noir.

If I can find a copy, I might rent it again so that I can better appreciate the experience.

Kal said...

Roshomon is a classic that was made a time when there were no other films playing with time and experience and perception like Kurasawa did. 7 Samurai, same thing. Lots of shit going on under the story. I was lucky to get to take great film study classes in University. Best elective ever.

Erik Johnson Illustrator said...

I took film studies in both high school and college. There were plenty of silent films but I can only remember one or two foreign films, that might have been in the "Contemporary Film Studies" course, were I heard they saw a lot of indie/experimental stuff.

I ought to make a list of what we saw, if I can remember.

Erik Johnson Illustrator said...

Heres the movies I remember we watched in my high school film class, which had some surprising variety.

Star Wars
Modern Times
Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure (!)
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
The Outlaw Josey Wales
Open Range
Cool Hand Luke
On The Waterfront
North by Northwest
The Great Escape
King Kong

Kal said...

I would have added JAWS to that list. Bill and Teds is a very smart comedy with laugh out loud moments. I bet you remember that movie more than most other comedies you have seen.

Kal said...

The film studies classes in my University started at the beginning of film (The Lumiere brothers making money for filming their employees leaving at the end of the work day), silent films, german expresionalism, gangster movies, musicals, epic spectacles, summer blockbusters, mavericks and artists, and cartoons.

Erik Johnson Illustrator said...

I remember we also saw "Roxanne" with Steve Martin. Definitely some contemporary choices. My college film course likewise started with the origins of film, DW Griffith, Melies, The Lumiere brothers before we moved into silent comedies and finished with film noir. "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari" and "City Lights" were my favorite from that class but we didn't watch as many movies as we did documentaries about movies.

I took a screenwriting class one year were we saw lots of movie portions. The only movie I think we saw start to finish was "Silence of the Lambs" though we did see about 90% of "Fatal Attraction".