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Around the World in 86 Movies
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorDanae Cassandra
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We have finally made it through Africa, watching films from seventeen different African countries.  Now we shall proceed to Europe, beginning with Portugal.

I have 2 films that are primarily from Portugal:

- Um Filme Falado (A Talking Picture)
- Viagem ao Princípio do Mundo (Voyage to the Beginning of the World)

They're both from the same director, Manoel de Oliveira, who has been making films since 1927 - and is still making them!  I think we shall watch Voyage, but we'll see how we feel when we get a chance to sit down for a movie again.
If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.
-- Thorin Oakenshield
 Last edited: by Danae Cassandra
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorDanae Cassandra
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Where We Are:  Portugal
wikipedia



Viagem ao Princípio do Mundo (Voyage to the Beginning of the World)
Year of Release: 1997
Starring: Marcello Mastroianni, Jean-Yves Gautier, Leonor Silveira, Diogo Dória, Isabel de Castro
Directed By: Manoel de Oliveira
Genre:  Drama

Overview:
"One of the most beautiful films ever made about aging. VOYAGE TO THE BEGINNING OF THE WORLD brings together 89-year-old Portuguese film maker Manoel de Oliveira and Italian icon Marcello Mastroianni, in what would be his last film. Playing a film maker clearly based on Oliveira, Mastolianni takes three actor friends on a driving tour of a mountain village, where one of the actors (Jean-Yves Gautier) is united with the elderly aunt he has never met. Family becomes the link between the past and present, in a film of great simplicity, dignity, and wisdom. Through Mastroianni, Oliveira speculates on the beginnings and endings (the village is in the North, where the Portuguese nation began), on what remains of the past (a primitive wooden statute, the meaning of which has been lost) and on what disappears (the ruins of a hotel). The cinematography, by Renato Berta, is at once radiantly clear and surrealistically devoid of detail - as if what we were seeing was already a recollection." - Dave Kehr, NY DAILY NEWS

My Thoughts:
This was a beautiful, poetic film, simple in execution, subtle and complicated in thought.  It's a study in character, in memory and origins, the meaning and hold of the past, whether that be the past of the individual, the family, or the country.  It's a film that takes it time - another person might say it's slow and talky.  There really isn't any action, all of the conflict is internal, and there are no heroes or villains. Instead it's a film about the search for identity, whether that search is focussed toward the family one comes from or things left behind from one's youth as age has taken over.

I found it to be an elegant little film with a lovely nostalgic atmosphere, but as much as I enjoyed the film, I would only recommend it for the art house crowd.  There is nothing to hold the attention of the Hollywood blockbuster crowd.

Bechdel Test:  Fail

Overall: 4/5
If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.
-- Thorin Oakenshield
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorDanae Cassandra
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Where We're Going Next:  Spain

I have 19 films that have Spain listed as the only CoO.  I'm thinking of watching either El amor Brujo, Death of a Cyclist, Sex and Lucia or Spirit of the Beehive, but I certainly wouldn't mind hearing any thoughts.

- El amor Brujo
- Bad Education
- El Bola
- Blood Wedding
- Carmen
- Cria cuervos...
- Curse of the Devil
- Death of a Cyclist
- Mondays in the Sun
- Night of the Werewolf
- The Orphanage
- The Sea Inside
- The Secret Life of Words
- Sex and Lucia
- South from Granada
- The Spirit of the Beehive
- Talk to Her
- Volver
- Werewolf Shadow
If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.
-- Thorin Oakenshield
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorDanae Cassandra
Registered: Apr 11, 2004
Registered: May 26, 2007
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Where We Are:  Spain
wikipedia

What We Watched:


El espíritu de la colmena (Spirit of the Beehive)
Year of Release:  1973
Starring:  Fernando Fernán Gómez, Teresa Gimpera, Ana Torrent, Isabel Tellería
Directed By:  Victor Erice
Genre:  Drama

Overview:
The Criterion Collection is proud to present Víctor Erice's spellbinding The Spirit of the Beehive, widely regarded as the greatest Spanish film of the 1970s. In a small Castilian village in 1940, directly following the country's devastating civil war, six-year-old Ana attends a traveling movie show of Frankenstein and becomes possessed by her memory of it. Produced as Franco's long regime was nearing its end, The Spirit of the Beehive is both a bewitching portrait of a child's haunted inner life and one of the most visually arresting movies ever made.

My Thoughts:
This was a beautiful film in every sense of the word.  Everything about it was excellent: the atmosphere, the direction, the cinematography, the performances.  It's a film of few words and much empathy, a film to relax and absorb and think about - one of the best sorts of films.  It has a slow, quiet, deliberate pace, and that sort of pace isn't for everyone. 

It's a film about isolation and alienation inside the family unit.  The father sees the bees in his hive working feverishly toward nothing - when it is actually his own family trapped in this  beehive, not the bees. It's a film about the innocence of childhood and how children see the world differently from  adults and that things we may dismiss as adults can have a profound effect upon a child.  It's a film about a child's desire for a father, but also a child's fear of her father.  It's also a critique of Franco's regime.

But most of all it's a really, really great film.  Highly recommended for art house film lovers.  One of the best films I've seen.

Bechdel Test:  Pass

Overall:  5/5
If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.
-- Thorin Oakenshield
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorDanae Cassandra
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Where We're Going Next:  France

I have 162 films with France as the sole country of origin.  If I remove documentaries, shorts, films in series, and films made in France by ex-pats of other countries (I consider Persepolis more an Iranian film than a French film, for example), I'm left with the list below.

There's so much good stuff to choose from in this group, but right now I'm leaning toward L'Atalante.

- Alphaville
- Amelie
- Army of Shadows
- The Artist
- L'Atalante
- Au hasard Balthazar
- Au revoir les enfants
- Avenue Montaigne
- Azur & Asmar: The Princes Quest
- Band of Outsiders
- The Bear
- The Beat That My Heart Skipped
- Le beau Serge
- Beauty and the Beast
- Black Moon
- Black Orpheus
- Bob le Flambeur
- Breathless
- Brotherhood of the Wolf
- Camile Claudel
- Le Cercle Rouge
- Children of Paradise
- The City of Lost Children
- Les cousins
- The Crook
- Day for Night
- Delicatessen
- Diabolique
- Diary of a Chambermaid
- Eyes Without a Face
- Fat Girl
- Fear[s] of the Dark
- La femme Nikita
- The Fifth Element
- The Fire Within
- Forbidden Games
- Gadjo Dilo
- Get Out Your Handkerchiefs
- Girl on the Bridge
- Grand Illusion
- Grande ecole
- The Grocer's Son
- La haine
- Happily Ever After
- Hiroshima mon amour
- The Illusionist
- Immortal
- Inch 'Allah Dimanche
- The Italian Straw Hat
- Joyeux Noel
- Jules and Jim
- L'Age d'or
- The Last Metro
- Last Tango in Paris
- Last Year at Marienbad
- Lola Montes
- Look at Me
- The Lovers
- Leon
- Leon Morin, Priest
- Made in U.S.A.
- Mademoiselle
- The Man Who Loved Women
- Masculin feminin
- Maitresse
- The Milky Way
- Les miserables
- Mississippi Mermaid
- Monsieur Ibrahim
- Mouchette
- Murmur of the Heart
- One Hundred and One Nights
- Paris, je t'aime
- The Passion of Joan of Arc
- Pierrot le fou
- Playtime
- Priceless
- Princes and Princesses
- Princess Tam Tam
- Raising Victor Vargas
- La Revue des Revues
- Rififi
- La Ronde
- The Rules of the Game
- The Science of Sleep
- Seaside
- The Secret of the Grain
- Siren of the Tropics
- Summer Hours
- A Tale of Springtime
- Le Trou
- The Valet
- A Very Long Engagement
- La Vie En Rose
- Viva Maria!
- Vivre sa vie
- Wages of Fear
- White Material
- Wild Grass
- A Woman is a Woman
- Wooden Crosses
- Zazie dans le metro
- Zou Zou
If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.
-- Thorin Oakenshield
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorDanae Cassandra
Registered: Apr 11, 2004
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Where We Are:  France
wikipedia

What We Watched:


L'Atalante
Year of Release:  1934
Starring:  Dita Parlo, Jean Dasté, Michel Simon
Directed By:  Jean Vigo
Genre:  Romance, Drama

Overview:
Even among cinema's legends, Jean Vigo stands apart. The son of a notorious anarchist, Vigo had a brief but brilliant career making poetic, lightly surrealist films before his life was cut tragically short by tuberculosis at age twenty-nine. Like the daring early works of his contemporaries Jean Cocteau and Luis Buñuel, Vigo's films refused to play by the rules. This set includes all of Vigo's titles: À propos de Nice, an absurdist, rhythmic slice of life from the bustling coastal city; Taris, an inventive short portrait of a swimming champion; Zéro de conduite, a radical, delightful tale of boarding-school rebellion that has influenced countless filmmakers; and L'Atalante, widely regarded as one of cinema's finest achievements, about newlyweds beginning their life together on a canal barge. These are the witty, visually adventurous works of a pivotal film artist.

My Thoughts:
I enjoyed this film and thought it was quite good, though I can't say that I thought this was one of the greatest films of all time.  I think it had the potential to be one of those films, had Vigo been allowed to keep it the way he envisioned and if we had that version.  This is, after all, a reconstructed version of L'Atalante, the film having been chopped by the distributor back in 1934.  Vigo obviously had tremendous talent and it's a shame he died so young.

There are a lot of wonderful shots, the camera work is very interesting, as is the lighting.  The visual aspect, while a bit choppy in editing, is very lyrical and poetic nonetheless.  Another thing Vigo really got right was in depicting the cramped space inside the barge.  While the performances of the two newlyweds are solid, Michel Simon's character, Père Jules, steals the show.  He's colorful, comical and salty, and I enjoyed him a lot.  It is a kind of story you don't see very often - it begins with the wedding and at its core is about the difficulty of the couple to adjust to married life.  Most romances are about the lead-up to the wedding and end with "they lived happily ever after" so it's refreshing to see a film address the reality of marriage being difficult. 

L'Atalante reminded me very much of Sunrise, and if you liked that film you'll like this one.  Recommended for silent film lovers (even though this isn't silent, it has a silent film aesthetic to it) and film lovers in general, but not really the general public.  While it's a very good film, the languid pacing alone would bore many modern viewers.

Bechdel Test:  Fail

Overall: 4/5
If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.
-- Thorin Oakenshield
 Last edited: by Danae Cassandra
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorDanae Cassandra
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Where We're Going Next:  The United Kingdom

I have 587 profiles that list The UK as country of origin, so rather than list them all I'll narrow it down to two:  if we have time Wednesday we'll likely watch The 39 Steps (1935), but if we don't have time until Sunday we might try to watch Hamlet (1948).
If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.
-- Thorin Oakenshield
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorDanae Cassandra
Registered: Apr 11, 2004
Registered: May 26, 2007
Reputation: Great Rating
United States Posts: 2,878
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Where We Are:  The United Kingdom
wikipedia

What We Watched:


The 39 Steps
Year of Release:  1935
Starring:  Robert Donat, Madeleine Carroll, Lucie Mannheim, Godfrey Tearle
Directed By:  Alfred Hitchcock
Genre:  Suspense/Thriller

Overview:
The best known of Hitchcock's British films, this civilized spy yarn follows the escapades of Richard Hannay (Robert Donat), who stumbles into a conspiracy that involves him in a hectic chase across the Scottish moors—a chase in which he is both the pursuer and the pursued. Adapted from John Buchan's novel, this classic Hitchcock "wrong man" thriller encapsulates themes that anticipate the director's biggest American films (especially North by Northwest), and is a standout among his early works.

My Thoughts:
This was a really, really good film.  Of course, with Hitchcock's name attached to it I was expecting it to be - and it didn't disappoint me.  It had a great atmosphere, great cinematography, suspense, and excellent work from all the cast.  Hitchcock really knew how to keep you interested, and how to pace and move things - you find out what's going on as Hannay does, which I felt really kept the suspense of the film going.  The editing, script and dialogue are all great too.  A really superb film. 

Recommended for anyone, unless you can't stand old movies.  Then I feel sorry for you.

Bechdel Test:  Fail

Overall: 5/5
If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.
-- Thorin Oakenshield
 Last edited: by Danae Cassandra
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorDanae Cassandra
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Where We're Going Next:  Ireland

Taking out the concert DVDs leaves us with this list of 5:

- The Boys and Girl From County Clare
- Intermission
- Kisses
- Once
- The Secret of Kells

I've seen all of them except Intermission and Kisses, so we'll be watching one of those.
If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.
-- Thorin Oakenshield
 Last edited: by Danae Cassandra
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorDanae Cassandra
Registered: Apr 11, 2004
Registered: May 26, 2007
Reputation: Great Rating
United States Posts: 2,878
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Where We Are:  Ireland
wikipedia

What We Watched:


Intermission
Year of Release: 2003
Starring: Colin Farrell, Cillian Murphy, Brian O'Byrne, Kelly MacDonald, Colm Meaney
Directed By: John Crowley
Genre: Comedy, Drama, Crime, Romance

Overview:
Fifty-four characters and eleven storylines intersect with "dazzling" (San Francisco Chronicle) results in this "raucously funny and compellingly gritty" (BBCi) comedy.  An ingenious tale of small-town delinquents, shady cops and warring lovers reunited by a bizarre kidnapping plan, Intermission is a dark, edgy, "very funny study of love, lust and petty crime" (Sight & Sound)!

My Thoughts:
This is a sort of gritty, slice-of-life of the working class kind of film.  It had a kind of disjointed beginning, and I wasn't sure I was going to enjoy the movie, but I gave it a chance and as it developed I was drawn further in and everything came together wonderfully.  It's entertaining and fun - and really, really funny at certain parts.  The look on Colin Farrell's face when Cillian Murphy's character puts the brown sauce in his tea.  I just about couldn't stop laughing.  It's a bit violent, the language is coarse, but the dialogue is well written and the actors really embody their parts.  I'll admit I bought it because of the presence of Colm Meaney, being the Trek fan I am, and he's great in it, but none of the actors are slouches. Recommended for anyone who's enjoyed an ensemble piece.

Bechdel Test: Fail

Overall: 3.25/5
If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.
-- Thorin Oakenshield
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorDanae Cassandra
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Registered: May 26, 2007
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Where We're Going Next:  Iceland

I own two films from Iceland: 
- Hafið (The Sea)
- Nói Albinói

Don't know which one we'll watch yet.
If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.
-- Thorin Oakenshield
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar Contributordee1959jay
Registered: March 19, 2007
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Nói Albinói is worth watching. Don't know the other one.

One I can recommend for you to get is 101 Reykjavik.
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorDanae Cassandra
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Where We Are:  Iceland
wikipedia



Nói Albinói
Year of Release:  2002
Starring:  Tómas Lemarquis, Pröstur Leó Gunnarsson, Elín Hansdóttir,
Directed By:  Dagur Kári
Genre:  Drama

Overview:
Seventeen-year-old Nói drifts through life on a remote fjord in the north of Iceland. In winter, the fjord is cut off from the outside world, surrounded by ominous mountains and buried under a shroud of snow. Nói dreams of escaping from this white-walled prison with Iris, a city girl who works in a local gas station. But his clumsy attempts at escape spiral out of control and end in complete failure. Only a natural disaster will shatter Nói's universe and offer him a better world...

My Thoughts:
This is the story of a bright, bored young man with lots of potential and nothing to do with it.  His brilliant intellect is stifled by school, his dreams are suffocated by the isolation he is in.  He meets the new girl in town, and for a moment in his life there is a bright spark and he hopes of escape.

This is very much a character study of a brilliant, disaffected, isolated teenager and the life he is leading, drifting in and out of school, from one activity to another, unsure of where he is going, what he wants, or what the future will hold.  Only sure that he wants to get out of here and do something.

The cinematography choices enforces the isolated, lonely feeling - everything is white, blue and gray, snow and ice.  Cold and bleak.  Excellently done for this film.

Recommended for lovers of art films.  I enjoyed it, but it's not for everyone.

Bechdel Test:  Fail

Overall:  3.5/5
If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.
-- Thorin Oakenshield
 Last edited: by Danae Cassandra
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorDanae Cassandra
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Where We're Going Next:  Norway

I have 6 films to choose from here:

- The Bothersome Man
- Buddy
- Elling
- Hawaii, Oslo
- Insomnia
- Monster, Thursday

We've seen Insomnia, so it will likely be one of the others.
If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.
-- Thorin Oakenshield
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorDanae Cassandra
Registered: Apr 11, 2004
Registered: May 26, 2007
Reputation: Great Rating
United States Posts: 2,878
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Where We Are:  Norway
wikipedia

What We Watched:


Elling
Year of Release:  2001
Starring:  Per Christian Ellefsen, Sven Nordin, Marit Pia Jacobsen, Jørgen Langhelle, Per Christensen
Directed By:  Petter Næss
Genre:  Comedy

Overview:
After a two-year stint in a state home in which the shy, neurotic Elling and the loud, sex-obsessed Kjell Bjarne became close friends, the pair are released and forced to enter the real world.They find themselves placed in a state funded apartment where a social worker tells them to behave responsibly and act like normal members of society. Initially, the simple act of going around the corner for groceries is a challenge. In time, as they learn to adjust, the two find oddball ways to cope with society, striking up unlikely friendships in the strangest places. Now they're packed and ready for the greatest adventure of their lives. All they have to do is get out of the house!

My Thoughts:
This was a wonderful, funny, touching, ultimately heartwarming film.  It's a film about relationships - the relationships of people with each other, and the relationships of people with society.  It's a film about getting out of your comfort zone and grabbing life.  And the difficulty in doing so.

Elling, our protagonist, begins with great difficulties in grabbing life.  While it is never mentioned, he obviously has a severe anxiety disorder and is extremely shy, having been sheltered his entire life.  It's a stretch for him to try walking down the block to buy groceries.  Yet, as he gets outside his comfort zone and tries to do things, he accomplishes things. If we look deeper into ourselves, we might see a bit of Elling inside each of us - we each have our own comfort zones and our own problems breaking out of our familiar, safe havens and routines. In Elling's (and his roomie, Kjell Bjarne's) triumphs we could see our own.

Top-notch acting on the part of the two leads.  Absolutely some of the best I've seen in a long time.  They really embody these characters. The camera work seems, at first, nothing special, but I really liked the way it seemed to tilt, or swim, just a little, when Frank (the social worker) pushed Elling and Kjell Bjarne to do something uncomfortable.

Another thing I really liked was that the film treated these two men with a lot of humanity and dignity.  Both had a lot to offer, if they are given, and give themselves, a chance to find it.  Very funny and uplifting film - highly recommended.

Bechdel Test: Fail

Overall: 4.5/5
If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.
-- Thorin Oakenshield
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorDanae Cassandra
Registered: Apr 11, 2004
Registered: May 26, 2007
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Where We're Going Next:  Sweden

I have a decent number of Swedish films to choose from, most of them from Ingmar Bergman.  I can say already that we'll be watching The Seventh Seal

- Cries and Whispers
- Crisis
- Fanny & Alexander
- The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest
- The Girl Who Played With Fire
- The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo
- I Am Curious (Blue)
- I Am Curious (Yellow)
- Ingeborg Holm
- Kestrel's Eye
- Let the Right One In
- The Magic Flute
- The Magician
- A Man There Was
- My Life as a Dog
- The Phantom Carriage
- Port of Call
- Saraband
- Scenes From a Marriage
- The Seventh Seal
- The Silence
- Smiles of a Summer Night
- Summer Interlude
- Summer With Monika
- Thirst
- Through a Glass Darkly
- To Joy
- Torment
- Wild Strawberries
- Winter Light
- You the Living
If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.
-- Thorin Oakenshield
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