I find this part surprising....Roger Zelazny novel...turned into a movie. It wasn't MST3K awful...
It's far more bland than that. The closest thing the movie has to bands of outlaws in fetish gear was a small group of radiation scarred rednecks hanging out at a gas station.That kinda sounds like The Road Warrior series. Or something that would fit in that universe.
Not a fan of Zelazny?Also I find this part surprising.
I mentioned in another thread I didn't like his Amber books. Generally, I'm not impressed by his writing.Not a fan of Zelazny?
I've often thought that I should hang some of his scenes as wall art. I'd like to get the Criterion Collection of Stagecoach.But John Ford is the fucking man, damned near every frame of this film could hang in a fine arts museum.
Definitely. They always looked good, but it wasn't until a class I took in college about John Ford that I really came to appreciate the grace of his style.I liked Stagecoach more than My Darling Clementine, but I totally agree with you about John Ford's cinematic eye. Beautiful film making.
Same here. I never cared about Westerns, but then I took a course on "The History of the Amercian Western" and learned to appreciate the good, the bad and the ugly of the genre. Film, novels and tv, as well as documented history. It was a great semester.Definitely. They always looked good, but it wasn't until a class I took in college about John Ford that I really came to appreciate the grace of his style.
booooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooand learned to appreciate the good, the bad and the ugly of the genre.
Same here. I never cared about Westerns, but then I took a course on "The History of the Amercian Western" and learned to appreciate the good, the bad and the ugly of the genre. Film, novels and tv, as well as documented history. It was a great semester.
...I just Turbo'd?
Stories of self reliance, clear lines of morality (white hats vs black), firearm proficiency and positive portrayals of masculinity just aren't in style any more I guess. Every western I've seen in the last 10 years is either a comedic deconstruction or a grimdark subversion with anvilicious social themes.I loved Westerns when I was a kid. Books and movies. Still do, I guess--it's just that they don't make many of them anymore.
Subversion in westerns has been around as long as the genre, though. Hell, Gunsmoke did it on a regular basis, as far back as the radio serial. Some of the best westerns (ha) are subverted or even completely inverted, like Unforgiven.[DOUBLEPOST=1421187018,1421186889][/DOUBLEPOST]To think of it, Eastwood got famous off of subverted roles, like the Man with No Name.Stories of self reliance, clear lines of morality (white hats vs black), firearm proficiency and positive portrayals of masculinity just aren't in style any more I guess. Every western I've seen in the last 10 years is either a comedic deconstruction or a grimdark subversion with anvilicious social themes.
"You know, if we lost this war, I think it would have driven us crazy. It would have torn us apart. Y'know. As a country. But we didn't. Thanks to you." - The Comedian to Dr. Manhattan, Vietnam, 1971If I remember what my professor said, the American population lost it's love affair with Westerns during Vietnam. The American faultless hero didn't jive with what they were seeing on TV. Westers used to make up about 50% of movies released and during/post Vietnam, their profitability sank dramaticly.
American Sniper. It's okay, but be prepared for a LOT of OOH RAH hero worship. And, man was it a good thing that Kyle was there to save all those Marines who weren't trained well enough for urban welfare!American Sniper. It was great and you all should see it
All movies change from right after watching them to having time to think. I was pissed even while watching it because of the whole "Marine undertrained, Navy SEALS supermen hurr hurr hurr" thing. The Vox article articulated everything I was feeling and brought it into a better focus.You went from "it was ok" to "I disliked it" in 24 hours... did that vox article perhaps convince you that you disliked it?
(I myself haven't seen the movie)