Thursday, February 28, 2013

What's Your Favorite Horror Film?


It seems that I'm always posting at the same time on here, pure coincidence, I swear ha ha. After reading the "Horror Movie" section in chapter 7, wanted to ask what everyone's favorite horror movie is.  I found it interesting how horror movie actors didn't make as much as other genre's actors in those days.  Not so much the case these days with all of the horror movies released.  So what's everyones favorite horror movie film?  Mine is probably the original Halloween.  It's such a classic movie.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

The Departed


As a tie in to chapter 7 in Movie History: A Survey, I wanted to talk about the film The Departed.  I re-watched this movie on TV the other day and own the DVD and Blu-ray of this great film and I thought of it immediately when reading chapter 7.  "The Gangster Film" section of chapter 7 may not refer to this type of film exactly, but I often relate them to each other.  Of course, The Departed is a newer film and is a remake of the 2002 Japanese film, Infernal Affairs, but I find similarities between this movie and the movies of the past decades.  The plots are similar and most of the mobsters die at the end.  There are differences though, including the more brutal language and scenes in this movie.  I found it to be one of the most abrasive films I've ever seen, with excessive amount of swears.  All of the swears and violence do add a level of realism to the film which I really liked.  Anyone else feel the same way?

Monday, February 25, 2013


In honor of 50 years of the Bond films, I thought I'd blog about Agent 007.  As a tribute to one of my favorite Bond movies of all time, Goldeneye, the above image seemed perfect. I got the Bond 50 set on Blu-ray for Christmas, which also includes every 007 movie (with the exception of the Thunderball remake), a placeholder for Skyfall; and a bonus disc filled with behind-the-scenes content, Bond featurettes, and Skyfall behind-the-scenes special features.  It really is an amazing set, while the Bond movies look incredible on Blu-ray.  The audio and visual quality are unsurpassed when it comes to Blu-ray (well not unless you have the RAW footage).


Which brings me to Skyfall!  I was very impressed with Skyfall and the Skyfall Blu-ray.  It had a good plot, with the classic 007 novelties: girls, villains, and gadgets.  While the gadgets were toned down for this movie, the Bond girls are as beautiful as ever and the villain is scary psycho.  The Blu-ray is top notch quality and delivers true audio and visual excellence.   A beefy DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 soundtrack and MPEG-4 AVC make this Blu-ray truly shine.  Since I'm taking a film history class, I wanted to talk about how the new Bond film compares to the older ones.  Simply put, it does!  Daniel Craig is magnificent in this film and is just as entertaining as Bonds of the past.  There are some really visually impressive scenes, such as the ice/snow scene, the opening blurry/narrow lens scene, and the introduction of the villain.  These scenes are shots that stuck with me and made an immediate impression.  Check this Blu-ray or DVD out.  What are you guys' favorite Bond flicks?



Friday, February 22, 2013

PAPER 1 DONE!...FILM CENSORSHIP

So I've finally finished Paper 1 in Film History class.  It was a tricky one, I must say.  Putting all of my information together and comparing/contrasting the different points was tough!  I used censorship as my main basis for my paper and I found some interesting information.  Censorship of film has a colorful past and folks back then didn't like homicide very much, it seems.  They didn't want any homicide scenes on film, nor any arson or poisoning either.  I found this a bit humorous and interesting.  Look at the movies of today and look at how much these themes are used: regularly.  We have come a long way from the censorship of that era, but there still is censorship in movies today.  All of this reminds me of a certain documentary I watched last year about film ratings.  I can't remember the exact name but it was something like "This documentary is not rated."

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

BACK IN ACTION! - MY TAKE ON 1913


Well it's been quite a while since I've posted on here.  Since my last post there has been an NHL lockout and the Bruins have only lost two regulation games.  It's been a rather eventful fall and winter.  Included in this fun is my Film History class which I've been enjoying.  Winter Storm Nemo has left me finding time to read and study.  Our first paper is due by the end of the week and I've been trying to find newspaper articles from my birthday month of March.  The only tough part is that they have to be from 1913.  I stumbled upon a few good ones and I was intrigued by the newspapers from back then.  The pictures look so foreign in their low quality appearance and the grammar of the text is far more eloquent.

I found a broad range of articles, scaling from how films are evil, to a couple's encounter with a wild animal.  It was so interesting to see how folks back then were concerned about the content in the films in that era.  They would probably pass out at the sight of some of today's gory and obscene films (reminds me of a new absurd comedy commercial I saw on TV tonight).  I'm all for comedy films, but some studios just take it too far and it just ends up being dumb and good for only maybe one laugh.  All of the articles were extremely interesting and seeing these newspapers from a century ago transported me back in time.  Do a quick google search or use http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov.