Introduction

1001 movies you must see before you die. Must I? Let's see.

My name is Dagmar and I am from Czech Republic. I have a bachelor's degree in screenwriting. I study movies. I watch movies. I write about movies. I kind of mention movies a lot. I even cross stitch things I like in movies. My views on cinema could be described as peculiar. My views on the "1001 movies" list as complicated. It happens a lot that I get the feeling it wasn't that necessary to see some particular movies. Sometimes I'm really grateful I saw them. And there are also times when I don't watch any new movies for six months straight. And they keep adding new movies every damn year so I might have to never die to watch them all.

What's the score right now?
606/1245 - That's 639 left to see.
I started this experiment on July 3rd 2009 and the latest update was made on April 19th 2023.

You can find the full list here.

Tuesday, 27 November 2018

The Revenant (2015)

USA/HongKkong/Taiwan
directed by: Alejandro González Iñárritu
written by: Mark L. Smith, Alejandro González Iñárritu + Michael Punke (book)
starring: Domhnall Gleeson, Will Poulter, Forrest Goodluck
seen on 27th November, 2018

-"I found God" he used to say. "And while sitting there and basking in the glory and sublimity of mercy... I shot and ate that son of a bitch." 

Before watching the film I read that: Revenant in French also means (reverting to) "spirit" or "ghost". That got me every excited of course, but despite all those fever dreams I did not end up feeling the film touched a spiritual plane. In fact it feels like a crossbreed between Malick's "The New World" and "Dead Man" by Jarmusch with it not being as good as either of them. Another comparison would be with Iñárritu's own "Birdman" - I was not too keen to watch it but when I finally started I could not take my eyes off the screen because I found it so hypnotizing. With "The Revenant" it was the opposite, I started quite eager but had to force myself to even finish watching. And I am one of those people who run to the woods and forests any chance they get, mind you.

I don't really like it when Terrence Malick embraces his inner Terrence Malick to much, and I don't mean to start tolerating it with other directors. But Iñárritu made another mistake which I find to be too fundamental to excuse and that is giving the film a human villain and giving the hero other motivation than to simply "survive"- I think that it essentially negates the reason for this film to exist. "Survive to kill the killer of my son" is an extremely cliché motivation for such a hostile, ferocious and cruel environment. I admire the setting, I just don't like the story (or rather the author's manipulation of the story). A nihilistic tale of a lone trapper fighting for his life because that's the only thing he knows to do would be much more suitable.

And it gets worse with the fact that Tom Hardy simply seems to be too ingelligent to portray a character like that and therefore seems to be bordering between overacting and a caricature which is not a worthy counterpart to Leo's rare minimalism. (And here I must say that since they were wanting to give him the bald guy statue for some time that I am very glad they chose this film and not for example "The Aviator" or "The Wolf of Wall Street" even though personally I lost interest in his acting about fifteen years ago.) Domhnall Gleeson is finally taking his first steps from "a handsome man" to "a fine actor". I'm giving Forrest Goodluck a follow on Instagram. And Will Poulter gets a spot on my list of actors who cry beautifully. 

And finally I have to say something about the soundtrack. I was utterly annoyed by that "epic western film music" which seemed to try to bloat every shot with a fake sense of importance, especially because that Japanese musical minimalism that accompanied for example the final fight was a superb embodiment of those primordial instincts and emotions the film was or was supposed to be about. If the film lost that music combo and went only with Ryûichi Sakamoto, my opinion of the whole film would probably change for the better a lot. And I'd say that a few people of this film's opponents would stop saying that "The Revenant" is all artsy-fartsy and shallow if that were the case. Let's see if I watch it again in ten years and change my mind.

Sunday, 11 November 2018

BlacKkKlansman (2018)

USA
directed by: Spike Lee
written by: Spike Lee, David Rabinowitz, Charlie Wachtel, Kevin Willmott + Ron Stallworth (book)
starring: John David Washington, Adam Driver, Topher Grace
seen on 11th November, 2018

As far as I can remember, this has to be the best (non-documentary) film about civil rights in the United States I have ever seen. It's smart, detailed, composed, it does great job plaing with its form and genre rules and most, most of all: it is not overcome by emotions like other films (and creators) from the same category (12 Years A Slave, The Birth Of A Nation 2016 etc.) Spike Lee remains calm, the only moment he "lets go" of his "artistic distance" is in the zeitgeist fuelled apendix about the horrible todays happenings. The actors are also precise, natural and believable, I'm just so happy to have found a film so down to earth and still (or thanks to that) impressive to the highest degree. A special mention goes to the music by Terence Blachard which sounded like absolute heaven to my ears.


Friday, 9 November 2018

Black Panther (2018)

USA
directed by: Ryan Coogler
written by: Ryan Coogler, Joe Robert Cole + Stan Lee, Jack Kirby (comic book)
starring: Chadwick Boseman, Lupita Nyong'o, Danai Gurira
seen on 9th November, 2018

If I didn't already wish to be Gina Carano and after her Noomi Rapace, I would definitely wish to be Danai Gurira. 

Enormous hype always makes me kind of scared to watch a movie and I did put off watching Black Panther quite a few times to lose all expectations, so my oh my, wasn't I pleasantly surprised almost at every turn. I was a little bit dissapointed by some of that "generic hero music" compared to the rest of the soundtrack and the film could be a bit shorter to be more impactful, but that's as critical as I will get.

The screenplay seems to be a lot more thought-through than your usual billion blockbuster these days, I especially like the skilful way it tells an origin story as well as a stand-alone current story at the same time. The antagonist's got some excellent motivation, but he sort of turns into the standard "I will destroy the world and reign over the remnants" kid of villain after he manages to win his first fight, so that's a tiny amount of shame. But oh my goodness, I really relished that all-female commando. Yes yes yes. 

P.S.: After some time passed and some thinking was done, I can now declare Black Panther (along with The Winter Soldier) to be my favourite MCU movie.

Wednesday, 7 November 2018

The Godson (1967)

 Le Samouraï
France/Italy
directed by: Jean-Pierre Melville
written by: Jean-Pierre Melville, Georges Pellegrin
starring: Alain Delon, François Périer, Nathalie Delon
seen on 7th November, 2018

And here I am, thinking that cold and distant films are my cup of tea... Well, now I know there are some kinds of teas that I just don't get yet or perhaps never will and therefore I don't need to keep trying them and bitter my day with their unpleasant taste. Cathy Rosier is divine, but that's all I got from this film. Delon (surprisingly) did not bring enough charisma for me to be invested into this empty film and fill it with my own life, as one usually does with empty films.

Monday, 5 November 2018

Dumbo (1941)

USA
directed by: Ben Sharpsteen
written by: Otto Englander
starring: Edward Brophy, Sterling Holloway, Herman Bing, Verna Felton
seen on 5th November, 2018

-"Did you ever see an elephant fly?" -"Well, I've seen a dragonfly." 

Hot damn, under all that "cuteness" lurks a very dark story and cudos for doing so, but other than that it feels exactly like a short film streched into a theatre release under the whips of a moneygrabbing studio overlord trying to make the cheapest film possible after a string of financial flops. And to make drunk clown caricatures of animators who went on strike over being paid fairly for their work, that is real freaking low.