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.

Sunday, 6 June 2021

Young Frankenstein (1974)

USA
directed by: Mel Brooks
written by: Gene Wilder, Mel Brooks + Mary Shelley (book)

starring: Gene Wilder, Peter Boyle, Marty Feldman
seen on 6th June, 2021

Damn, I think I'm in love with Marty Feldman now.

Sunday, 23 May 2021

Bride of Frankenstein (1935)

USA
directed by: James Whale
written by: William Hurlbut, John L. Balderston, Philip MacDonald, R.C. Sherriff + Mary Shelley (book)

starring: Boris Karloff, Colin Clive, Valerie Hobson
seen on 23rd May, 2021

I'm not sure if I watched it in a wrong mood or what but this sequel seems to not follow in any footsteps that made the first one good/interesting. The prologue with the authors was awesome, the ending in the lab with the hissing was extremely awesome, everything Boris did was frickin' mega awesome, but the rest of the runtime... 

Unbearable side characters such as the old maid or the fiancée, Henry is still an impotent ignoramus, doctor Devil and with his trunk of bottles is ludicrous... The second half does get better, but oh my did the middle part with all the needless stuff make it hard to watch, the atmosphere suffered a real blow. 

Friday, 21 May 2021

Frankenstein (1931)

USA
directed by: James Whale
written by: Garrett Fort, Francis Edward Faragoh + Mary Shelley (book)

starring: Boris Karloff, Colin Clive, Mae Clarke
seen on 21st May, 2021

The thing is, to Boris I would not hesitate giving all the praise there is, but I do have a bunch of not-so-nice notes towards the rest of the film, making the review "average" even though the film is obviously not average at all. 

At the centre of my displeasure is how the film-makers either don't understand the character of Victor Frankenstein (in the film renamed Henry) or intentionally manipulate emotions to make him  seem like a "nice guy". I've hated the character with a passion ever since I read the book many years ago and he definitely has a spot in my personal "top 10 most hated fictional characters of all time". So any attempt at making him into a sympathetic protagonist makes me angry beyond measure.

Instead of this true, deep evil (that the book really is about, to me) the film-makers dwell on the "pretty" stuff, like pseudogothic set pieces, mob mentality and sensitive monster exploitation. It is a genre building piece of cinema, but it also foreshadows how many horror movies remove the intriguing layers from their backgrounds. It attacks the lowest urges instead of asking questions.

Saturday, 3 April 2021

Jules and Jim (1962)

Jules et Jim
France

directed by: François Truffaut
written by: François Truffaut, Jean Gruault + Henri-Pierre Roché (book)

starring: Jeanne Moreau, Oskar Werner, Henri Serre
seen on 3rd April, 2021

-"Keep in mind that words can't have the same meaning across languages, because they're not of the same gender. Unlike in French, "war", "death" and "moon" are masculine in German, while "sun" and "love" are feminine. "Life" is neuter."

I'd like to think I'm playful, but this film would make me judge and reject everything playful altogether. Too much of a male optics for me to navigate through. 

Tuesday, 23 March 2021

Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (1936)

USA
directed by: Frank Capra
written by: Robert Riskin

starring: Gary Cooper, Jean Arthur, George Bancroft
seen on 23rd March, 2021

Oh yes, the ancient human fantasy of punching a lawyer in the face without repercussions. 

I don't really know what to think about Mr. Deeds, and I'm not sure if letting my impressions settle will help me or make me completely forget about the film. I immediately thought of comparing it with Mr. Smith Goes To Washington, which I found better articulated and better made overall. 

Mr. Deeds is either too much (or too little) a comedy, in its current state it seems like the jokes are interrupting the flow of the story and/or message. Gary Cooper is obviously brilliant and I like him way more that Jimmy Stewart, but the rest around him... The tension between comedy, romance and militant naivete is stressing me out and I seem to have some kind of a personal feud with films that can't decide what they want to be. Stop hiding behind "a comedy" when you want to make a movie about something serious, film-makers. Mr. Deeds does not exactly fall into that category, but still. It made me think of that so here it shall be written.