Lord of The Rings will be considered three different films AgainstMeAgainstYou, and Kill Bill will be split into Vol 1 and Vol 2. Likewise with the Harry Potter films, etc... I'm not sure anyone counts the three LOTR films as one unit tbh (Kill Bill has been squished into one film since its release at certain points though).
The odd thing with Che is that it's not actually two movies, it's a two-part movie. It was submitted to Cannes under one film (Che (Part I: The Argentine and Part II: Guerilla)), and it seems to have been split simply due to its length.
I'd vouch for Che as a single film. I know it's split into two on IMDb, and the films do have a different aspect ratio, but I think there's a decent argument for it. Criterion basically has it as one film as well (on two discs). It's differentiable from Deathly Hallows Pt1/Pt2, Kill Vill 1/2, The Human Condition, etc. It's almost closer to Gangs of Wasseypur, which is usually considered a single film.
This tracks with how CriterionForum treated those movies. Tarantino originally conceived of Kill Bill as one film of course, but Weinstein talked Tarrantino into splitting it during the editing stage. Haven't seen Che. The aspect ratio change is strange. Does the film jump in time when the aspect ratio changes?
Lord of The Rings will be considered three different films AgainstMeAgainstYou, and Kill Bill will be split into Vol 1 and Vol 2. Likewise with the Harry Potter films, etc... I'm not sure anyone counts the three LOTR films as one unit tbh (Kill Bill has been squished into one film since its release at certain points though).
The odd thing with Che is that it's not actually two movies, it's a two-part movie. It was submitted to Cannes under one film (Che (Part I: The Argentine and Part II: Guerilla)), and it seems to have been split simply due to its length.
I'd vouch for Che as a single film. I know it's split into two on IMDb, and the films do have a different aspect ratio, but I think there's a decent argument for it. Criterion basically has it as one film as well (on two discs). It's differentiable from Deathly Hallows Pt1/Pt2, Kill Vill 1/2, The Human Condition, etc. It's almost closer to Gangs of Wasseypur, which is usually considered a single film.
This tracks with how CriterionForum treated those movies. Tarantino originally conceived of Kill Bill as one film of course, but Weinstein talked Tarrantino into splitting it during the editing stage. Haven't seen Che. The aspect ratio change is strange. Does the film jump in time when the aspect ratio changes?
Yeah, it jumps from the end of the revolution in Cuba to his arrival in Bolivia for the attempted revolution there, so a significant amount of time later, although the first part does skip back and forth between the events in Cuba and his famous ambassadorial speeches/interviews, if I remember correctly. Been a few years since I last watched it; it isn't a film that makes for easy, endlessly rewatchable viewing, because it's messy and long and claustrophobia-inducing, but it is also super visceral and authentic feeling, giving a real sense of what the chaos of the situation must have been like. Would like to rewatch before I put together a list, but it'll probably land pretty high on mine. _________________ 2021 in full effect. Come drop me some recs. Y'all know what I like.
Would you believe me if I said I've never watched In Vanda's Room? I can't find it . Being said, I got around to Vitalina Varela last week, and I think it's my favourite Costa film. Phenomenal work. If you haven't had a chance to see it, I'm hoping you do soon. It would've placed pretty high on my 2019 list.
(.... I also haven't watched The Best of Youth ...). Somebody else put a bit of pressure on me to watch it recently too. Might get on that for the poll. It's length has been making me put it off for years.
But yeah, I'm putting some stuff on there in the queue.
Has the unthinkable happened- fallen out of love with one sir Paul Blart? Strange times indeed. Anyways great list, some kindred choices to be sure
And yeah the Best of Youth is quite engrossing, i Remember sitting through it during SIFF one year and feeling exhausted, but enjoyed it more in two sittings at home. Def worth checking out if you're still Quart-to-the-E.
Would you believe me if I said I've never watched In Vanda's Room? I can't find it .
It's on the Criterion Channel. Don't recommend it, though maybe if you've liked other Pedro Costa films, you'll like it too. I regret not watching Colossal Youth first, because it's supposed to be better and less tedious -- I've been putting off seeing Colossal Youth for years because of sitting through the nearly 3-hour In Vanda's Room. Enough time's passed now that I'll probably get around to checking out Colossal Youth during the poll period.
Last edited by PurpleHazel on 06/04/2020 04:45; edited 1 time in total
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