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*winner gets a grilled Reek*
Unforgiven is still my favorite western. TGTBTU was my first one, though.
Really? I always felt like TGTB&TU was great, but maybe a little longer than it needed to be. Huh.No idea who that could be.
I finished my revisit of the Dollars Trilogy last night. All of them are still amazing of course. But man, The Good, The Bad & The Ugly feels like it's been heavily edited down.
Really? I always felt like TGTB&TU was great, but maybe a little longer than it needed to be. Huh.
Speaking of classics, I'm now officially more than 1/3 of the way through my great Hitchcock binge. My rankings of the ones I've done so far:
[FONT="]1. Notorious (1947)
2. Shadow of a Doubt (1943)
3. Strangers on a Train (1951)
4. Vertigo (1958)
5. North By Northwest (1959)
6. Psycho (1960)
7. Rear Window (1954)
8. Spellbound (1945)
9. Rope (1948)
10. The Birds (1963)
11. Dial M for Murder (1954)
12. Rebecca (1940)
13. Saboteur (1942)
14. Foreign Correspondent (1940)
15. Blackmail (1929)[/FONT]
[FONT="]16. I Confess (1953)
17. Under Capricorn (1948)[/FONT]
[FONT="]18. Easy Virtue (1928)[/FONT]
[FONT="]19. The Ring (1927)[/FONT]
[FONT="]20. The Farmer’s Wife (1928)[/FONT]
[FONT="][/FONT]
[FONT="]I've enjoyed all of them to varying degrees, except The Farmer's Wife. No idea what Hitch was thinking there.
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Oh I get your meaning, you might be onto something there. Leone seemed way more interested in getting to the 3rd act, given the way he drags out every little moment in it, lol.There's a lot of plot the movie absolutely blitzes through in the early stages. Feels like a lot of it is on the editing room floor.
Oh I get your meaning, you might be onto something there. Leone seemed way more interested in getting to the 3rd act, given the way he drags out every little moment in it, lol.
Well by all accounts we dodged you a bullet there, lol.It's a shame your country caused Jane's Got a Gun to flop. Means I wont get to see it in theatres now.
[FONT="]I've enjoyed all of them to varying degrees, except The Farmer's Wife. No idea what Hitch was thinking there.
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Well by all accounts we dodged you a bullet there, lol.
Wouldn't know, didn't see it.So it's not your life story?
Oh my word, yessir you do! He's given us so many of the best movies ever made, Strangers on a Train being one of them, imo. Everyone immediately thinks of his most iconic films of the late 50's-60's (Vertigo, Psycho, The Birds, North by Northwest), but I firmly believe his best period was the one right before that, the ones of the 40's/early 50's, which included Strangers on a Train, Shadow of a Doubt and my fave, Notorious. This binge has just reaffirmed that belief for me. Shadow of a Doubt was Hitchcock's personal favorite of his films. His heroines were much more interesting and compelling to me during that period as well, before his "icy blondes" phase.I've only ever seen Strangers on a Train, which is quite brilliant. I definitely need to see more.