T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
174.1 | The best voice-over, too | ASDG::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Tue May 04 1993 22:38 | 12 |
|
The best feel-bad movie I've seen to date is Zentropa.
Grime, psychological abuse, war rubble, despondency, terrorist
organizations, bombings, hangings, drownings, suicide by exsanguination, small
children commiting political assasinations.....it's all
here, in black and white AND color. Gee, just like the Wizard of Oz.
I highly suggest seeing this on the big screen, and sitting in the first ten
rows of the theater.
Lisa
|
174.2 | My office was just as big as his | ASDG::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Tue May 04 1993 22:39 | 12 |
|
Another feel bad movie is Brazil.
Ductwork, plastic surgery, ductwork, bureaucracy, ductwork, terrorism,
ductwork, torture, ductwork, Robert DeNiro, ductwork, insanity, ductwork,
it's all here.
The last 20 seconds of the movie are definitely the feel-bad "clincher".
The first feel-bad movie I ever saw.
Lisa
|
174.3 | Barbie's Dream House | ASDG::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Tue May 04 1993 22:39 | 14 |
| The second feel-bad movie I ever saw was Parents.
This would not have been nearly as disturbing if they hadn't set the
story in total electric 50's art deco style. Also, the casting of Randy
Quaid as the father was essential.
The basic premise of the film was that the kid kept being fed meat for
supper, but his parents wouldn't tell him where the meat came from
so he had to find out for himself.
Make sure to see this one on the big screen so that you don't miss any of the
home furnishings.
Lisa
|
174.4 | Anyone up for a game of Go Fish? | ASDG::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Tue May 04 1993 22:41 | 22 |
|
The most unexpected feel-bad movie I saw was The Manchurian Candidate.
I'm sure the circumstances under which I saw it had a lot to do with its
impact on me.
It was New Years Eve (actually early New Year's morning) and my friends and
I were quite tired. We stuffed the movie into the VCR and then began to
doze off thinking "My God, not another war movie. And one with Frank Sinatra
to boot".
Suddenly, the, ummmm.......Ladies Home and Garden Show scene came on.
Suddenly we became mesmerized by what was on the screen. As the movie
ended we shook out our heads. One of my friends later on told me that
she was so impressed, she went out and watched it again.
This definitely works the best if you have no clue what's going to go
on the first time you watch it.
Also, watch for Angela Landsbury. No, she's not Jessica Fletcher in this
one.
Lisa
|
174.5 | Self-explanatory | ASDG::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Tue May 04 1993 22:41 | 4 |
|
Henry, Portrait of a Serial Killer.
Lisa
|
174.6 | Yet another movie where Jennifer Jason Leigh takes abuse | ASDG::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Tue May 04 1993 22:42 | 15 |
|
This whole topic was brought on by my watching Last Exit to Brooklyn
yesterday.
The seedier side of repulsive characters brought to your VCR. Slimy
union bosses, domineering fathers, prostitutes, young children with
no future, flaming tranvestites, evil militia men..........throw in constant
headbashing, knives through legs, people hit by cars, people kicked to
death, tear gas, blood, rape.....
You don't feel sorry for anyone by the time this is over.
This one's OK for the VCR.
Lisa
|
174.7 | Soylent Green | 16564::NEWELL_JO | Don't wind your toys too tight | Tue May 04 1993 23:17 | 11 |
| Filled with a dark, depressing look into the future.
Memories of years gone by available only to those who
choose to die. Strawberry jam at $250.00 a jar. Food
processed in wafer form and color-coded for nutrition
levels. Violence and dispair everywhere you looked.
This film disturbed me terribly some 18-19 years ago
when I first saw it and I still can't bring myself
to see it again.
Jodi-
|
174.8 | | 29881::REILLY | Sean Reilly CSG/AVS DTN:293-5983 | Tue May 04 1993 23:22 | 7 |
|
Eraserhead. Definitely.
The soundtrack, the dialog, the images, everything - is depressing
and uncomfortable.
- Sean
|
174.9 | | 6179::VALENZA | My note runneth over. | Wed May 05 1993 00:24 | 6 |
| "The Cook, the Thief, his Wife, and her Lover". I have never hated a
movie so much as I hated this one. I stayed through it all, but when I
walked out of the theatre after it was over my whole day was ruined,
and I just felt disgusted.
-- Mike
|
174.10 | Man Bites Dog | 26608::BRANDENBERG | | Wed May 05 1993 00:26 | 6 |
|
'Man Bites Dog' a Belgian/French film (sorry, I don't have the original
title at hand) currently playing at the Coolidge Corner. First 45
minutes or so you laugh at the satirical portrayal of an absolutely
mechanical killer. Then, it becomes not so funny and you're uncomfortable
about having laughed at it.
|
174.11 | Three more... | 15377::DEMON::COURT | Everybody thought it was a dog. | Wed May 05 1993 09:28 | 11 |
| "Promised Land," a movie starring Keifer Sutherland, Meg Ryan, Jason
Gedrick, and Tracy Pollan. Four high school graduates going nowhere
with one of the most depressing endings I've ever seen.
"Crooked Hearts," with Peter Coyote and others. A family that makes
even the most disfunctional family seem like Ozzie and Harriet.
"Man in the Moon," a "feel good" movie with a "feel real bad" scene
in the middle.
Mike
|
174.12 | La femme Nikita | 58379::BAYNE | relax folks, enjoy the show | Wed May 05 1993 10:37 | 1 |
|
|
174.13 | What a terrible topic | VIA::LILCBR::COHEN | | Wed May 05 1993 10:42 | 6 |
|
Threads - A docudrama of what "really" happens when the Bomb hits. Seemed
very realistic and very depressing. Made "the day after" look like a kiddy show
1984 - The "1984" version. Egads, total depression. My wife threatened to leave
me if I EVER took her to see another movie like that again.
|
174.14 | Nuclear proliferation+dire predictions+the wall | 18583::SHAW | | Wed May 05 1993 10:47 | 8 |
| "Pink Floyd: The Wall" - a must-see after viewing
"THe Man Who Saw Tomorrow" which, as a teenager, I took
WAAAAAAY too seriously.
I walked out of The Wall about halfway through. Maybe it
had a "happy" ending, but I can't bring myself to watch it.
helen
|
174.15 | Feeling good about feeling bad | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i musta got lost | Wed May 05 1993 11:56 | 29 |
| 1) A Handful of Dust - a well done and interesting movie with just
about the bleakest ending I've ever seen...
2) Roger & Me - documentary about lay-offs in Detroit - very
depressing & interesting
3) Matewan - John Sayles movie about union workers trying to get
better rights for mine workers - very good movie -
made me very angry.
4) Kafka - Depressing, had a lot to say & I enjoyed it
5) The Handmaid's Tale - bleak look at a possible rightwing,
religious-nut future, very scary prospect,
but I loved the movie
6) Thelma & Louise - tragic ending, great movie
7) The Stepford Wives - bleak early warning of current feminist
backlash? depressing statement of male
espectations of marriage? but, good movie
8) Of Mice & Men - such a good movie, so depressing (& sort've
uplifting at the same time)
Lorna
|
174.16 | | 5793::STARR | in somebody else's sky.... | Wed May 05 1993 12:07 | 7 |
| 'Rush' with Jennifer Jason-Liegh and Jason Patric.
'Whore' with Thersa Russell.
Lots of classics like 'MacBeth'.....
alan
|
174.17 | I can't wait for Ray to put in his 2 cents | ASDG::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Wed May 05 1993 12:51 | 18 |
|
Oh yeah, A CLockwork Orange. How could I forget this one.
The all-time bleakest view of the future. And having Malcolm McDowell
in the leading role (my nominee for the most physically repungent actor)
helped it out.
What makes it even worse, is that it's probably the "most likely
depressing future to actually occur in real life".
And to get off the subject a bit, has there ever been a movie starring
Jennifer Jason Leigh where good things actually happen to her?
Besides Last Exit to Brooklyn and Rush, she was in Fast Times at Ridgemont
High (where she got cast as a "good girl turned sex maniac turned good girl"
and The Best Little Girl in the World (where she was cast as a girl with
severe anorexia).
Lisa
|
174.18 | The Boost | 58379::BAYNE | relax folks, enjoy the show | Wed May 05 1993 14:32 | 4 |
| Sean Young and James Woods star as a couple getting
addicited/unaddicted/addicted to drugs.
Shawn
|
174.19 | Blade Runner | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Wed May 05 1993 14:34 | 5 |
| _Blade Runner_ Harrison Ford seeking out renegade androids in 21st
(or so) century L.A. Violence, but the worst part was the background
mood of future L.A. being more crowded and filthy than today's L.A.
John
|
174.20 | Three top feel-bads | 32198::KRUEGER | | Wed May 05 1993 16:09 | 13 |
| A Clockwork Orange. The absolute worst ... depressing, violent,
horrifying, disturbing.
Shoot the Moon - Albert Finney and Diane Keaton, about a totally
selfish pig of a man and his affair with Karen Allen and his divorce
from Keaton ... and what it did to his four daughters, especially Dana
Hill, the oldest. Great acting, but definitely a feel bad movie.
Looking for Mr. Goodbar - Poor Diane Keaton! The victim again ... this
time EVERYONE's victim, from her father to her first lover to her last
moments, and everyone in between.
Leslie
|
174.21 | | 12116::MDNITE::RIVERS | Hey you! Get away from dat thing! | Wed May 05 1993 16:36 | 12 |
| Platoon. Not a happy film, by any means, although a good one.
Killing Fields. Although it had a fairly "happy" ending, it was still
a far from happy film.
Hamlet. Jeez. The only film I've seen where everybody dies.
(since Hamlet has been out for what? 300+ years, I hope that isn't a
spoiler... :)
kim
|
174.22 | too scary | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i musta got lost | Wed May 05 1993 16:49 | 6 |
| re .21, I agree with Platoon. I'd add that to my list.
I could only bear to see it once.
Lorna
|
174.23 | A few more war flicks | 58379::BAYNE | relax folks, enjoy the show | Wed May 05 1993 16:57 | 10 |
| A few more:
Casualties of War....Michael J. Fox Sean Penn
Das Boot
Ran
Shawn
|
174.24 | | 6179::VALENZA | My note runneth over. | Wed May 05 1993 17:09 | 4 |
| "After Hours". Even though it was a comedy, I could not bear to watch
it a second time.
-- Mike
|
174.25 | | 16564::NEWELL_JO | Don't wind your toys too tight | Wed May 05 1993 18:46 | 13 |
| Prince of Tides.
I was gripping my armrests through the whole film.
My friend who saw it with me seemed distured as well.
A couple months ago my sister came to visit. I asked
her if she's seen PoT. She shook her head and told
me she flipped out after seeing it and spent several
days for several weeks in therapy.
Can you say dysfunctional family? If you can, then you
can have mine.
Jodi-
|
174.26 | Pre-teen initiation rituals | ASDG::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Wed May 05 1993 18:54 | 20 |
|
Wait, there's this one "educational" film on drugs that they used
to show all the 7th graders in my Middle School. It was called
"Dead is Dead". It basically showed DT's in totally spectacular detail.
You used to see it during health period. Since everyone didn't have health
at the same time, the lucky ones who saw it first told everyone else
about the good parts. "Yeah, like this guy has the runs and you see
go down the side of the toilet, and then this woman pukes to 'Lean on Me',
and then these people with holes in their legs just put the drugs right
in......."
Of course, this was morbidly fascinating material. People used to be
excited that today was the day they would see THE FILM. And then
you saw it and went "EEEEEEEEEEEEEEWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW".
It had no effect whatsoever on anyone's decision whether or not to use
drugs.
Lisa
|
174.27 | We stayed because we kept hoping it would get better | ASDG::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Wed May 05 1993 19:00 | 8 |
|
Tribulation 99.
This was the worst movie I've ever sat all the way through. I felt
awful not only because I had PAID for the experience, but because I had
convinced someone else to come along with me.
Lisa
|
174.28 | very, very, violent | 16913::MEUSE_DA | | Wed May 05 1993 20:10 | 8 |
|
"I Spit On Your Grave"
If you feel good after watching this video, you may need a good
shrink.
|
174.29 | See it with someone you want to commit suicide | 16913::STERN_TO | Tom Stern -- Have TK, will travel! | Wed May 05 1993 20:22 | 20 |
| I have several. Most recently:
Batman Returns. Not the Batman I grew up reding. Also not anything I
remotely considered good. Yet another Tim Burton movie
bemoaning lack of family love.
Crimes and Misdemeanors. Woody Allen has a long discussion explaining
why he had to ruin "Purple Rose of Cairo." Made me root
for Mia.
Sex, Lies, and Videotape. A bunch of unhappy people bemoaning their
unhappiness. I kept waiting for something to happen.
Finally, something did: they turned on the lights.
Dead Poet's Society. Robin Williams as a teacher who commits the
ultimate crime in the school he works for: he teaches his
students how to think on their own (It's possible I hated
this one due to being an ex-schoolteacher).
tom
|
174.30 | | 49438::BARTAK | Andrea Bartak, Vienna, Austria | Thu May 06 1993 08:20 | 7 |
| - Jacob's ladder
- the movie about young man kept prisoner in a turkish jail
becaus of drugs, the title was something with "48 hours"
Andrea
|
174.31 | | 6656::MCGARGHAN | Looking for trouble? I can offer you a wide variety. | Thu May 06 1993 10:02 | 14 |
| RE -1:
I think you mean MIDNIGHT EXPRESS?
***
TRULY, MADLY, DEEPLY -- I enjoyed it but it upset me for days
afterwards. I rented it to watch and had to stop it and cry for a
while before I could stand to finish it.
FRANCES - Jessica Lange as Frances Farmer. The scenes dealing with
mental illness, real or perceived.
|
174.32 | waste of celluloid | 29171::ESTES | | Thu May 06 1993 10:49 | 8 |
|
Two that come to mind right now (I know there are others) are:
DEFCON 4
The Day After
Tim
|
174.33 | | 12116::MDNITE::RIVERS | Hey you! Get away from dat thing! | Thu May 06 1993 11:25 | 9 |
| re. last
DEFCON 4 was more of a bad movie rather than a 'feel bad' movie. I
didn't feel bad after watching this, I felt really stupid for having
wasted 90 minutes of my life doing it.
kim
|
174.34 | 3 more... | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i musta got lost | Thu May 06 1993 12:38 | 16 |
| Goodfellas - the acting was good, but movie was so violent, and
contained such callous attitudes towards human life,
that it made me feel really bad after watching it.
Last of the Mohicans - The blood and guts in this movie was so
sickening that I it made me want to puke.
Full Metal Jacket - This movie made me very angry - the violence,
and the insensitivity of the U.S. Marine
Corps towards soldiers who were having
trouble adjusting to military life sickened
me.
Lorna
|
174.35 | | 3270::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Thu May 06 1993 16:19 | 7 |
| RE: .30 by 49438::BARTAK
>the movie about young man kept prisoner in a turkish jail
>becaus of drugs, the title was something with "48 hours"
2400 hours express?
|
174.36 | | 49438::BARTAK | Andrea Bartak, Vienna, Austria | Fri May 07 1993 05:55 | 10 |
| re..31,.35
.31 is correct - it was of course "Midnight Express".
The German Title was "12:00 h nachts", therefore I was confused with
the hours.
Andrea
|
174.37 | | 7405::MAXFIELD | | Mon May 10 1993 10:21 | 4 |
| "Klute" always depresses me. though it's a good movie, the milieu
is just so sordid.
Richard
|
174.38 | another one | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | not her real initial | Mon May 10 1993 11:12 | 8 |
| Drugstore Cowboy - this movie depresses me, although it's well done and
the acting is good, but as .37 said about Klute,
"the milieu is just so sordid." :-)
(i like that phrase)
Lorna
|
174.39 | | 42712::DUTTONS | | Tue May 11 1993 09:15 | 8 |
| "The War Game" by Peter Watkins, a film about life after nuclear war,
commissioned (and subsequently rejected) by the BBC in the late 60s.
This film will convince *anyone* that the end of the world is nigh,
and very unpleasant.
Matter of fact, all Peter Watkins films feel bad - an Edvard Munch
biopic, a grizzly "documentary" of the battle of Culloden etc. etc.
|
174.40 | | CALLME::MR_TOPAZ | | Tue May 11 1993 09:15 | 3 |
| Sarafina qualifies, esp. since I went into the movie knowing
nothing about it except that it was a musical, starred Whoopi
Goldberg, and took place in S Africa.
|
174.41 | Angst and Ennui, Part 1 | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Ditty Bag | Tue May 11 1993 12:00 | 84 |
| ("Parents" is very special to me since my father looked _exactly_ like
the Randy Quaid character when he was the Quaid character's age and I
was the nerdy boy's age.)
Well, where to begin? As the big hit song from Godard's "The Married
Woman" goes, "Sad movies always make me cry". I love a good wallow in
the sloughs of despond, and, sorry, "Roger & Me" is a mere puddle of
despond.
There was a great silent movie starring Lon Chaney, called "He Who Is
Slapped". I've seen it only once, but the spot is still tender. Tears
of a psychotic clown.
Pabst's "Pandora's Box" is sexy in a Germanic way (i.e., bleak).
Von Stroheim never did much for me, but his silents can't be accused of
cheeriness. Von Sternberg was the Peter Greenaway of his time, and he
had Marlene Dietrich, to boot.
Just about any Garbo movie can be counted on for some lovingly lingered
over torture.
Hitchcock was great at sneaking cynical stories with unlikeable
characters trapped in awful circumstances past mass audiences. An early
example is "Sabotage", with its dull deceitful hero seducing the wife
of a pathetic anarchist, and the suspense scene where we're kept on the
edge of our seats for minutes as a cute little boy and a cute little
puppy sit on a bus with a bomb -- and then Hitchcock blows up the bus.
I'll try to keep the list of favorites short, but there's also:
- "Secret Agent" with John Gielgud as the coldest romantic hero
of all time, and the good guys, with a great deal of effort,
managing to assassinate an innocent man...
- Emotional B&D in "Notorious", with Claude Raines as a
heartbreakingly sweet Nazi...
- "Psycho", the purest demonstration of emptied narrative in the
history of commercial film; only comparable to Antonioni...
- "Vertigo", probably the best of the many melancholy San Francisco
films; as pure a tragedy as film has to offer...
Hitchcock was one jolly fat guy.
Speaking of San Francisco, it doesn't get much bleaker than madcap
Richard Lester's 1968 "Petulia", with George C. Scott in a painfully
accurate divorce, Julie Christie married to wife-beating Richard
Chamberlain, and a classically sardonic last line. I never have
trusted Chamberlain, and he makes a great villain.
Ingmar Bergman is usually touted as the Sultan of Sychodrama, and for
my dirty money, he never did better than "Persona", a grating wildly
experimental look at just how awful life is, particularly human beings.
For some reason, Fellini's "La Dolce Vita" has recently slipped in
critical estimation. I don't know if it's because Fellini became Clown
Central soon afterward or because critics are all thumbs nowadays,
but I still say that any movie which features three pounds of black
make-up under Marcello Mastroianni's eyes, the only decent optimistic
character killing himself and his family, Nico flirting, AND a giant
dead fish, is a damn fine movie.
Michelangelo Antonioni. I love this guy. He's devoted his entire life
to pointing out that inanimate objects, particularly if immobile as
well, are much much more interesting than people. In "Il Grido" you
get to watch a poor slob wander around miserable and lonely from place
to place until he dies. "L'Avventura", or "It's A Wonderful Life,
Not", demonstrates that one person's existence doesn't make a damn bit
of difference to anyone else; all that really matters are rocks. In
"L'Eclisse", the camera spends the last 10 minutes staring at a street
corner where nothing is happening, since both the hero and the heroine
are standing up the date they'd made with each other; the camera is
just as glad. In "Red Desert", we watch a suicidal neurotic woman go
from painful color scheme to painful color scheme, finally seeking
solace in new friend Richard Harris, who promptly date-rapes her;
luckily, the camera has all kinds of neato factories to look at. In
"The Passenger" (the movie Jack Nicholson supressed!), the camera is so
bored that it wanders off in the last 15 minutes to stroll around the
block, while the hero is (somehow) being tracked down and killed
elsewhere. Antonioni doesn't work on TV though, so don't rent the
videos; your attention starts wandering to your carpet, your sofa, the
angle your bookcase makes to the wall...
|
174.42 | This should cure you of the drunk driving habit | ASDG::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Tue May 11 1993 17:58 | 20 |
|
Did your father feed you meat, Ray?
Did I remember to mention Street Trash here?
This, and the remake of the Fly, have been the only two movies I can
remember that actually GROSSED ME OUT.
But Street Trash ws the worse of the two since the storyline was so
sordid. They had all these mentally disturbed bums who had this mini-society
inside a landfill. Most were alcoholics, too, and the story rotated
around this extra cheap Viper vodka that someone had uncovered in a basement
somewhere and was selling to them.
Thing was, if you drank this vodka, your body would turn into blue ooze.
Untold frames of this picture spent showing the transformation from sinew
to jello. And even when you weren't watching people melt, the characters
kept sending you into the bathroom for appointments with the ceramic
therapist.
Lisa
|
174.43 | I forgot, this one grossed me out too. | ASDG::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Tue May 11 1993 18:00 | 17 |
| Did I mention Pink Flamingos here yet?
This was an early John Waters film featuring really awful characters
and despicable acts.
There's one woman who spends the whole film in a playpen, fawning over
the milkman and his eggs. There's a talent show where some guy shows us
amazing feats you can do with your rectal opening.
And then there's the climax, which I had been tipped off to earlier, where
Divine coprophagiates. Even though I knew it was going to happen
it was a far more nefarious occurance to watch I ever could have expected.
This and Street Trash are probabaly the only two movies I find too
disgusting to ever watch again.
Lisa
|
174.44 | Randy's cuter, younger brother? | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | not her real initial | Tue May 11 1993 18:03 | 4 |
| re .41, do you have any relatives that look like *Dennis* Quaid? :-)
Lorna
|
174.45 | Yes, my father made me eat pot roast | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Ditty Bag | Tue May 11 1993 19:32 | 14 |
| > re .41, do you have any relatives that look like *Dennis* Quaid? :-)
No, but nowadays my father looks like Jonathan Winters.
"Street Trash" is sickening, but I give it points for attitude.
Edie the Egg Lady (from "Pink Flamingos") is a real hero of mine and I
won't hear a word agin her. Many's the smooth move I've made on a lust
object while repeating those sacred words, "Ooooh, I love you, too! But
<giggle> I love my eggy-weggies just a little bit more!"
"The Fly" will be in Part 3.
Ray
|
174.46 | | 6179::VALENZA | My note runneth over. | Tue May 11 1993 23:14 | 8 |
| I remember watching "Pink Flamingos" in an Indianapolis theatre and
hearing a woman behind me saying, "This is disgusting!" And that was
only five minutes into the movie! She walked out long before Divine's
infamous scene at the end.
"Pink Flamingos" is definitely an experience. :-)
-- Mike
|
174.47 | | 42712::DUTTONS | | Wed May 12 1993 09:23 | 12 |
| Ohhhh....
I thought "Pink Flamingoes" was a lovely film. Age 18 I wanted
to live in that world like age 4 I wanted to be in "Play School".
Another happy one is the highly graphic "Pure Sh*t", a mid-70s
documentary about Melbourne junkies. If you ever thought of taking
a needle to your veins...
An obvious feel-bad candidate is that film by the guy who made
"Solaris" - you know, the one where the house burns. Also destroying
houses - Antonioni's "Zabriskie Point".
|
174.48 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | not her real initial | Wed May 12 1993 10:32 | 12 |
| Another feel bad movie: Shalom Bombay - I think that's the title?
Is that the title of that
movie that came out a couple
of years ago about the life
of a street kid in Bombay?
That movie made me think, "Wow! I'd hate to be a street kid in
Bombay, you know?" :-) Very depressing.
Lorna
|
174.49 | Clean & Sober | 6862::BROOMFIELD | | Wed May 12 1993 13:36 | 5 |
|
Michael Keaton doing a good job playing a drug and alcohol abuser
in an excellent drama that made me squirm.
Mike
|
174.50 | ZZZZZZZZZZZZ | 6602::SCHIAVONE | Don't ever try to put me down! | Wed May 12 1993 13:36 | 5 |
|
What about "My Own Private Idaho" ? Sad Sad Sad
/Cap'n Quad
|
174.51 | The Good Soldier | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Wed May 12 1993 14:09 | 13 |
| .41> I love a good wallow in the sloughs of despond, and, sorry,
.41> "Roger & Me" is a mere puddle of despond.
If Topaz is gonna object to abuse of "Vomitorium" then I've got to
praise Ray's clever construct that makes dual use of the noun "slough".
Probably a bit too exotic to submit to Reader's Digest, though.
Another FeelBad movie is "The Good Soldier", Ford Madox Ford's tale of
two couples, one American one English, in early 20th century Europe.
Wealth fails to buy happiness. I've only got the PBS tape, don't know
if it's been produced for the big screen.
John
|
174.52 | | 6179::VALENZA | No. | Wed May 12 1993 14:37 | 4 |
| I don't think anyone has mentioned "Sid & Nancy" yet, but that was a
definite downer.
-- Mike
|
174.53 | sad ver 2 | 29171::ESTES | | Wed May 12 1993 14:45 | 8 |
|
I have to agree with .50 (6602::SCHIAVONE) My Own Private Idaho was
a pitiful excuse for a film.
Tim
|
174.54 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | not her real initial | Wed May 12 1993 16:14 | 8 |
| re .53, if I say I consider a movie a downer, or a feel bad movie, that
doesn't mean that I didn't think it was a good movie. In fact, I think
that just about all the movies I've mentioned in this topic were good
movies. I think My Own Private Idaho was somewhat sad, but I enjoyed
it a lot, and thought it was a good movie.
Lorna
|
174.55 | Sorry | 29171::ESTES | | Wed May 12 1993 17:25 | 9 |
|
re .54
My apologies Lorna, when I replied to .50 about "My Own Private
Idaho" I mistakingly thought I was in the "Vomitorium" note which is
where "My Own Private Idaho" belongs in my opinion. A sad movie yes and
a waste of time, again my own opinion.
Tim
|
174.56 | Blue Movies | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Ditty Bag | Wed May 12 1993 17:55 | 12 |
| > An obvious feel-bad candidate is that film by the guy who made
> "Solaris" - you know, the one where the house burns.
Andrei Tarkovsky, one of my favorite directors. Another for Part 3.
(No one is gonna be interested in Part 2, I can tell already.)
My favorite junkie movie is "Trash", but it's a comedy of manners.
"Zabriskie Point & Click" and "My Privates Look Like Potatoes" are
both too upbeat for my taste.
Ray
|
174.57 | Cuckoo's nest | 51219::GREAR_R | | Thu May 13 1993 08:10 | 2 |
| Has no one ever been depressed by "one flew over the Cuckoo's nest"?
I am every time ;-{
|
174.58 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Thu May 13 1993 11:38 | 10 |
| re .57, I think "One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest" is one of those
movies that is both depressing an uplifting at the same time.
Something bad happens to one of the main characters, but something good
happens to another one, for example.
I think Awakenings is similar in that it's depressing, but with an
ultimately uplifting and affirmative ending.
Lorna
|
174.59 | Hustling = No FUN | 6602::SCHIAVONE | Don't ever try to put me down! | Thu May 13 1993 13:03 | 17 |
| > My apologies Lorna, when I replied to .50 about "My Own Private
> Idaho" I mistakingly thought I was in the "Vomitorium" note which is
> where "My Own Private Idaho" belongs in my opinion. A sad movie yes and
> a waste of time, again my own opinion.
Thanks for clarifying Tim, I liked MOPI and was not refering to sad
as the state of the movie but how it made me feel.
IMHO
/Cap'n Quad
|
174.60 | | 3759::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Fri May 14 1993 09:32 | 14 |
| RE: .48 by VAXWRK::STHILAIRE
>Another feel bad movie: Shalom Bombay - I think that's the title?
"Salaam Bombay", I think.
"Galipolli" and "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" were two that left me
sitting helplessly in tears at the end.
"J.F.K." had me in tears before the opening credits had finished.
"It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World" had me in tears at the end and not
from laughter. I was devastated by Spencer Tracy's surprising turn.
|
174.61 | | 12116::MDNITE::RIVERS | Hey! Get away from dat thing! | Fri May 14 1993 10:43 | 7 |
|
That's true. How could I forget "Gallipoli"? Or "Breaker Morant"?
Egad. They're both great, but utterly depressing.
kim
|
174.62 | Reservoir Dogs | 58379::BAYNE | relax folks, enjoy the show | Fri May 14 1993 11:50 | 4 |
| One of the best movies I've seen in a while, but the outcome is totally
downbeat.
Shawn
|
174.63 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Fri May 14 1993 12:01 | 7 |
| Re .62: Well, that's a matter of opinion. Under the circumstances, I
think things turned out as happily as they possibly could for nearly
everybody concerned.
;-)
-b
|
174.64 | speaking of dogs... | 16564::NEWELL_JO | Don't wind your toys too tight | Fri May 14 1993 13:21 | 2 |
| A Boy and His Dog
(with a young Don Johnson)
|
174.65 | Blue Velvet | BRAT::PAQUETTE_L | | Fri May 14 1993 13:26 | 1 |
| Blue Velvet. Extremely disturbing and kind of creepy.
|
174.66 | | 26523::LASKY | | Fri May 14 1993 13:45 | 4 |
| How about "Glory" very good flick but depressing and true ending.
Bart
|
174.67 | Feeling good | 57133::RYDBERG | | Fri May 14 1993 16:57 | 16 |
| 1) Full Metal Jacket - Didn't Stanly Kubrick direct? Twilight Zone
movie with no hope; could have been called "Waiting to Die" - How do
others feel this compared with other Vietnam movies? Different topic?
2) Clockwork Orange - the glorification of violence; made it look good,
like it was the wave of the future and "the way to go" Somehow this
didn't depress me.
3) The Crying Game - the love story didn't take away the underlying
feel of hopelessness and violence as a way of life
4) Can't remember the name - amateur writer who goes to Hollywood to be
a screenwriter; holes up in this room - John Goodman is his neighbor in
the hotel; the place goes up in flames???
|
174.68 | Who's afraid of Virginia Woolf? | 3173::MCCARTHY | | Fri May 14 1993 17:27 | 4 |
|
My favorite feel bad movie is Who's afraid of Virginia Woolf?
------MM
|
174.69 | Barton Fink | 16821::POGAR | Resident Movie Critic & Costner Fan | Fri May 14 1993 17:31 | 4 |
| Re: .67
Barton Fink
|
174.70 | And don't forget "Detour" -- ugly people for ugly times! | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Ditty Bag | Mon May 17 1993 13:57 | 111 |
| I have two words for you: Film Noir.
This tag (French for "blaxploitation") was attached after the fact to
movies made in the '40s and '50s, movies which, like mudskippers and
Digital middle management, adapted in a wondrous way to environmental
stress.
Lots of movies had to be made. They had to be made cheap. They had to
be made interesting. Finally, any action (at least, any action too
morally complex for an average Care Bear to handle before breakfast)
had to be punished.
Film Noir is easily derived from these conditions:
If Cheap, then no Spectacle.
If Interesting and not-Spectacle, then Action.
If Action, then Punishment.
Punishment is therefore Inevitable.
If Punishment and Inevitable, then Fate.
If Punishment and Interesting, then Sadism.
Therefore, "Sadistic Fate", or Film Noir. Q.E.D.
Sadistic Fate also turned out to be an abiding personal concern for
European and other artsy directors once they realized that they were
stuck in Hollywood, leading to lots of cool Expressionist and Brechtian
influences.
Orson Welles, for example, supplied an unprepared world with "The Lady
From Shanghai", the only film in which Welles as director didn't give
his own role a death scene. Instead he killed his career. This
bizarre concoction of misogyny, misanthropy, homophobia, suicide, class
war, insults to Rita Hayworth (Welle's wife at the time, and indirect
source of funding), courtroom drama worthy of the Three Stooges, and a
slipping brogue, may be the most intensely deliberate self-destructive
act in American film.
And many years later, Welles helped close the Film Noir era with "Touch
of Evil", the ugliest beautifully made movie until "Eraserhead". Of
course, with a cast like Charlton "Where is my GUN?!" Heston, Janet
Leigh, Marlene Dietrich, Dennis Weaver, and Mercedes McCambridge, who
needs special effects? Welles _gained_ _weight_ for this film. Don't
miss the scene where Janet Leigh is gang-raped, injected with heroin,
and wakes up directly under the protuding eyes and tongue of a fat guy
who was strangled to death. "All border towns bring out the worst in a
country, Susie."
Fritz Lang supplied many a gloomy look at America before finally giving
up on us. "The Big Heat" is classic Noir, with stiffnecked cop Glenn
Ford going dingo, Lee Marvin doing his best gorilla, and Noir Dream
Girl Gloria Grahame getting horribly scarred.
A number of fine talents produced a number of Doomed Young Lovers
Escaping from the Law films, which, as "Thelma & Louise" and "Guncrazy"
shows, is still the most sure-fired way to achieve great movie
romance. And Lang got it started in 1937 with "You Only Live Once",
starring Sylvia Sidney and a blindingly young Henry Fonda.
Twelve years later, Nicholas Ray started his career with "They Live By
Night", the most elegaic lovers-on-the-lam tribute ever. The actors
are perfection, and the film is not only stronger than its source (the
novel "Thieves Like Us") but stronger than its remake by Robert Altman,
usually no slouch in the feel-bad movie dept.
As Godard once said, "You can imagine John Ford as a career military
man, you can imagine Frank Tashlin as a brain surgeon, but you can't
imagine Nicholas Ray doing anything but making movies." Not until
Martin Scorsese was there another director who combined imaginative
storytelling, beautifully meaningful visuals, and the knack of dragging
actors' best performances of them with rusty pliers. "Rebel Without a
Cause" is as good a way as any to watch Sal Mineo crack up; "On
Dangerous Ground" is a fine way to watch Robert Ryan grind his teeth
below the gumline; and so on.
But my favorite Nick Ray movie is "In a Lonely Place", where Humphrey
Bogart gives the performance of his life. I mean that literally: he
seems to be dissecting the "Bogie" persona he assumed in life,
stripping it down to bare jagged shards of self-destructive
intelligence. Gloria Grahame lays back, acts cool, and thereby drifts
way too far from shore. (Grahame was married to Ray at the time the
film was started; like Hayworth for Welles, she helped get studio
support for him, and so she and Ray kept their divorce mid-film a
secret. A short while after it was released, she married Ray's son.
Not surprising that the movie feels like Ray is doing open heart
surgery on himself... "Nurse! Bring that shaving mirror closer!")
The Film Noir label is usually found sticking to the gumshoes of
semi-psychotic flatfoots and the dirty collars of petty criminals, but
I believe it's useful when considering horror movies, comedies, and
Westerns as well.
The classiest acts in Film Noir may have been put together by director
Jacques Tourneur, associated with gorgeous heavy-cream cinematography
and snappy morally ambiguous scripts. "Out of the Past" has been
called the Ultimate Robert Mitchum Movie, and what can we add other
than that it also contains the Kirk Douglas's most believable role, in
which he intimidates by sheer sleaziness.
But Tourneur's other masterpiece was nominally horror: "Cat People",
with Simone Simon as the Ineffable Other, first seduced, then betrayed,
and finally murdered by Normal Sensible People, with assistence from a
psychiatrist who routinely sexually assaulted his patients. "Cat
People" is so depressing that it was the first movie I was able to
watch after my quasi-divorce.
Fritz Lang's cop movies are great, but he went further over the top
with "Rancho Notorious", a color-saturated musical Western tragedy
starring Marlene Dietrich and the ever-morally-flawed Arthur Kennedy.
The chorus of the cowboy ballad theme song goes: "Hate! Murder! And
revenge!" Ki-yi-yi-yo yippy-yo yippy-yay!
Ray
|
174.71 | "Have you been reading 'Playboy' again?" | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Ditty Bag | Mon May 17 1993 16:42 | 30 |
| Although I included a bumper crop of typos in that last reply, I forgot
to include my current favorite example of Film Noir comedy.
The '50s approach to sex -- a desparate sweaty leer somehow both
infantile and deathlike -- makes sex farces of the period fairly
excruciating experiences. Feel Bad experiences, in fact.
Now Billy Wilder strived for dark cynical depression in many films, but
I don't trust his blue moods -- too facile -- until "Kiss Me, Stupid",
the sex farce to end all (his) sex farces. Technically speaking, it
came out in 1964 (even includes a couple of uneasy Beatles jokes), but
it capped its decayed era like pre-yellowed dental work.
Dean Martin, the most metaphysically distressing of all pop musicians,
is the star. Well, we could stop right there. But co-stars are Ray
Walston, as horribly creepy and clinging as Anthony Quinn's underwear,
playing the American Hubby role too gruesome for Tom Ewell! That
deserves another "!": ! And, as "sexpot" (good description, since
she's treated pretty much like a spittoon), that most underrated of
tragic actresses, Kim Novak, who in this movie is once again forced by
an obsessive lunatic to roleplay above her station.
The recent video release loses the Panavision, alas. In a Real
Theater, you feel _surrounded_ by rank sleaze. All the thrills of a
three-day delousing festival or a Woods Meeting, with none of the
salary. But the photography (clinical), the pacing (painful), and the
acting (halitosis) can still be appreciated on the small screen. I
spread newspapers under mine first.
Ray
|
174.72 | yippee!! the evening's looking up :-) | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Mon May 17 1993 16:54 | 5 |
| re .71, well, I don't know about anybody else, but I'm going to stop
and rent it on my way home tonight!!
Lorna
|
174.73 | Volleyball in Cambodia | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Ditty Bag | Mon May 17 1993 19:20 | 7 |
| Cool, Lorna -- hope you enjoy it!
And while you're there, might as well reserve a copy of "Shoah" for
your next birthday -- great party flick! I used to swear by "The
Sorrow & the Pity" but "Shoah"'s got nicer scenery.
Ray
|
174.74 | One happy, one sad | RAB::KARDON | When to kiss and when to kill? | Wed May 19 1993 12:48 | 15 |
| > This whole topic was brought on by my watching Last Exit to Brooklyn
> yesterday.
While maybe not the most depressing movie I have ever seen, it
definately depressed me more than any other film. It completely wiped
out the remainder of the NYC romp me and some friends of mine were
in the midst of. When especially down, we still make comparisons
to this movie.
Somebody earlier had mentioned Brazil as a depressing film. I found
it to be completely the opposite. I thought it was the exhilarating
story of how somebody found an escape from the oppressive world in
which he lived.
-Scott
|
174.75 | | 3270::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Wed May 19 1993 14:34 | 10 |
| RE: .74 by RAB::KARDON
>Somebody earlier had mentioned Brazil as a depressing film. I found
>it to be completely the opposite. I thought it was the exhilarating
>story of how somebody found an escape from the oppressive world in
>which he lived.
I suspect you did not see the director's version, but rather the studio
version.
|
174.77 | Brazil | 58379::BAYNE | relax folks, enjoy the show | Wed May 19 1993 15:59 | 12 |
| re .75
>>I suspect you did not see the director's version, but rather the studio
>>version.
Dennis
Could you differentiate the two endings. In the version I remember, the
escape from the oppressive world happened only in our hero's mind......
Alzheimerly
Shawn
|
174.78 | I was cured, all right | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Ditty Bag | Wed May 19 1993 16:42 | 4 |
| The "director's cut" actually _doesn't_ differ all that radically from
the original release. The, er, happy ending is in both.
Ray
|
174.79 | Sniff | RAB::KARDON | When to kiss and when to kill? | Wed May 19 1993 17:31 | 21 |
| >> Somebody earlier had mentioned Brazil as a depressing film. I found
>> it to be completely the opposite. I thought it was the exhilarating
>> story of how somebody found an escape from the oppressive world in
>> which he lived.
> I suspect you did not see the director's version, but rather the studio
> version.
Actually, I've seen both versions multiple times. Ray is correct that
the "happy" ending is in both.
On another note, the single scene which affected me the most was the
one in Gallopli (sp?) when the soldier about to march off on a suicidal
charge (which was supposed to be prevented) removes his wedding ring
and leaves it to be found by some future survivor.
For some reason, that extreme acceptance of death was the saddest scene
I've ever seen in a movie (although my mood at the time might have
heightened the experience).
-Scott
|
174.80 | | 26523::LASKY | | Wed May 19 1993 17:37 | 4 |
| The movie Glory was way up there in the depressing dept. A very
graphic and up close look at the Civil War.
Bart
|
174.81 | | 7094::VALENZA | Mars needs flip flops. | Wed May 19 1993 17:59 | 9 |
| I would distinguish between movies that are tragic but deeply moving,
and those that are mean spirited or revolting. To me, movies like
"Gallipoli" and "Breaker Morant", while tragic, were still enjoyable
because they appealed to one's moral sense of right and wrong, and did
so in a way that was moving. I was angry *with* these movies, not *at*
them. So, in that sense, I wouldn't categorize every movie with an
unhappy ending as a "feel bad" movie.
-- Mike
|
174.82 | | 42712::DUTTONS | | Thu May 20 1993 07:57 | 4 |
| > I wouldn't categorize every movie with an unhappy ending
> as a "feel bad" movie
Absolutely. As Aristotle pointed out, a tragic movie is a feelgood movie.
|
174.83 | a couple more | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Thu May 20 1993 10:41 | 22 |
| re .82, I didn't know Aristotle was a movie buff...
Anyway, I thought of two more movies that I'd consider to be Feel Bad
Movies:
1) Sweetie - This is an Australian film about a woman who has an
extremely obese, mentally retarded sister called
Sweetie. Taking care of her impacts the lives of
the entire family in a very depressing way. Also,
the ending of the movie is terribly depressing and
Sweetie is a repulsive character. I felt bad after
I watched it.
2) Ironweed - Starring Meryl Streep and Jack Nicholson as two
homeless alcoholics during the depression of the
1930's. A very dismal view of life.
Lorna
|
174.84 | Depressing | 31790::KRUEGER | | Thu May 20 1993 11:19 | 6 |
| I agree about Ironweed, Lorna. I also thought Barfly was the same kind
of depressing movie, with Mickey Rourke and Faye Dunaway. Kind of
makes you wonder why you pay good money to see excellent actors depress
the hell out of you!
Leslie
|
174.85 | Feel Baddest | 31790::KRUEGER | | Thu May 20 1993 11:22 | 8 |
| Okay, it just hit me ... the worst "feel bad" movie I've ever seen
outside of Clockwork Orange is "Soldier Blue" ... a western about the
massacre of Custer's last stand ... little children hanging from
bayonets, speared through spikes ... the main character vomited when he
saw the destruction, and I almost joined him. A horrible, horrible
movie.
Leslie
|
174.86 | | 8269::MARTINN | I saw it on a PBS documentary | Thu May 20 1993 12:12 | 8 |
| Oh yea, I've just caught on to what 'feel bad movies' means (DUH!!!)!
;-) (p.s. most 'feel bad movies' for me though usually end up bringing
about some type of inspiration)
So the movie I'd have to nominate in this category is one that left my
crying for a good fifteen minutes afterwards....Boyz in the Hood!
Natalie
|
174.87 | Sailor Who Fell From Grace | 21752::SFRASER | | Thu May 20 1993 12:29 | 12 |
| I'm usually a read-only noter, but after reading the last
note, a movie came to mind. I couldn't talk for hours after
leaving the theatre it left such an impression on me.
The Sailor Who Fell From Grace With The Sea
It starred Chris Kristofferson and a relatively unknown
actress (at the time) who has since been in many movies.
I don't know her name.
I wonder if it affected anyone else....
|
174.88 | I think it was . . . | 42721::IVES_J | One i-node short of a file system | Thu May 20 1993 12:36 | 4 |
| I *think* it was Sarah Miles who was last seen (by me anyway) in John
Boormans 'Hope and Glory'. She was a 60's wild child but has not been
seen that much of late.
|
174.89 | Thanks | 21752::SFRASER | | Thu May 20 1993 12:41 | 1 |
| Yes, she's the one.
|
174.90 | | 42712::DUTTONS | | Thu May 20 1993 13:17 | 4 |
| > Sweetie
FWIW - this high-grade feel-bad was directed by Jane
Campion, who later did "An Angel at My Table".
|
174.91 | Based on a true story | 6240::HALL | Dale | Thu May 20 1993 13:40 | 6 |
| My "favorite" feel-bad movie is "I Want to Live!" starring Susan Hayward
as a convicted murderer emphatically maintaining her innocence through a
series of appeals in California in the 1950's. Filmed in black and
white for extra feel-bad ambiance -
Dale
|
174.92 | The Whining of the Lambs | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Ditty Bag | Thu May 20 1993 13:48 | 12 |
| Jane Campion is a Feel-Bad genius. "Sweetie" was awesome. "An Angel
at My Table" really made you feel like you were right there spending
decades inside a geeky psychotic writer with bad teeth -- much much
better done than stoopid ripoffs like "Barton Fink". Campion's shorts
are nothing to laugh at, either.
But she's not Australian. She's New Zealand through and through.
Judging by movies and music, the New Zealandish outlook isn't as
frat-party as the Australian. It's more like Finland, kind of lumpy
and morose.
Ray
|
174.93 | a new take on tree houses | 9439::bence | A life of shape... | Thu May 20 1993 15:32 | 6 |
|
another vote for "Sweetie" - a character and movie that sticks with you
(no matter how hard you try to forget it.)
The person who took me to see this gets "thanked" at regular intervals.
|
174.94 | | 3270::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Thu May 20 1993 15:57 | 21 |
| RE: .79 by RAB::KARDON
"Brazil"
>> I suspect you did not see the director's version, but rather the studio
>> version.
>Actually, I've seen both versions multiple times. Ray is correct that
>the "happy" ending is in both.
I've not seen it, but I recall hearing of a version that was shown on
TV that had an ending that was different than the theatrical version.
>On another note, the single scene which affected me the most was the
>one in Gallopli (sp?) when the soldier about to march off on a suicidal
>charge (which was supposed to be prevented) removes his wedding ring
>and leaves it to be found by some future survivor.
Sort of like in "Glory" when Matthew Broderick sends his horse off down
the beach. He just knows he's never coming back.
|
174.95 | | 42712::DUTTONS | | Fri May 21 1993 07:50 | 26 |
| RE .92
> Jane Campion
> She's New Zealand through and through
Not really - Jane Campion was born in New Zealand, but has lived,
worked and gone to film school in Australia. "An Angel at My Table"
was an OZ/NZ production; "Sweetie" was an Australian production set,
as I remember, in Melbourne.
> Judging by movies and music, the New Zealandish outlook isn't as
> frat-party as the Australian.
Antipodean pundits have been playing spot-the-difference for years,
but really there's far more diversity within each country than between
them. There *is* a mushy-macho side to Australian movies and music -
from Peter Weir to Baz Luhrmann, Percy Grainger to Nick Cave - but I
think Gillian Armstrong or Yothu Yindi would resent having their outlook
described as "frat-party"!
> New Zealand
> It's more like Finland, kind of lumpy and morose.
How very true - maybe Aki Kaurismaki should make a film about sheep
farming?
|
174.96 | like "Bad Lieutenant" vs. "Beverly Hills Cop" | 32779::LABUDDE | Denial is not a river in Egypt | Fri May 21 1993 10:20 | 11 |
|
Re: "Sweetie" vs. "Barton Fink"....
Since "Barton Fink" was basically a comedy, comparisons to "Sweetie" or any
other movie -- just because they happen to be about writers - is pretty
hard to justify.
The intent of these movies would seem to be worlds apart from
the get-go. But hey, how about "Sweetie" vs. "Kafka"?
|
174.97 | | 8269::MARTINN | I saw it on a PBS documentary | Fri May 21 1993 12:04 | 5 |
| re. The Sailor Who Fell From Grace With The Sea
I've never heard of it.....do you know if it's out on video yet?
Natalie
|
174.98 | "The Hindenburg" vs. "The Life & Death of Colonel Blimp" | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Ditty Bag | Fri May 21 1993 13:29 | 3 |
| Now I _really_ feel bad.
Ray
|
174.99 | | 29067::A_PARRACO | I vent, therefore I am ... | Fri May 21 1993 21:38 | 10 |
|
How 'bout 'Henry, Portrait of a Serial Killer' ?
Sean Penn's 'The Indian Runner' was pretty depressing too ...
'Touch of Evil' is just plain GREAT ! Seedy, seedy, seedy - I always
want a shower after seeing it ! And what a soundtrack by Mancini, love
those bongos !
- acp
|
174.100 | Ack | ASDG::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Sat May 22 1993 01:27 | 17 |
|
Hey, my note is the first to get 100 replies! Wow!
Just so that I make this a somewhat useful reply, a while back
someone mentioned Frances. The ultimate in victimization movies.
"What, you don't want to be a starlet, Frances? You must be sick,
we'll send you to this nice hospital....."
X-The Man With X-Ray Eyes -----the last scene in this is brilliant,
and I read that the last line in this film was supposed to be "I can
still see!" but the studio thought it too terrifying at the time and had
it snipped.
Watching the movies that they used as the background for the Butthole Surfers
left me revolted for days.
Lisa
|
174.101 | When Johnny cmes marchin' home... | 6602::SCHIAVONE | Don't ever try to put me down! | Sat May 22 1993 08:59 | 14 |
|
RE- Henry, POASK
Wow I forgot about that one, that was depressing, and scary
to think about. Imagine being that bored. He was a great instructor
though. A true love story also???
Lisa,
No more RadRad or what? Are movies the thing to do down
South. My sister just came back from GA. and she must have gone to
4 a week! Although Atlanta can be pretty hip.
/Cap'n Quad
|
174.102 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Sun May 23 1993 22:19 | 22 |
| I caught a nice little downer this weekend - "Morning Departure," a
1950 film about a sunken submarine. <pause while the groans subside>
There've been heaps of sunken-sub movies [and, come to think of it, why
not? Subs _are_ under water most of the time; what other kind of sub
movie could one make?], and many of them seem to have tragic (or at
least semi-tragic) endings [like, oddly enough, most real-life
submarine sinkings], but this one had an extra touch of "what's the
use" to it. While most of the sub-disaster flicks I've seen have
involved wartime heroics and/or some kind of technological
super-hackery (tip-off line: "Dammit, man, I know it's a million-to-
one shot, but IT MIGHT WORK!", or the alternate: "I know we'll risk
destroying the whole ship/space station/planet, but we have to
_try_!"), this one was (a) set in peacetime, and (b) stuck to procedure
throughout. "This is what they do when a sub's overdue. This is what we
do to help them find us. This is what they do when they have found us.
This is what we do next." Etc.... But, you know, sometimes you can do
everything right and still lose.
Very cheery movie. Made me feel whole heaps better about having
cutworms in my basil. ;-)
-b
|
174.103 | | 12116::MDNITE::RIVERS | Hey! Get away from dat thing! | Mon May 24 1993 11:21 | 8 |
| Having watched it this weekend, I would say that "The Player" rather
fits the Feel Bad category -- a very good picture, but with a
completely cynical, depressing (and somewhat unsatisfying) ending. Not
that I expected any different by the time the end credits rolled
around.
kim
|
174.104 | Marnie | 17655::LAYTON | | Mon May 24 1993 16:21 | 5 |
| Speaking of Hitchcock, (back a few score notes...) I thought Marnie was
a right depressing flick. I can't remember the ending, but the mood of
the movie was tres noir.
Carl
|
174.105 | It's worse than you think | 58633::MCRAM | Marshall Cram DTN 631-7162 | Tue May 25 1993 15:20 | 14 |
|
re -2. Apparently "Morning Departure" had a ironic twist. It
concerned a Royal Navy sub going down after leaving port. Between the
finish of production and release a RN submarine left port and went down
with loss of the entire crew, closely paralleling the movie.
They delayed opening the movie.
They were concerned about the relative's reaction. After much agonizing
and consultation they went ahead, even in the sub home ports. There was
no adverse reaction, perhaps because they went to pains not to
capitalize on headline story.
That makes a *real* feel bad movie.
|
174.106 | "Man Bites Dog" | KOLFAX::WIEGLEB | Question Reality | Tue May 25 1993 19:43 | 11 |
| Probably deserves its own topic, but...
"Man Bites Dog" - A Belgian documentary film crew follows a (rather
genial) serial killer around as he offs several score people.
Something of a comedy, but the laughter gets increasingly curdled as
the film progresses. A shower would have been insufficent afterward -
perhaps a good sand-blasting would do.
As dark as they come...
- Dave
|
174.107 | Feeling bad for Kris! | 32198::KRUEGER | | Thu May 27 1993 11:53 | 11 |
| The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea starred Kris Kristofferson
and Sarah Miles and was a VERY tragic movie. But the publicity
surrounding the movie was very hot; Miles and a very drunk
Kristofferson did a Playboy spread of their nude love scenes in the
movie and so infuriated Rita Coolidge, Kristofferson's wife at the
time, that she left him.
The movie IS on video because I rented it one night for my boyfriend
who hadn't seen it.
Leslie
|
174.108 | | 42721::IVES_J | One i-node short of a file system | Thu May 27 1993 12:47 | 8 |
| I think this film (TSWFFGWTS) is based on a book by the equally
controversial Japanese writer Mishima, who in turn had a film made about
him by francis Ford Coppola ('A life in 4 chapters').
Most famous for attempting a military coup in Japan which failed so he
committed ritual suicide in front of the troops at the military
accademy. he was obsessed with the image of St Sabastianne,who was tied up
and shot through with arrows.
|
174.109 | Hara Karaoke | KOLFAX::WIEGLEB | Question Reality | Thu May 27 1993 13:50 | 7 |
| Rathole alert:
"Mishima" was actually directed by Paul Schrader (1985).
Coppola may very well have produced it, but my own guess would be
Scorsese. (Schrader wrote the screenplay for "Taxi Driver".)
- Dave
|
174.110 | i still have nightmares... | 5468::HABER | supercalifragilisticexpialidocious | Fri May 28 1993 12:43 | 6 |
| re: 107 --
i saw Sailor... i still have nightmares about the final scenes.
brrrr. and it's been years!
sandy
|
174.111 | | 3270::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Fri May 28 1993 16:10 | 9 |
| When I saw "The Sailor Who Fell From Grace With The Sea" I sat in
front of four late-middle-aged ladies who got hysterical during the
scene where Miles and Kristofferson have tea in a restaurant full of
people while certain things occur under the table.
Come to think of it, it reminds me of the faked orgasm scene in that
Rob Reiner film, only Miles wasn't faking it. Heck, I don't even think
she was acting.
|
174.112 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Mon May 31 1993 17:13 | 17 |
| Another feel-bad flick: "Sweet Charity". Something in between
eavesdropping on a gossipy phone conversation between high-school kids
and watching a stray puppy trying to find somebody to follow home, but
getting cans tied to its tail at every turn. Oh, and then there's the
delicious fillip of having one's most squirm-inducing memories
recalled every now and then - incidents perhaps not quite as
humiliating as those our heroine suffers, but still too close for
comfort.
I think the ending's supposed to be upbeat, but I just saw the kind of
numb exhaustion that (in my experience) usually follows a "dark night
of the soul". Reaction: "Damn - all that pain, and I didn't die. What
do I do now?"
I guess I really shouldn't watch this movie. ;-)
-b
|
174.113 | | VAXWRK::ELKINS | Adam Elkins @MSO | Tue Jun 01 1993 15:48 | 3 |
|
'Night Mother. Great movie, but so depressing.
|
174.114 | | 6729::PATTON | | Tue Jun 01 1993 15:49 | 5 |
| "The Handmaid's Tale" - whew. I thought it did a very good job
of translating the book to screen: I felt worse watching the
movie than reading the book.
Lucy
|
174.115 | Feel bad??? Alexina is for you!! | 57176::MILANESE | | Wed Jul 14 1993 17:47 | 31 |
| I rented a French flick over the
weekend, called "Alexina", set
in mid 1800's in France about
a hermaphrodite, who has been reared
as a girl but as an adult has the
sexual organs of a man.
It's subtitled (some people don't like
subtitled movies) and the end
{spoiler warning}
is quite sad as Alexina has his
sex "Officially" changed on his
birth certificate from a woman to
a man. He has fallen in love with
a woman, wants to marry her, and
needs to find his way in the world
as a man in order to marry her.
BUT...because their affair started
when they both were "female", they
caused a huge scandal. The ex-lover
marries someone else and Alexina ends
us killing himself.
A very different movie, showing the
hatred, prejudice, and intolerance of
people.
the world
|
174.116 | "Repulsion" | 31787::CONNELLY | Network partner excited | Mon Jul 26 1993 02:43 | 6 |
|
Catherine Deneuve goes homicidally insane when left alone for the weekend.
A film with no redeeming qualities (unlike other downers like "Gallipoli"
and "Glory"). Technically very well done though.
paul
|
174.117 | Oh, yeah, Repulsion | 57176::MILANESE | | Mon Jul 26 1993 15:28 | 8 |
| I remember seeing Repulsion when
I was a teenager and thinking it
was weird. Of course, I didn't
understand it, though.
Wasn't that a Roman Polanski picture...
of course, he's a weird guy, so I
guess it follows.
|
174.118 | Repulsion to Beauty | ISLNDS::HERMAN | What's so funny 'bout P,L&U? | Mon Jul 26 1993 18:27 | 48 |
|
re .116
"Repulsion" is a truly horrifying film. One of Roman Polanski's earlier
efforts (1963?) with a very young Catherine Deneuve. (I think this was
her first major role and she was about 23 years old.)
The B&W photography is very effective, from the opening close-up of
Deneuve's eyeball to the dream/fantasy sequences shown from her
imagination. I was reminded of the dream sequence Salvador Dali did the
sets for in Hitchcock's "Spellbound".
There are a few very gruesome scenes- though being in B&W, they are not
necessarily graphic, but chilling in the Hitchcock mode. I'll never
think of a beautician in quite the same way anymore. :^)
I agree entirely with .116 that this is a 'feel bad' film, though I
wouldn't say it has no redeeming values other than being a well-made
film. I saw this about six months ago and can remember just staring at
the screen, emotionally drained, for a couple of minutes after the tape
had finished just trying to get my mental breath back.
Deneuve's classically pretty innocence contrasts very effectively with
her descent into madness. One of the points Polanski makes is that
beauty and innocence masks the inner being, and that the people
Deneuve interacts with see her surface and not the insanity within
until it is far too late.
The way in which he shows some of the causes of her insanity- the
rampant sexism and assumptions made about her since she's young and
pretty are also well done. And Deneuve shows, even at this early age,
that she is an excellent actress and not just a pretty face. A
powerful performance.
Fortunately for my mental state, I had rented another early 60's B&W
film starring another very talented young woman in an early Oscar
winning performance; Julie Christie in "Darling". This helped bring me
back into a better frame of mind. "Darling" is not exactly a frothy and
light film, exploring other aspects of beauty/sex stereotyping in the
early sixties, but it is positively 'Mary Poppins' compared to
"Repulsion".
The two films made a very interesting double feature if you like
renting films taking a contrasting look at a theme. :^)
Cheers,
George
|
174.119 | Kill da wabbit | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Live monkey brain | Wed Aug 18 1993 18:55 | 10 |
| "Repulsion" is a great movie. But I think Polanski grabbed Deneuve
after she'd developed a wholesome corn-fed image via froth like "The
Umbrellas of Cherbourg", and after she'd completely blown that image by
doing "Belle du Jour" for Luis Bunuel. So "Repulsion" would be around
1965 or 1966.
As I remember, it's Polanski's second English film. It's certainly
aged much better than the tawdry misogyny of "Darling".
Ray
|
174.120 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Thu Aug 19 1993 11:51 | 5 |
| re .119, oh, I rented "Darling" last year and thought it was wonderful.
I thought it did a good job showing how sexists things were back then.
Lorna
|
174.121 | Sofies Choice | 3737::KAZAZIAN | | Mon Oct 04 1993 15:17 | 20 |
| Sofies Choice - The scene where she must choose to save (at least she
thinks she is saving) her son or daughter... and all the other scenes.
Waterloo Bridge - My favorite oldie - very sad ending to a wonderful
love story.
Guns of Autumn - A documentary about hunting...but the victims are
trapped in pens or cages.
Soldier Blue - The real story about how the west was won...
The Day After - I was a teenager on vacation in Florida when I saw
this. I was absolutely hysterical and couldn't watch the rest I was so
upset. I called my father to come and get me in Florida, he was able
to calm me down...'it's only a movie'...
|
174.122 | Really feel bad | 24728::WOOD | | Tue Oct 05 1993 10:05 | 7 |
|
Last exit to Brooklyn. The whole movie.....nuff said
-=-=-R~C~W-=-=-
|
174.123 | What?! Not in here yet?! | 31803::STEVENSON_T | | Thu Oct 28 1993 14:10 | 11 |
| The Doors
and not not sure of the title, but the movie about the organized crime
twins of Great Britain, The Crays
Both films gave me headaches, and left me physically, mentally and
spiritually nauseated.
Tricia
If you're interested, I'll tell you how I *really* feel :-)
|
174.124 | | 12035::MDNITE::RIVERS | | Fri Oct 29 1993 10:00 | 10 |
| re: .last
The film was indeed, "The Krays".
I thought it was a great movie.
Cheers,
kim
|
174.125 | 2 recent gloom & doom movies | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | what about now? | Thu Dec 16 1993 16:40 | 10 |
| I'll add both The Piano and A Dangerous Woman to this list.
While I thought both movies were well-done and both held my attention,
interesting plot and good acting, etc, both left me with an overall
feeling of distaste. What pathetically, miserable situations these
women wound-up in!! So depressing. Both definitely fall into the
I'm-glad-I'm-not-them category.
Lorna
|
174.126 | HappyHours | 51614::VAKTMASTERI | Like a planet | Fri Jan 07 1994 10:22 | 22 |
|
Ghosts of the civil dead Australian prison movie starring Nick
Cave
Last house on the left Wes Craven's first movie
I spit on your grave Don't mention Thelma & Louise
Henry - POASK Not a single cop in the whole movie
Naked
Eraserhead
Freaks Tod Browning
Drugstore Cowboy
... and John Water's early movies
Henri
|
174.127 | very feel bad | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Mon Jan 10 1994 12:00 | 4 |
| re .126, definitely agree with Drugstore Cowboy. That depressed me.
Lorna
|
174.128 | Less than 0 | 18583::LYSETH | | Wed Jan 12 1994 21:11 | 6 |
|
This is still the only movie that I "try" not to watch again.
Good story, but depressing as I can find.
-Kevin
|
174.129 | Crimes of Passion | 18583::LYSETH | | Wed Jan 12 1994 21:14 | 6 |
|
A "Feel Bad Story" but one that I truly enjoy is with
probably one of my favorite actresses, Kathleen Turner.
Crimes of Passion
|
174.130 | | 65320::RIVERS | Stupid, STUPID rat creatures! | Tue Jan 18 1994 03:28 | 5 |
| Speaking of feel bad and Kathleen Turner, the War of the Roses was a
rather depressing, darkly funny movie. I liked it.
kim
|
174.131 | Naked New Zealanders | YUPPY::SECURITY | Security @LDO | Thu Jan 27 1994 12:22 | 33 |
|
Now, I'm the first to rationalise away bad vibes in films (e.g. only a
movie, it's just tomato sauce, the director's gonna yell 'CUT!!' at any
second), BUT. When I saw Mike Leigh's film 'Naked', all of that went out
the window. I've never been so spiritually scarred by a cinematic
experience in my life. It was the most misanthropological thing that
has ever happened to me. A veritible barrage of every conceiveable
human frailty, cruelty, and weakness. I left feeling very grim about
the human race and its future. Perhaps the mark of a good film can
be determined in part by how well it affects the audience. Well thanks
a bunch, Mike. I don't know how I would have coped without it. I hope
you spend my money wisely. I don't think I could be *paid* enough
to sit through that again. A well made movie, but gee...
I cringe when I think that I had intended to see "Dave" but found that
the run had finished at the theatre. Wish I'd read a few reviews
before taking the plunge...
re: .95
Yep, it's true that us New Zealanders can be lumpy and morose, but I'm
glad that we don't take these traits to unrealistic extremes like - say -
the English do.
Besides, Australians drink more beer than the rest of the world
combined so it's no small wonder that they behave like the cast of
'Animal House.'
|
174.132 | | 42443::IMMSA | adrift on the sea of heartbreak | Mon Feb 21 1994 08:51 | 21 |
| I agree with Ghosts of the Civil Dead (back a few replies).
This one actually showed on TV here in the UK, uncut.
Back in the 60's I saw a film in London which the British Board of Film
Censors refused to pass for UK wide exhibition, called Mondo Cane
(pronounced Carnay).
It was a documentary type film and as I recall was a catalogue of
unpleasant things that go on around the world.
For example, it showed snakes being purchased in a market in Hong Kong
and being skinned.
It showed a bull tethered to a post and a Ghurka chopping off the
bull's head with one swipe of a sword.
I cannot recall what other unpleasantries were shown... it was 30 years
ago that I saw it, but I have never heard of it since.
andy
|
174.133 | | 7892::SLABOUNTY | Is this p_n great or what? | Mon Feb 21 1994 09:57 | 10 |
|
"Lost Angels" was pretty depressing, for the most part.
The high point for me was watching Amy Locane get nailed against
the wall.
8^)
GTI
|
174.134 | | CDROM::SHIPLEY | Smmeeeeegggg Heeeeeeeeead | Mon Feb 21 1994 10:25 | 14 |
| > Back in the 60's I saw a film in London which the British Board of Film
> Censors refused to pass for UK wide exhibition, called Mondo Cane
> (pronounced Carnay).
> It was a documentary type film and as I recall was a catalogue of
> unpleasant things that go on around the world.
> I cannot recall what other unpleasantries were shown... it was 30 years
> ago that I saw it, but I have never heard of it since.
Both this, and the sequel Mondo Cane II, are/were available for
rental at our local store. I saw the first but not the second
(as yet) and found it mainly distasteful, but not as shocking
as the covers made them out to be.
|
174.135 | Izzit? Huh? Izzit? | YUPPY::SECURITY | Security @LDO | Thu Feb 24 1994 16:54 | 7 |
|
Is 'Lost Angels' out on video in the UK?
Looooooooovvvvvved the soundtrack.
|
174.136 | seven types of suicide | 41174::ISEPDEVELOP | | Mon Jul 04 1994 09:28 | 10 |
|
The ultimate feel bad film has got to be "Der todes King" this film is
serious. Directed by the same guy that directed the Nekromantik films
so you can imagine the type of atmosphere except darker, a must if
your'e in to those type of films.
Another film that springs to mind is the 'Death Trip' films - a
compilation of shorts with apperances from Lydia Lunch, Henry Rollins
(with long hair) and more and an amazing soundtrack eg. Sonic Youth,
Butthole Surfers, Foetus
|
174.137 | These gave me the blues | HOTLNE::SHIELDS | | Mon Dec 02 1996 04:26 | 18 |
174.138 | | OHFSS1::PENFROY | Just Do It or Just Say No? | Mon Dec 02 1996 09:29 | 6 |
174.139 | | BUSY::SLAB | Grandchildren of the Damned | Mon Dec 02 1996 11:04 | 3 |
174.140 | Thanks! | HOTLNE::SHIELDS | | Wed Dec 04 1996 00:15 | 8 |
174.141 | two more..... | HOTLNE::SHIELDS | | Wed Dec 25 1996 00:23 | 11 |
174.142 | | SNAX::NOONAN | sing the soul's blues | Wed Dec 25 1996 00:50 | 7 |
174.143 | The most depressing and terrifying.... | HOTLNE::SHIELDS | | Wed Dec 25 1996 03:54 | 23 |
174.144 | | BUSY::SLAB | And one of us is left to carry on. | Thu Dec 26 1996 10:58 | 5
|