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T O P I C    R E V I E W
thefoxboy Posted - 06/25/2009 : 06:07:09
Four Your Consideration - Treasure Hunt

Sean Says: "Welcome Penguins and Film-lovers"
- Put any five reviews you like in your F.Y.C. list.
- Do not use reviews from the previous round - you must change them every round.
- Post here to declare that you've done it. Sooner is better than later.
- Provide a spoiler warning in your post when appropriate.
- You must read the F.Y.C.s of all participants.
- The next round starts on Monday or Thursday at 6:00 a.m. FWFR time, whichever comes next.
- The initiator of the next round will name the thread "FYCTH - #***" or "Sean's FYCTH - #***", "***" is one integer greater than the number of the current round. The initiator of the next round will copy this post verbatim and it will appear as the opening post of the next round, the only things that may be changed are fonts/colours and smileys (which may be removed altogether if desired) and the inviso comment after "Sean Says:".

15   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
clay Posted - 06/29/2009 : 08:31:52
Viewed & voted/Duly noted.

zulu Posted - 06/29/2009 : 07:30:09
quote:
Originally posted by BaftaBabe

quote:
Originally posted by demonic







And welcome back Zulu! Always great to see you round these parts.




Thanks.
rockfsh Posted - 06/29/2009 : 05:26:35
quote:
Originally posted by Salopian

quote:
Originally posted by rockfsh

Mixed Bag

61 years earlier...



Thanks Sal. I've submitted a review for that one.
RockGolf Posted - 06/29/2009 : 04:50:15
quote:
Originally posted by Salopian

quote:
Originally posted by Ro�k G01f, MD+

RoGo's latest offerings.

So there is going to be an Arrested Development film? Awesome. That's one thing I'm grateful to A.C. for.

Apparently, Michael Cera was the last holdout, but after Year One...
lemmycaution Posted - 06/29/2009 : 04:36:34
V&V

Thanks for the nod Demo.
lemmycaution Posted - 06/29/2009 : 04:33:14
quote:
Originally posted by randall

quote:
Originally posted by BaftaBabe

quote:
Originally posted by randall

V&V. Baffy, THE ROBE was indeed wide, but aren't you forgetting poor Abel Gance?



As if I could! One of my all-time fav directors!

But triptych-screens are not quite the same as cinnamon toast.

I believe Gance's Polyvision [not the first, last, nor least of his magnificent cine inventions] was achieved by stacking three cameras one atop another to produce the triptych fx. In any case it was only used in one reel of his great Napoleon and only shown a few times - I'm guessing because it may have needed expensive adjustments to local cinemas. But anyway - The Robe is generally regarded as the first film to be shown completely in wide screen.

The Robe, of course, is crap compared with any Gance film. If anyone has never seen his oeuvre, run do not walk and mortgage a kidney to see any of them. I particularly recommend La Roue, Napoleon, and J'Accuse - one of the greatest anti-war films ever made [not to be confused with Jose Ferrer's I Accuse about the Dreyfus case].




Of course you were smart enough to particularly cite Cinemascope, which is a registered trademark, and THE ROBE was indubitably the first one, as you said. Too bad the picture sucked.

But among the "few times" NAPOLEON was projected in all its gasp-inducing widescreen grandeur was an engagement in the late Eighties at Radio City Music Hall with a full orchestra and Carmine Coppola waving the baton. As you might imagine from my description, I was present.





Yes. Magnificent. Mrs. lemmy and I were fortunate to see the same presentation in Toronto and a few months later in L.A.

P.S. Check out my Cinemascope accolade.
Whippersnapper. Posted - 06/29/2009 : 01:41:10

Well, I got even more less than I was expecting than your less than you were expecting that you got. And that's a fact.

V&Ved.

[matt] Posted - 06/29/2009 : 01:25:09

VV

yeah, a quiet round... I didn't get nearly as many votes as I was expecting for a couple of mine.


demonic Posted - 06/29/2009 : 01:06:01
Very good round - but surprised that some great work hasn't been properly recognised yet - two spring to mind: Lemmy's "Naked Fairy Tales" and Sludge's "Chitty" reviews.
Demisemicenturian Posted - 06/29/2009 : 00:02:48
quote:
Originally posted by Ro�k G01f, MD+

RoGo's latest offerings.

So there is going to be an Arrested Development film? Awesome. That's one thing I'm grateful to A.C. for.
Demisemicenturian Posted - 06/28/2009 : 23:51:46
quote:
Originally posted by rockfsh

Mixed Bag

61 years earlier...
randall Posted - 06/28/2009 : 23:37:45
quote:
Originally posted by BaftaBabe

quote:
Originally posted by randall

V&V. Baffy, THE ROBE was indeed wide, but aren't you forgetting poor Abel Gance?



As if I could! One of my all-time fav directors!

But triptych-screens are not quite the same as cinnamon toast.

I believe Gance's Polyvision [not the first, last, nor least of his magnificent cine inventions] was achieved by stacking three cameras one atop another to produce the triptych fx. In any case it was only used in one reel of his great Napoleon and only shown a few times - I'm guessing because it may have needed expensive adjustments to local cinemas. But anyway - The Robe is generally regarded as the first film to be shown completely in wide screen.

The Robe, of course, is crap compared with any Gance film. If anyone has never seen his oeuvre, run do not walk and mortgage a kidney to see any of them. I particularly recommend La Roue, Napoleon, and J'Accuse - one of the greatest anti-war films ever made [not to be confused with Jose Ferrer's I Accuse about the Dreyfus case].




Of course you were smart enough to particularly cite Cinemascope, which is a registered trademark, and THE ROBE was indubitably the first one, as you said. Too bad the picture sucked.

But among the "few times" NAPOLEON was projected in all its gasp-inducing widescreen grandeur was an engagement in the late Eighties at Radio City Music Hall with a full orchestra and Carmine Coppola waving the baton. As you might imagine from my description, I was present.

I was only playing with you...
BaftaBaby Posted - 06/28/2009 : 23:09:46
quote:
Originally posted by randall

V&V. Baffy, THE ROBE was indeed wide, but aren't you forgetting poor Abel Gance?



As if I could! One of my all-time fav directors!

But triptych-screens are not quite the same as cinnamon toast.

I believe Gance's Polyvision [not the first, last, nor least of his magnificent cine inventions] was achieved by stacking three cameras one atop another to produce the triptych fx. In any case it was only used in one reel of his great Napoleon and only shown a few times - I'm guessing because it may have needed expensive adjustments to local cinemas. But anyway - The Robe is generally regarded as the first film to be shown completely in wide screen.

The Robe, of course, is crap compared with any Gance film. If anyone has never seen his oeuvre, run do not walk and mortgage a kidney to see any of them. I particularly recommend La Roue, Napoleon, and J'Accuse - one of the greatest anti-war films ever made [not to be confused with Jose Ferrer's I Accuse about the Dreyfus case].

randall Posted - 06/28/2009 : 22:31:55
V&V. Baffy, THE ROBE was indeed wide, but aren't you forgetting poor Abel Gance?
BiggerBoat Posted - 06/28/2009 : 22:24:38
VVed

Another quiet week. How do we get new entrants here?

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