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Not enough old school film buffs on this forum
I sometimes feel a little lonely, throwing out old movie references that I know nobrowncoat but me even gets. Everyone here seems to be a manga fan or a TV junkie or a gamer freak (which wouldn't be so bad except I've met nobody who was getting into gaming during the Colombovision console era) and when they are a film buff its the same deal as with games--they're talking about PS3 or X-Box 360 games I can't even play because I'm broke as shit.
I mean yeah, you all know what "We have to go deeper" is about and probably know where the "ENGLISH MOTHERFUCKER" meme is from, but if I made a throwaway reference to a movie that tried to revolutionize film language without using intertitles, or if I told you that you should provide the prose poems and I shall provide the war, would you know what I'm talking about? Would you?
*Goes to wallow in coffee and coke, like the good Colombian I am*
Comments
Perry Mason rocks.
While I'm not a "film buff" I actually do enjoy a lot of movies from before the 1980s. Dick Tracy (starring Ralph Byrd), King Kong, the original Godzilla (could never stand the sequels), a few Akira Kurosawa films, been watching the Basil Rathbone interpretation of Sherlock Holmes recently, and whenever a movie remake comes out I always always watch the original first (IJBM: That a lot of people don't know that Brendan Frasier's Bedazzled was a remake).
I've seen Citizen Kane, but not The Maltese Falcon or Casablanca (which deeply saddens me).
My knowledge of old cinema is a bit spotty, but I guess I could nerd out along with you.
I think old cinema was good, but each aspect of the medium has grown over time. New cinema is good, too, and I like to see how the art form changes as time passes; this way, we can see how the medium evolves and how cultures trade influences.
I may have gone a little off the rails, but I think I got to the heart of the matter.
I don't remember what other 'old school films' I've seen. Those are just what come to mind.