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-   -   What was the last movie you saw at the theaters? (http://www.movieforums.com/community/showthread.php?t=9824)

matt72582 12-15-23 04:38 PM

Originally Posted by Holden Pike (Post 241637)
Z Channel: A Magnificent Obsession (Xan Cassavetes, USA)
This is a terrific documentary for film buffs, a chronicle of the rise and tragic fall of Jerry Harvey. Harvey was a smart if troubled man (apparently largely due to an abusive family dynamic) who loved film. I mean he frippin' loved it and devoted almost every waking second to his love. Initially in the early '70s this manifested itself when he got the job programming a Los Angeles theater, and through his infectious passion was able to highlight movies by filmmakers like Altman and Peckinpah that had been dismissed by critics and audiences on first pass, which got him a reputation among other film lovers and the filmmakers he was showcasing, many of whom he befriended. In the late '70s he and a pal even got a screenplay produced, the decent Spaghetti Western China 9, Liberty 37 starring friend Warren Oates directed by friend Monte Hellman. But all of that was a precursor to his true legacy.

By the very early '80s Harvey had gotten a couple jobs in cable television in L.A., a field that was still brand new. When he wound up at the Z Channel as chief programmer given free reign to make deals with studios and show whatever he wanted uncut and commercial free, Jerry was in heaven. His great taste and extremely eclectic choices in EVERYthing from the Altmans and Peckinpahs to the Henry Jalgoms and Nic Roegs to Kurosawa and Fellini to Nicholas Ray and Sam Fuller to silents and European soft-core porn and abosultely everything in between made the cable channel and Harvey himself a force in Los Angeles. He even had some real power to save films, not just in showing obscure stuff, but by tracking down uncut fully restored prints of Heaven's Gate, 1900, The Leopard and Once Upon A Time in America after the U.S. studios could give a *****, saving the director's visions before all the prints were destroyed. Not only did he save these butchered films, but he proved to the Studios that there was a market for them. Oh yeah, and he also ran movies letterboxed whenever he could find the transfers. Z Channel was so unique and beloved in L.A. that even national powerhouses HBO and Showtime couldn't take it down as the '80s progressed. Harvey's programming was so good and so incredibly different than the mainstream that there wasn't anything being offered to replace it in town. In the later '80s when Z Channel planned on going nationwide, the personal problems in Jerry's life escelated leading eventually to the murder of his wife and his own suicide. Z Channel essentially died with Harvey. The film is full of interviews with friends who worked with him as well as his first wife and first serious girl friend and tons of filmmakers and actors from the '70s and '80s like Bob Altman, Alan Rudolph, Paul Verhoeven, Jim Jarmusch, Vilmos Zsigmond, Jacqi Bisset, Theresa Russell, James Woods and current-day filmmakers who were fans like Alexander Payne and Quentin Tarantino. It's a great story of a love of film, and a sad look at a seriously depressed man who couldn't be saved. Z Channel: A Magnificent Obsession is directed by Gena Rowlands and John Cassavetes' daughter Alexandra.




Nice review. This was just on TCM, for those who might not be aware it was just on, which usually means it'll be available for a while On-Demand.

Holden Pike 12-15-23 05:49 PM

Re: What was the last movie you saw at the theaters?
 
Well that's a blast from the past. Must have been a lot of dust on that one. :)

GulfportDoc 12-15-23 08:48 PM

This sounds good. I recall watching Annie Hall (1977) on the Z Channel at a friend's house in L.A. As I recall the subscription was rather expensive, but my friends had dough so it was no problem. It might have been the first pay movie channel.

skizzerflake 12-17-23 11:27 PM

Re: What was the last movie you saw at the theaters?
 
Wonka. I'll never have those two hours back. Kids should be angry.

Corax 12-17-23 11:51 PM

Originally Posted by skizzerflake (Post 2428099)
Wonka. I'll never have those two hours back. Kids should be angry.
But what if Wonka offered you an everlasting nob-gobbler?

skizzerflake 12-18-23 02:01 AM

Originally Posted by Corax (Post 2428103)
But what if Wonka offered you an everlasting nob-gobbler?
I think Wonka would need to offer a 25% cut in the box office.

Corax 12-18-23 02:31 AM

Originally Posted by skizzerflake (Post 2428115)
I think Wonka would need to offer a 25% cut in the box office.
But a I thought a nob-gobbler was going for about a twenty, same as in town.

LavidDynch 12-18-23 04:26 AM

Silent Night (2023)


Unrealistic action movie where the main protagonist had more prep time than batman combined in all movies. A waste of time

stillmellow 12-18-23 04:58 PM

The Boy and the Heron


Not Studio Ghibli's best or worst. The movie sticks with its studio's typical character tropes and story beats, used better in their other movies.


There are plenty of gorgeous scenes, but few of them seem connected to the story, possibly appearing in any Ghibli film.


It's use of the block tower as a metaphor is effective, but I never really connected with any of the characters besides our protagonist.


It was alright.


B-

GulfportDoc 12-18-23 08:33 PM

Originally Posted by GulfportDoc (Post 2427825)
This sounds good. I recall watching Annie Hall (1977) on the Z Channel at a friend's house in L.A. As I recall the subscription was rather expensive, but my friends had dough so it was no problem. It might have been the first pay movie channel.
Z Channel: A Magnificent Obsession-- Watched this last night. It was a fascinating doc about the rise and fall of likely the very first cable movie channel to feature non mainstream American and foreign films. It was very popular, and only available in L.A.

I hadn't known the story of its history, and I didn't know that Jerry Harvey was such a sad mental case. It was a very strange and tragic end.

AgrippinaX 12-19-23 07:32 AM

Originally Posted by stillmellow (Post 2428229)
The Boy and the Heron


Not Studio Ghibli's best or worst. The movie sticks with its studio's typical character tropes and story beats, used better in their other movies.


There are plenty of gorgeous scenes, but few of them seem connected to the story, possibly appearing in any Ghibli film.


It's use of the block tower as a metaphor is effective, but I never really connected with any of the characters besides our protagonist.


It was alright.


B-
A shame. I had a feeling it’s going downhill, as is everything.

ScarletLion 12-19-23 08:20 AM

Re: What was the last movie you saw at the theaters?
 
https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/...pg_UX1000_.jpg

hacxx 12-19-23 04:20 PM

Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales

beelzebubble 12-19-23 06:39 PM

Re: What was the last movie you saw at the theaters?
 
Maestro (2023)


Hated it!

honeykid 12-20-23 07:47 AM

Originally Posted by LavidDynch (Post 2428121)
Silent Night (2023)


Unrealistic action movie where the main protagonist had more prep time than batman combined in all movies. A waste of time
So an action movie then? :D

SpelingError 12-20-23 09:56 AM

Re: What was the last movie you saw at the theaters?
 
Napoleon

matt72582 12-20-23 10:40 AM

Originally Posted by GulfportDoc (Post 2427825)
This sounds good. I recall watching Annie Hall (1977) on the Z Channel at a friend's house in L.A. As I recall the subscription was rather expensive, but my friends had dough so it was no problem. It might have been the first pay movie channel.

True, but they seemed to have succeeded hardly any turnover. Once people got it, they never canceled.


What I loved about the channel (what I've learned about it - such as movies they would show) is that most stations of media assumes the people are so dumb, the typical, "Yeah, you and me understand, but what about the average man?" but when the people are given a chance (and that chance to cultivate), they know what's good, but are fed garbage.

LavidDynch 12-24-23 05:19 PM

Re: What was the last movie you saw at the theaters?
 
Into the Wild

One of my favorite movies of all time.

The protagonist is a selfish ******* !

Taz 12-24-23 09:56 PM

Re: What was the last movie you saw at the theaters?
 
It's a Wonderful Life


That was yesterday.


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