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by Blender Dumbass
Aka: J.Y. Amihud. A Jewish by blood, multifaceted artist with experience in film-making, visual effects, programming, game development, music and more. A philosopher at heart. An activist for freedom and privacy. Anti-Paternalist. A user of Libre Software. Speaking at least 3 human languages. The writer and director of the 2023 film "Moria's Race" and the lead developer of it's game sequel "Dani's Race".
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In 2019 on the Cannes film festival director Nicolas Winding Refn ( the director of the 2013 film Only God Forgives ) released episodes 4 and 5 of his ( then ) new multi-episode picture Too Old To Die Young. Episode 5 titled "The Fool" contains a car chase scene. Some argue it is one of the most romantic car chases in cinematic history. The joke is, that the car chase is set to a romantic Barry Manilow's 1974 hit "Mandy", making the juxtaposition rather hilarious in nature. But given the ass-born theory specialist that I am, I must suggest an interesting twist to this whole ordeal. During the principal photography of the first episode of Too Old To Die Young another film-maker Panos Cosmatos released a film, strangely similar in style to whatever Refn is doing. And his film was called Mandy. We can theorize that maybe Refn responded, in his strange way, recognizing the stylistic similarities, so to speak.
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If you find Only God Forgives a little weird, you will find Mandy borderline unwatchable. At least the first half of it, where Panos Cosmatos indulges in such a heavy dose of cinematic eccentricity that the film holds on a very thin thread of legibility, risking total loss of comprehensibility. Then, about midway, the film switches gears and becomes a violent action film, where Panos Cosmatos indulges in a far more legible ultra-violence. In a way Panos takes whatever Refn is doing in Only God Forgives and cranks it up to 25. Not to 11, not to 12. To 25.
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Even though the visual mastery on screen when it comes of Mandy is self evident. Panos's 2010's film Beyond the Black Rainbow, like Mandy is full of nice cinematography, understanding of composition and light. I would suggest that Refn is far superior as a film-maker in general. Somehow, given the eccentricities of both film-makers, Refn movies tend to be way more watchable. Only God Forgives even though slow and artsy, has a far better pacing and flow, than whatever Panos cooked up for Mandy. That said, though, Panos Cosmatos was able to craft here an utterly fucked up atmosphere. Leaving the first time viewer in something akin to shock by the end of the film.
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I think the best way to describe the difference is by examining the word "juxtaposition" itself. Refn lives in juxtaposition. He would cut from a violent scene to a nice melodic scene. Or use a romantic song in a tense action beat. While Panos will be violent where violence is needed. And will make you feel high on drugs when the characters indulge in drugs. Panos doesn't juxtapose as much.
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Nicolas Cage playing the main character in Mandy might be, given my theorizing ass, a reference Panos chose to do toward Nicolas Winding Refn. Or might be just a good casting decision. Given the actor's ability to play both subtle emotions and explode into theatrical fits of insanity pretty much at a moment's notice.
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Cage's character is interesting. Mandy at it's core is a revenge flick. A sort of reverse slasher ( where the good guy is the one who kills the most people ). There is a gang of evil bikers toward the beginning of the film, which do something very awful to Cage's character. They are interesting. They speak in this muffled low pitched voice, probably due to how much violence and evil shit they are a part of. Or maybe because of some drugs they take.
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By the end of the film, as Cage is killing his last victim, we hear that Cage's voice also changes to this low pitched muffled one. As if he became the monster he was trying to eliminate. That is an interesting corruption of the audience.
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Happy Hacking!!!
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Kill Bill is quite a chill
![[thumbnail]](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/c/c4/Kill_Bill_Volume_2.png)
Troler
👁 9 ❤ 2 💬 2
Kill Bill is a reference loaded film. The director lives in cinema, after all. At one point, the Bill of Kill Bill (David Carradine) reviews Superman, during a monologue with the presence of the protagonist Beatrix Kiddo (Uma Thurman). The said review made sense inside of the given scene, it made sense within the given plot. What if anything it was a flex. Q. Tarantino spoke through Bill about Superman and millions of people heard him. It could be argued, his most popular review... was part of a martial arts movie.
#killbill #quentintarantino #tarantino #film #review #movies #cinemastodon
Please Don't Feed the Children 2025 shows that Destry Spielberg has more balls than her father
![[thumbnail]](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/7/79/Please_Don%27t_Feed_the_Children.jpg/250px-Please_Don%27t_Feed_the_Children.jpg)
Blender Dumbass
👁 12 💬 1
Steven Spielberg directed some rather intense movies throughout his career. He made Duel in 1971 about a maniac truck driver. He made a blog-buster sensation Jaws in 1974. And he made films like Schindler's List and War of the Worlds that could be considered horror films. But he never did a true, scary horror film. My mother used to say that "Steven Spielberg is too sentimental to make truly scary movies". But that statement isn't true about his daughter Destry. 2025 film by Destry Allyn Spielberg Please Don't Feed the Children shows that she is capable to rival fucking Eli Roth if she wants to.
#PleaseDontFeedtheChildren #DestryAllynSpielberg #StevenSpielberg #horror #film #review #movies #cinemastodon
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