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[icon articles]Is Lars Von Trier Really an Edge Lord?

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[avatar]  Blender Dumbass

👁 60 💬 0



There is a certain sense among cinephiles that the danish filmmaker Lars Von Trier is nothing but an edge lord, making his films simply as a sort of pornography designed to outrage people. It does not help his case that his films are some of the hardest films to watch. And it doesn't help that his movies tend to touch upon uncomfortable things in very uncomfortable ways. Yet I don't believe Lars Von Trier does any of that for laughs.


#LarsVonTrier #filmmaking #film #movies #cinema #cinemastodon #horror #philosophy


[icon reviews]Pain & Gain is the most Lars Von Trier Michael Bay ever been

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[avatar]  Blender Dumbass

👁 1 💬 0



In my review of Ambulance I argued that Michael Bay is the Lars Von Trier of action. And now I gonna argue that Pain & Gain ( his 2013 crime comedy ) is the most Lars Von Trier he ever been.



#painandgain #film #review #movies #cinemastodon #dwaynejohnson #markwahlberg #anthonymackie


[icon reviews]Knock Knock 2015 is more of a Lars Von Trier movie

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[avatar]  Blender Dumbass

👁 7 💬 1



Before there was 2025 Balerina there were two other movies ( I know of ) which were collaborations of Keanu Reeves and Ana de Armas. One is the 2016 film Exposed which I am still yet to see. And then, before that, marking their first collaboration, there was a 2015 film by Eli Roth called Knock Knock, which I was curious to see for multiple reasons.


#knockknock #eliroth #anadearmas #keanureeves #film #review #movies #cinemastodon #larsvontrier


[icon reviews]S#X Acts 2012 is trying to beat Lars Von Trier at ultra-cinematic cringe

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[avatar]  Blender Dumbass

👁 7 💬 0



Six Acts ( or S#x Acts ) is an erotic drama horror film about a girl who is slowly realizing that she is being abused. The film feels strangely like the seduction scene in Taxi Driver but stretched out into 6 chapters, filling up a feature length movie.


#sixacts #film #review #movies #cinemastodon #sivanlevy #larsvontrier


[icon reviews]Breaking The Waves

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[avatar]  Blender Dumbass

👁 56 💬 0



Lars Von Trier is an interesting filmmaker. He directs mostly very depressing movies that are very hard to watch. Breaking The Waves is an interesting case study in his filmography because on some weird level this is one of the rare examples of a Lars Von Trier film with a happy ending. Even though you could perhaps argue that the ending is nowhere near happy at all.


[icon reviews]Nope

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[avatar]  Blender Dumbass

👁 54 💬 0



I was avoiding Nope for a few reasons. One of them was because people kept saying that it is very disturbing. It has a scene which I thought was to traumatize me. Now that I actually saw the film I can tell you that Jordan Peele, the director of Nope is not Lars Von Trier and therefor the scene is not actually that bad. To be quite frank, it seems like shooting that scene the way Lars Von Trier would have done it probably goes against the message of the movie.


[icon reviews]Melancholia is the best Science Fiction Film Ever

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[avatar]  Blender Dumbass

👁 57 💬 0



I don't think you think of Science Fiction often when thinking about Lars Von Trier. Yet, his 2011 masterpiece Melancholia is one of, if not the best, science fiction film(s) ever.


#melancholia #depression #mentalhealth #film #movies #cinemastodon #sciencefiction #scifi #larsvontrier #review #KirstenDunst #BradyCorbet #TheBrutalist


[icon reviews]Man on Fire 2004 is Tony Scott's Leon: The Professional

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[avatar]  Blender Dumbass

👁 9 💬 1



Critics gave negative reviews to 2004 Tony Scott's film Man on Fire because of "grim story that gets harder to take the longer it goes on". Are you fucking serious? How then Lars Von Trier movies get good reviews? Something isn't quite right here. To be frank, the film is very ultra-cinematic. Which could rub some critics the wrong way. Scott doesn't just direct the shit out of it. He also edits the shit out of it. Making one of the coolest directed films in existence. Which if you think about it, isn't particularly what critics find as a serious picture. And yes, the film is grim. At times it feel like a horror film. Not just a thriller. But the film is a rather satisfactory experience.


#manonfire #tonyscott #dakotafanning #DenzelWashington #film #review #movies #cinemastodon


[icon reviews]The House That Jack Built

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[avatar]  Blender Dumbass

👁 55 💬 0



When I started doing movie reviews I told myself that I will make reviews right after I saw the movie. But there is an exception to this rule. The first and the last time I saw The House That Jack Built was in Jerusalem Cinemateque in the end of 2018. Roughly 5 years ago. And this review will be made from the memory I have of the movie. I have no problem with the existence of this movie. Freedom of Speech is important. But I am not willing to watch it again. Even though I am kind of a fan of the director Lars Von Trier and the movie is arguably very good. It's just I'm not brave enough to sit through it again.


[icon reviews]The Texas Chain Saw Massacre 1974 or the pioneer in ultraviolence

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[avatar]  Blender Dumbass

👁 7 💬 1



If today we have a lot of films to choose from when we want to shock ourselves beyond believe: from barely serious, yet distrusting films by Eli Roth through intense hyper-violence by Coralie Fargeat or depressing looks at the world by Lars Von Trier all the way to deranged films like The Serbian Film, in 1970s you had probably only one true contender for such a level of derangeness. And it was the Tobe Hooper's 1974 film The Texas Chain Saw Massacre.


#TheTexasChainSawMassacre #TobeHooper #Horror #film #review #movies #cinemastodon


[icon reviews]Ambulance 2022 is a fucking masterpiece

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[avatar]  Blender Dumbass

👁 46 💬 0



Critics often think Michael Bay doesn't give a damn about characters, but how can you believe that when everything in the film is shut deliberately to be from a perspective of a character? Michael Bay is Lars Von Trier of action. Lars uses strange chaotic camera work and weird editing choices to elevate the emotion on screen and Michael Bay uses chaotic camera work and weird editing choices to elevate the emotions too. If you take him seriously everything clicks into place. It's just Michael Bay likes it louder.


#Ambulance #Ambulance2022 #MichaelBay #film #review #movies #cinemastodon #EizaGonzales #JakeGyllenhaal


[icon reviews]The Substance Will Make You Puke While Cumming

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[avatar]  Blender Dumbass

👁 63 💬 0



I am still unsure whether Coralie Fargeat meant for The Substance to be taken seriously or not. There was a similar misunderstanding when it comes to Lars Von Trier's The House That Jack Built, where the audience were laughing, unable to comprehend in the intensity of the film, while the director was dead serious. The experience I had watching The Substance reminded me of this confusion. The film is so over the top, it beats the absurdity of Sam Raimi's horror-comedies.



[icon reviews]Don't Look Up 2021 is Melancholia, but a comedy

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[avatar]  Blender Dumbass

👁 9 💬 4



A lot of people see the 2021 Adam McKay film Don't Look Up as something that fails to communicate the message of climate change well enough. McKay stated that the movie was written specifically to point people at the absurdity of the "climate crisis". And yet the film's allegorical comet / asteroid doomsday plot seems to fail at giving it justice. For once an asteroid that is about to destroy the planet is nobody's fault. While the climate change is somebody's fault. But if you look at the movie relatively to other disaster flicks of the same type ( like Armageddon and Melancholia ) you see something rather interesting.


#dontlookup #climatechange #adammckay #film #review #movies #cinemastodon


[icon reviews]The Neon Demon 2016 begs for a psycho-sexual analysis

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[avatar]  Blender Dumbass

👁 12 💬 2



Nicolas Winding Refn seems to be making only cult-classics. His 2011 Drive was a moderate box office success. But a banger of a cult-classic later on, as people understood that it is not a mere action film. Then he made Only God Forgives. A strange psycho-sexual movie where the plot lives in the crack-space between reality and dream-land. The film got misunderstood and barely made its money back. Yet those people who like it, like it very much. And then he made a straight box-office disaster The Neon Demon that made only half of its ( rather small $7.5 million ) budget back. Yet it is seems like it's the kind of movie that just begs for a deep analysis.


#TheNeonDemon #NicolasWindingRefn #movies #film #review #cinemastodon


[icon reviews]Pearl Harbor 2001 made me cry for 3 hours straight

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[avatar]  Blender Dumbass

👁 6 💬 2



In my review of Bad Boys II I talked about how Michael Bay needed to discharge from Pearl Harbor and do a properly Bayhem! movie. This speculation of mine is largely based on some stories from the set of this movie, where it looked like Bay tried to actually make a properly directed film in the very beginning and then suddenly snapped and started setting up Bayhem! shots out of nowhere in the middle of production. And when people pointed that out to him he told them to "Shut the fuck up" and that he "knows what he is doing".


#PearlHarbor #MichaelBay #movies #film #review #cinemastodon


[icon reviews]Gladiator 2000 is Ridley Scott's turn at mimicking Michael Bay

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[avatar]  Blender Dumbass

👁 5 💬 0



There are quite some differences between the Scott brothers ( Ridley and Tony ) and the Maximus himself Michael Bay. You can read Troler's observations and then my rant in the comments to see why they aren't quite the same. But specifically Tony Scott films sometimes feels almost like Michael Bay movies. Especially early Tony Scott and early Michael Bay, before both of them knew how similar they are and before they started trying to develop each other into opposite directions. Which happened roughly in time with the 21st century. And yet with all this the Ridley Scott epic Gladiator which was shot at 20st century and released at 21st, bluntly steals one of the shots Michael Bay is known for.


#Gladiator #RidleyScott #film #review #movies #cinemastodon



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