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  3. OT: Edgar Wright's Fave 1000 films

OT: Edgar Wright's Fave 1000 films

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    swanstep — 9 years ago(July 28, 2016 09:10 PM)

    1975-1989
    426 A Boy and His Dog L.Q. Jones, 1975
    427 Death Race 2000 Paul Bartel, 1975
    428 Deep Red Dario Argento, 1975
    429 Dog Day Afternoon Sidney Lumet, 1975
    430 Jaws Steven Spielberg, 1975
    431 Lisztomania Ken Russell, 1975
    432 Love and Death Woody Allen, 1975
    433 Monty Python and the Holy Grail Terry Gilliam, Terry Jones, 1975
    434 Night Moves Arthur Penn, 1975
    435 One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest Milo Forman, 1975
    436 Picnic at Hanging Rock Peter Weir, 1975
    437 Supervixens Russ Meyer, 1975
    438 The Stepford Wives Bryan Forbes, 1975
    439 Assault on Precinct 13 John Carpenter, 1976
    440 Bugsy Malone Alan Parker, 1976
    441 Carrie Brian De Palma, 1976
    442 Logan's Run Michael Anderson, 1976
    443 Marathon Man John Schlesinger, 1976
    444 Murder by Death Robert Moore, 1976
    445 Network Sidney Lumet, 1976
    446 Nuts in May Mike Leigh, 1976
    447 Taxi Driver Martin Scorsese, 1976
    448 The Gumball Rally Chuck Bail, 1976
    449 The Man Who Fell to Earth Nicolas Roeg, 1976
    450 The Omen Richard Donner, 1976
    451 The Tenant Roman Polanski, 1976
    452 Who Can Kill a Child? Narciso Ibanez Serrador, 1976
    453 Annie Hall Woody Allen, 1977
    454 Capricorn One Peter Hyams, 1977
    455 Close Encounters of the Third Kind Steven Spielberg, 1977
    456 Demon Seed Donald Cammell, 1977
    457 Eraserhead David Lynch, 1977
    458 High Anxiety Mel Brooks, 1977
    459 Jabberwocky Terry Gilliam, 1977
    460 Martin George A. Romero, 1977
    461 Rolling Thunder John Flynn, 1977
    462 Sorcerer William Friedkin, 1977
    463 Star Wars George Lucas, 1977
    464 Suspiria Dario Argento, 1977
    465 That Obscure Object of Desire Luis Bunuel, 1977
    466 The Duellists Ridley Scott, 1977
    467 The Kentucky Fried Movie John Landis, 1977
    468 The Sentinel Michael Winner, 1977
    469 The Spy Who Loved Me Lewis Gilbert, 1977
    470 Blue Collar Paul Schrader, 1978
    471 Coma Michael Crichton, 1978
    472 Dawn of the Dead George A. Romero, 1978
    473 Days of Heaven Terrence Malick, 1978
    474 Death on the Nile John Guillermin, 1978
    475 Fingers James Toback, 1978
    476 Grease Randal Kleiser, 1978
    477 Halloween John Carpenter, 1978
    478 I Wanna Hold Your Hand Robert Zemeckis, 1978
    479 Invasion of the Body Snatchers Philip Kaufman, 1978
    480 Long Weekend Colin Eggleston, 1978
    481 National Lampoon's Animal House John Landis, 1978
    482 Piranha Joe Dante, 1978
    483 Straight Time Ulu Grosbard, 1978
    484 Superman Richard Donner, 1978
    485 The 36th Chamber of Shaolin Chia-Liang Liu, 1978
    486 The Deer Hunter Michael Cimino, 1978
    487 The Driver Walter Hill, 1978
    488 The Fury Brian De Palma, 1978
    489 The Last Waltz Martin Scorsese, 1978
    490 The Silent Partner Daryl Duke, 1978
    491 Watership Down Martin Rosen, 1978
    492 Alien Ridley Scott, 1979
    493 All That Jazz Bob Fosse, 1979
    494 Being There Hal Ashby, 1979
    495 Mad Max George Miller, 1979
    496 Manhattan Woody Allen, 1979
    497 Monty Python's Life of Brian Terry Jones, 1979
    498 Rock 'n' Roll High School Jerry Zucker, Joe Dante, Allan Arkush, 1979
    499 Scum Alan Clarke, 1979
    500 The Black Hole Gary Nelson, 1979
    501 The Brood David Cronenberg, 1979
    502 The Jerk Carl Reiner, 1979
    503 The Wanderers Philip Kaufman, 1979
    504 The Warriors Walter Hill, 1979
    505 Winter Kills William Richert, 1979
    506 Airplane! Jim Abrahams, David Zucker, Jerry Zucker, 1980
    507 Dressed to Kill Brian De Palma, 1980
    508 Flash Gordon Mike Hodges, 1980
    509 Raging Bull Martin Scorsese, 1980
    510 Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back Irvin Kershner, 1980
    511 Stardust Memories Woody Allen, 1980
    512 Superman II Richard Lester, 1980
    513 The Blues Brothers John Landis, 1980
    514 The Changeling Peter Medak, 1980
    515 The Elephant Man David Lynch, 1980
    516 The Fog John Carpenter, 1980
    517 The Long Good Friday John Mackenzie, 1980
    518 The Ninth Configuration William Peter Blatty, 1980
    519 The Shining Stanley Kubrick, 1980
    520 The Stunt Man Richard Rush, 1980
    521 An American Werewolf in London John Landis, 1981
    522 Blow Out Brian De Palma, 1981
    523 Body Heat Lawrence Kasdan, 1981
    524 Cutter's Way Ivan Passer, 1981
    525 Dead & Buried Gary Sherman, 1981
    526 Diva Jean-Jacques Beineix, 1981
    527 Escape from New York John Carpenter, 1981
    528 Gregory's Girl Bill Forsyth, 1981
    529 Looker Michael Crichton, 1981
    530 Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior George Miller, 1981
    531 Modern Romance Albert Brooks, 1981
    532 Ms. 45 Abel Ferrara, 1981
    533 Raiders of the Lost Ark Steven Spielberg, 1981
    534 Road Games Richard Franklin, 1981
    535 Sharky's Machine Burt Reynolds, 1981
    536 Southern Comfort Walter Hill, 1981
    537 The Beyond Lucio Fulci, 1981
    538 The Evil Dead Sam Raimi, 1981
    539 The Howling Joe Dante, 1981
    540 Thief Michael Mann, 1981
    541 Time Bandits Terry Gilliam, 1981
    542 Venom Piers Haggard, 1981
    543 48 Hrs. Walter Hill, 1982
    544 Blade Runner Ridley Scott, 1982
    545 Creepshow George A. Romero, 1982
    546 Diner Barry Levinson, 1982
    547 E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial Steven Spielberg, 1982
    548 Eating Raoul Paul Bartel, 1982
    549 Fitzcarraldo Werner Herzog, 1982
    550 Koyaanisqatsi Godfrey Reggio, 1982
    551 Poltergeist Tobe Hooper, 1982
    552 Star Trek II: The Wrath of

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      swanstep — 9 years ago(July 28, 2016 09:12 PM)

      1990-2000
      660 Arachnophobia Frank Marshall, 1990
      661 Goodfellas Martin Scorsese, 1990
      662 Gremlins 2: The New Batch Joe Dante, 1990
      663 La femme Nikita Luc Besson, 1990
      664 Life Is Sweet Mike Leigh, 1990
      665 Miami Blues George Armitage, 1990
      666 Miller's Crossing Joel Coen, Ethan Coen, 1990
      667 Misery Rob Reiner, 1990
      668 Tremors Ron Underwood, 1990
      669 Trust Hal Hartley, 1990
      670 Wild at Heart David Lynch, 1990
      671 Barton Fink Joel Coen, Ethan Coen, 1991
      672 Cape Fear Martin Scorsese, 1991
      673 Delicatessen Jean-Pierre Jeunet, Marc Caro, 1991
      674 Homicide David Mamet, 1991
      675 JFK Oliver Stone, 1991
      676 Johnny Suede Tom DiCillo, 1991
      677 L.A. Story Mick Jackson, 1991
      678 Naked Lunch David Cronenberg, 1991
      679 Point Break Kathryn Bigelow, 1991
      680 Riki-Oh: The Story of Ricky Lam Ngai Kai, 1991
      681 Terminator 2: Judgment Day James Cameron, 1991
      682 The Last Boy Scout Tony Scott, 1991
      683 The People Under the Stairs Wes Craven, 1991
      684 The Rapture Michael Tolkin, 1991
      685 The Silence of the Lambs Jonathan Demme, 1991
      686 Bad Lieutenant Abel Ferrara, 1992
      687 Batman Returns Tim Burton, 1992
      688 Bitter Moon Roman Polanski, 1992
      689 Dead Alive Peter Jackson, 1992
      690 El Mariachi Robert Rodriguez, 1992
      691 Glengarry Glen Ross James Foley, 1992
      692 Hard Boiled John Woo, 1992
      693 Man Bites Dog Rmy Belvaux, Andr Bonzel, Benot Poelvoorde, 1992
      694 One False Move Carl Franklin, 1992
      695 Police Story 3: Super Cop Stanley Tong, 1992
      696 Raising Cain Brian De Palma, 1992
      697 Reservoir Dogs Quentin Tarantino, 1992
      698 Romper Stomper Geoffrey Wright, 1992
      699 The Player Robert Altman, 1992
      700 Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me David Lynch, 1992
      701 Unforgiven Clint Eastwood, 1992
      702 A Man in Uniform David Wellington, 1993
      703 Bad Boy Bubby Rolf de Heer, 1993
      704 Carlito's Way Brian De Palma, 1993
      705 Cronos Guillermo del Toro, 1993
      706 Dazed and Confused Richard Linklater, 1993
      707 Groundhog Day Harold Ramis, 1993
      708 Jurassic Park Steven Spielberg, 1993
      709 Naked Mike Leigh, 1993
      710 Raining Stones Ken Loach, 1993
      711 Red Rock West John Dahl, 1993
      712 Suture Scott McGehee, David Siegel, 1993
      713 The Legend II Corey Yuen, 1993
      714 True Romance Tony Scott, 1993
      715 Wallace & Gromit in The Wrong Trousers Nick Park, 1993
      716 Amateur Hal Hartley, 1994
      717 Chungking Express Wong Kar-wai, 1994
      718 Clerks Kevin Smith, 1994
      719 Ed Wood Tim Burton, 1994
      720 Fist of Legend Gordon Chan, 1994
      721 Heavenly Creatures Peter Jackson, 1994
      722 Lon: The Professional Luc Besson, 1994
      723 Nightwatch Ole Bornedal, 1994
      724 Once Were Warriors Lee Tamahori, 1994
      725 Pulp Fiction Quentin Tarantino, 1994
      726 Speed Jan de Bont, 1994
      727 The Last Seduction John Dahl, 1994
      728 The Legend of Drunken Master Jackie Chan, Chia-Liang Liu, 1994
      729 The Shawshank Redemption Frank Darabont, 1994
      730 Three Colors: Red Krzysztof Kielowski, 1994
      731 Desperado Robert Rodriguez, 1995
      732 Heat Michael Mann, 1995
      733 La Haine Mathieu Kassovitz, 1995
      734 Seven David Fincher, 1995
      735 The Doom Generation Gregg Araki, 1995
      736 The Quick and the Dead Sam Raimi, 1995
      737 The Usual Suspects Bryan Singer, 1995
      738 Toy Story John Lasseter, 1995
      739 Welcome to the Dollhouse Todd Solondz, 1995
      740 Big Night Campbell Scott, Stanley Tucci, 1996
      741 Bottle Rocket Wes Anderson, 1996
      742 Bound Lilly Wachowski, Lana Wachowski, 1996
      743 Breaking the Waves Lars von Trier, 1996
      744 Citizen Ruth Alexander Payne, 1996
      745 Flirting with Disaster David O. Russell, 1996
      746 Fargo Joel Coen, Ethan Coen, 1996
      747 Freeway Matthew Bright, 1996
      748 Romeo Juliet Baz Luhrmann, 1996
      749 Scream Wes Craven, 1996
      750 Small Faces Gillies MacKinnon, 1996
      751 Swingers Doug Liman, 1996
      752 Trainspotting Danny Boyle, 1996
      753 Waiting for Guffman Christopher Guest, 1996
      754 When We Were Kings Leon Gast, 1996
      755 Boogie Nights Paul Thomas Anderson, 1997
      756 Cube Vincenzo Natali, 1997
      757 Fireworks Takeshi Kitano, 1997
      758 Funny Games Michael Haneke, 1997
      759 Grosse Pointe Blank George Armitage, 1997
      760 Gummo Harmony Korine, 1997
      761 Jackie Brown Quentin Tarantino, 1997
      762 L.A. Confidential Curtis Hanson, 1997
      763 Lost Highway David Lynch, 1997
      764 Nil by Mouth Gary Oldman, 1997
      765 Retroactive Louis Morneau, 1997
      766 Starship Troopers Paul Verhoeven, 1997
      767 The Ice Storm Ang Lee, 1997
      768 A Simple Plan Sam Raimi, 1998
      769 American History X Tony Kaye, 1998
      770 Buffalo '66 Vincent Gallo, 1998
      771 Happiness Todd Solondz, 1998
      772 I Stand Alone Gaspar No, 1998
      773 Last Night Don McKellar, 1998
      774 Love Is the Devil John Maybury, 1998
      775 Out of Sight Steven Soderbergh, 1998
      776 Pi Darren Aronofsky, 1998
      777 Ring Hideo Nakata, 1998
      778 Run Lola Run Tom Tykwer, 1998
      779 Rushmore Wes Anderson, 1998
      780 The Celebration Thomas Vinterberg, 1998
      781 The General John Boorman, 1998
      782 There's Something About Mary Bobby Farrelly, Peter Farrelly, 1998
      783 Wild Things John McNaughton, 1998
      784 A Room for Romeo Brass Shane Meadows, 1999
      785 American Movie Chris Smith, 1999
      786 Audition Takashi Miike, 1999
      787 Being Joh

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        swanstep — 9 years ago(July 28, 2016 09:14 PM)

        2001-2016
        812 The Low Down Jamie Thraves, 2000
        813 Amlie Jean-Pierre Jeunet, 2001
        814 Donnie Darko Richard Kelly, 2001
        815 Frailty Bill Paxton, 2001
        816 Jeepers Creepers Victor Salva, 2001
        817 Mulholland Drive David Lynch, 2001
        818 Ocean's Eleven Steven Soderbergh, 2001
        819 Shaolin Soccer Stephen Chow, 2001
        820 Spirited Away Hayao Miyazaki, 2001
        821 The Devil's Backbone Guillermo del Toro, 2001
        822 The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring Peter Jackson, 2001
        823 The Others Alejandro Amenabar, 2001
        824 The Royal Tenenbaums Wes Anderson, 2001
        825 Training Day Antoine Fuqua, 2001
        826 Y tu mama tambin Alfonso Cuaron, 2001
        827 24 Hour Party People Michael Winterbottom, 2002
        828 Adaptation. Spike Jonze, 2002
        829 City of God Fernando Meirelles, Katia Lund, 2002
        830 Hero Zhang Yimou, 2002
        831 Infernal Affairs Andrew Lau Wai-keung, Alan Mak, 2002
        832 Irreversible Gaspar No, 2002
        833 Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance Park Chan-wook, 2002
        834 Good Bye Lenin! Wolfgang Becker, 2003
        835 High Tension Alexandre Aja, 2003
        836 Kill Bill: Vol. 1 Quentin Tarantino, 2003
        837 Los Angeles Plays Itself Thom Andersen, 2003
        838 Lost in Translation Sofia Coppola, 2003
        839 Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World Peter Weir, 2003
        840 Memories of Murder Bong Joon-ho, 2003
        841 Oldboy Park Chan-wook, 2003
        842 Ong-Bak Prachya Pinkaew, 2003
        843 School of Rock Richard Linklater, 2003
        844 The Triplets of Belleville Sylvain Chomet, 2003
        845 Touching the Void Kevin Macdonald, 2003
        846 Windy City Heat Bobcat Goldthwait, 2003
        847 Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy Adam McKay, 2004
        848 Before Sunset Richard Linklater, 2004
        849 Born to Fight Panna Rittikrai, 2004
        850 Collateral Michael Mann, 2004
        851 Dead Man's Shoes Shane Meadows, 2004
        852 Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind Michel Gondry, 2004
        853 Kill Bill: Vol. 2 Quentin Tarantino, 2004
        854 Kung Fu Hustle Stephen Chow, 2004
        855 Man on Fire Tony Scott, 2004
        856 Napoleon Dynamite Jared Hess, 2004
        857 Sideways Alexander Payne, 2004
        858 Spider-Man 2 Sam Raimi, 2004
        859 Team America: World Police Trey Parker, 2004
        860 The Bourne Supremacy Paul Greengrass, 2004
        861 The Incredibles Brad Bird, 2004
        862 A History of Violence David Cronenberg, 2005
        863 Brick Rian Johnson, 2005
        864 Brokeback Mountain Ang Lee, 2005
        865 Domino Tony Scott, 2005
        866 Hidden Michael Haneke, 2005
        867 Kiss Kiss Bang Bang Shane Black, 2005
        868 Sin City Quentin Tarantino, Robert Rodriguez, Frank Miller, 2005
        869 The Descent Neil Marshall, 2005
        870 Apocalypto Mel Gibson, 2006
        871 Casino Royale Martin Campbell, 2006
        872 Children of Men Alfonso Cuaron, 2006
        873 Inside Man Spike Lee, 2006
        874 Marie Antoinette Sofia Coppola, 2006
        875 Pan's Labyrinth Guillermo del Toro, 2006
        876 The Foot Fist Way Jody Hill, 2006
        877 The Host Bong Joon-ho, 2006
        878 United 93 Paul Greengrass, 2006
        879 [REC] Jaume Balaguero, Paco Plaza, 2007
        880 Control Anton Corbijn, 2007
        881 Hot Rod Akiva Schaffer, 2007
        882 No Country for Old Men Joel Coen, Ethan Coen, 2007
        883 Persepolis Vincent Paronnaud, Marjane Satrapi, 2007
        884 Superbad Greg Mottola, 2007
        885 There Will Be Blood Paul Thomas Anderson, 2007
        886 The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters Seth Gordon, 2007
        887 Timecrimes Nacho Vigalondo, 2007
        888 Zodiac David Fincher, 2007
        889 Gomorrah Matteo Garrone, 2008
        890 Happy-Go-Lucky Mike Leigh, 2008
        891 Hunger Steve McQueen, 2008
        892 Let the Right One In Tomas Alfredson, 2008
        893 Man on Wire James Marsh, 2008
        894 Synecdoche, New York Charlie Kaufman, 2008
        895 The Dark Knight Christopher Nolan, 2008
        896 The Ruins Carter Smith, 2008
        897 The Wrestler Darren Aronofsky, 2008
        898 A Prophet Jacques Audiard, 2009
        899 A Serious Man Joel Coen, Ethan Coen, 2009
        900 Coraline Henry Selick, 2009
        901 Crank: High Voltage Mark Neveldine, Brian Taylor, 2009
        902 District 9 Neill Blomkamp, 2009
        903 Enter the Void Gaspar No, 2009
        904 Fantastic Mr. Fox Wes Anderson, 2009
        905 Fish Tank Andrea Arnold, 2009
        906 Henri-Georges Clouzot's Inferno Serge Bromberg, Ruxandra Medrea, 2009
        907 Inglourious Basterds Quentin Tarantino, 2009
        908 Le Donk & Scorz-ayz-ee Shane Meadows, 2009
        909 Moon Duncan Jones, 2009
        910 Splice Vincenzo Natali, 2009
        911 World's Greatest Dad Bobcat Goldthwait, 2009
        912 13 Assassins Takashi Miike, 2010
        913 Animal Kingdom David Michod, 2010
        914 Black Swan Darren Aronofsky, 2010
        915 Inception Christopher Nolan, 2010
        916 Point Blank Fred Cavay, 2010
        917 Senna Asif Kapadia, 2010
        918 The Arbor Clio Barnard, 2010
        919 The Social Network David Fincher, 2010
        920 The Town Ben Affleck, 2010
        921 The Trip Michael Winterbottom, 2010
        922 Bernie Richard Linklater, 2011
        923 Beyond the Black Rainbow Panos Cosmatos, 2011
        924 Michael Markus Schleinzer, 2011
        925 Midnight in Paris Woody Allen, 2011
        926 The Artist Michel Hazanavicius, 2011
        927 The Cabin in the Woods Drew Goddard, 2011
        928 The Raid: Redemption Gareth Evans, 2011
        929 The Skin I Live In Pedro Almodovar, 2011
        930 Anna Karenina Joe Wright, 2012
        931 Berberian Sound Studio Peter Strickland, 2012
        932 Compliance Craig Zobel

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          swanstep — 9 years ago(September 11, 2016 07:05 AM)

          998 The Wolfpack Crystal Moselle, 2015
          An undistinguished documentary on a decidedly unweighty subject (and with a massive blindspot about its own conception), The Wolfpack is probably one of Wright's least defensible/sensible picks. Urgent, landmark documentaries like Act of Killing, Fog of War, Capturing The Friedmans, Crumb aren't on his list, and this piece of fluff is? Too bizarre.
          Next up, back to the '70s with:
          Melody (1971)
          Electra Glide in Blue (1973)

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            swanstep — 9 years ago(September 12, 2016 08:08 AM)

            377 Electra Glide in Blue James William Guercio, 1973
            A pretty great-looking ramble through the same territory as Easy Rider and Two-Lane Black-top and Vanishing Point only this time from the vantage-point of a Vietnam Vet, straight arrow, motor-cycle cop in Monument Valley Arizona for the most part (with all the western film resonance that brings). It also has some of the same music instincts as Play Misty for Me and Zabriskie Point from the same period, so, e.g., there's a great concert performance thrown in.
            The story and dialogue's fairly elliptical at times so I often had the feeling I was missing something or having to make guesses about what happened and often the action was staged in a way that just made it easy to miss something. This isn't a problem at home when you can pause and rewind etc., but I imagine that back in 1973 I lot of people probably left the theater going 'Huh?' Films pay a price at the box office for not spelling things out clearly. but maybe they make it back in rewatchability and cult-status later on?
            Superior photography from Conrad Hall is a highlight throughout and some of the movie's thoughts about police paranoia and brutality feel quite timely right now. Every cop we see apart from Robert Blake is corrupt and one fantasizes that there's a 'Police genocide' going on. Yikes.
            Jeannine Riley has a good supporting part that pays off with a scene that almost heads into Blue Velvet territory.
            Does one really need Electra Glide after all the other movies I've mentioned? Probably not, but Wright doesn't seem to have been troubled by that sort of consideration (whereas if I make a top x list I'm always tortured by what I'm having to leave out, so I'm always eager to cull for redundancy, non-essential-ness, etc.!). Anyhow, I'm glad to have seen EGIB in the spirit of '70s downer completeness.

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              ecarle — 9 years ago(September 12, 2016 05:06 PM)

              377 Electra Glide in Blue James William Guercio, 1973
              A pretty great-looking ramble through the same territory as Easy Rider and Two-Lane Black-top and Vanishing Point only this time from the vantage-point of a Vietnam Vet, straight arrow, motor-cycle cop in Monument Valley Arizona for the most part (with all the western film resonance that brings). It also has some of the same music instincts as Play Misty for Me and Zabriskie Point from the same period, so, e.g., there's a great concert performance thrown in.
              How about them early 70's road movies, huh? Especially the ones with the wide desert vistas and hilly highways ahead
              I would like to point out that a few years ago, I drove from Reno Nevada down to Las Vegas using a desert route andit was like those movies. Vanishing Point in particular, I think I ran through some of the same desert towns.
              The story and dialogue's fairly elliptical at times so I often had the feeling I was missing something or having to make guesses about what happened and often the action was staged in a way that just made it easy to miss something. This isn't a problem at home when you can pause and rewind etc., but I imagine that back in 1973 I lot of people probably left the theater going 'Huh?' Films pay a price at the box office for not spelling things out clearly. but maybe they make it back in rewatchability and cult-status later on?
              Maybe. Two Lane Blacktop is another good example of this. The actors are standing there, saying lines, but they don't really fit as dialogue in the razor sharp Ping-Pong Psycho tradition. And the actors mumble. And sometimes the screen goes dark in the lighting and you can't see who's who.
              "I Love the Seventies!"

              Superior photography from Conrad Hall is a highlight throughout and some of the movie's thoughts about police paranoia and brutality feel quite timely right now. Every cop we see apart from Robert Blake is corrupt and one fantasizes that there's a 'Police genocide' going on. Yikes.
              A theme that never really goes away. Keep in mind that in late (Xmas) 1973, Dirty Harry himself went up against a "uniformed death squad" in "Magnum Force." It seemed to be Clint Eastwood's apologia for the "fascist" aspects of Harry, but it won no solace for him from Pauline Kael(or was it Judith Crist?) who wrote: "Evidently Harry is only mad at these killer cops because they didn't check with him first."
              The late Sidney Lumet made many films about crooked cops(Serpico, Prince of the City, Q and A, Night Falls on Manhattan), he said, "because that is the most important topic in the world. If your cops are corrupt, your society is in grave danger." (Or something like that.)
              Jeannine Riley has a good supporting part that pays off with a scene that almost heads into Blue Velvet territory.
              I've not seen all of this film, I don't remember her in it. She was a 60's cutie on Petticoat Junction?
              As the younger folks say around these boards: does she get naked?
              Oh, never mind.
              Does one really need Electra Glide after all the other movies I've mentioned? Probably not, but Wright doesn't seem to have been troubled by that sort of consideration (whereas if I make a top x list I'm always tortured by what I'm having to leave out, so I'm always eager to cull for redundancy, non-essential-ness,
              Well, you're doing a bang-up job.
              I've only seen parts of this movie, but I do recall that the director had made his name as a producer of Chicago albums(?) and the famous last shot with Robert Blake , who slowly worked his way up to regular work (Baretta)mainly by showing up and playing the rebel on Johnny Carson(Carson loved it) and of course eventually threw it all away.

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                swanstep — 9 years ago(September 12, 2016 05:49 PM)

                I've not seen all of this film, I don't remember her in it. She was a 60's cutie on Petticoat Junction?
                That's her.
                As the younger folks say around these boards: does she get naked?
                No. She's quite sexy though. She plays a beaten-down-by-life waitress/hostess and she's in a belly-top in her big sad scene which shows off her very long mid-riff with a great nipped in waist. Her character tells us she was a rockette before things started going wrong for her, and we see that she's still got a body that won't quit (as guys say).

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                  swanstep — 9 years ago(September 13, 2016 06:08 AM)

                  652 Virile Games Jan Svankmajer, 1988
                  Virile Games is a surreal, 14 minute, word-less, mostly collage and claymation short about football/soccer and the hooliganism that is often associated with it (particularly in the '80s). It didn't do much for me. Should perhaps be seen while intoxicated/stoned to be best appreciated I suspect.
                  At any rate, VG's inclusion marks Wright's list as a deeply personal one. Sticking to animation broadly conceived, maybe no other film buff alive would pick Virile Games over landmark late '80s animes like Grave of the Fireflies, My Neighbor Totoro, Kiki's Delivery Service yet that's what Wright does.

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                    swanstep — 9 years ago(September 14, 2016 08:30 AM)

                    336 Melody, Waris Hussein, 1971
                    Gawd, you need to be 10 or 11 to really enjoy Melody. It's the sort of film that breaks into a pop-song assisted montage literally every couple of minutes, i.e., about half the film is these montages. A very simple story that could be done within an hour is thereby stretched out to nearly double that length. If you quint properly I guess you can see some of Wes Anderson oeuvre as flowing from here, esp. Moonrise Kingdom but also Rushmore. Melody is a little like Moonrise Kingdom made by someone with no interest in production design, no real editing or shot-making skill, no understanding of good dialogue, and no ability to elicit good performances from young actors!
                    But, I dunno, the IMDb score for this film is 7.9 (on reletively few votes) - which is only just outside the IMDb top 250 (things like The Avengers and Roman Holiday are some of the lowest ranked 8.0s in the top 250 for comparison). So I'm guessing that Melody just does hit people very hard at a certain age and perhaps from a specific generation. There's no arguing with that.
                    In my view, then, this is another of Wright's picks that's truly personal.
                    684 The Rapture, Michael Tolkin, 1991
                    I remember this getting a delayed release or maybe re-release on the art-house circuit after The Player written by Tolkin hit fairly big in 1992.so I was glad to finally get to see it. SoTolkin does the official Christian end-of-the-world scenario pretty straight. Rather like Scorsese's Last Temptation of Christ, The Rapture's ideal audience is a a certain sort of thoughtful Christian, almost everyone else it's either going to really annoy or slightly bore. I was in the latter category. That said, there's a good central performance from Mimi Rogers, and her initial (pre-finding God) 'swinger lifestyle' + work ennui is intelligently drawn. Still, really not my thing.

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                      ecarle — 9 years ago(September 17, 2016 11:04 AM)

                      That said, there's a good central performance from Mimi Rogers, and her initial (pre-finding God) 'swinger lifestyle' + work ennui is intelligently drawn
                      I saw The Rapture once on cable. I don't remember much about it other than the premise(which gets talked about and had an HBO series about it a few years ago, the Rapture that is.) I recall that Ms. Rogers(the first Mrs. Tom Cruise, I might add) did some sex scenes as part of that swinger lifestyle part.
                      What I mainly remember but not why it happened, or to who was a long terrifying sequence of a crazed shooter killing a lot of folks in an office. Am I right? Was someone close to the Rogers character killed?
                      The concept of a crazed shooter killing a lot of folks in an office is chilling and too real, I might also add.
                      I recall one episode of "Six Feet Under." Each episode opened with the death of a character by some oddball means sometimes(a cougar killing a mountain jogger, a woman whose head was crushed when she raised it up out of a sunroof and hit a low hanging pole, etc.) The "probable victim" was in her kitchen cooking with gas and on the phone. She's gonna die. Nothe people on the end of the phone are going to die. Office shooting. Big surprise.
                      The John Grisham courtroom thriller "Runaway Jury" used then-noted actor Dylan McDermott to play a very brief role as a husband and father who is killed in the film's first scene: an office shooting.
                      I remember these scenes because they just seem to be one of the "top ten" horrors that could be visited upon "regular everyday people" in the course of their work. I doubt that Hitchcock could have ever brought himself to film such a thingbut it was his subject in more cinematic ways.

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                        swanstep — 9 years ago(September 17, 2016 07:38 PM)

                        What I mainly remember but not why it happened, or to who was a long terrifying sequence of a crazed shooter killing a lot of folks in an office. Am I right? Was someone close to the Rogers character killed?
                        That's one of the best and most memorable scenes for sure: pre-X-files, David Duchovny playing Mimi Rogers's husband (a sceptical swinger-type whom Rogers has been able to convert to her hyper-Christianity, and with whom she now - there's a '6 years later' intertitle - has a kid and a thriving business) is the shooter's final victim that we see.
                        The shooter isn't random, he's one of Duchovny's employees that he has to fire. There's a long-ish scene where we see Duchovny firing him as compassionately as it's possible to do so (explaining how they've tried to work with guy, got him to go to AA, etc. but the work's still terrible) but the guy just gets more and more angry and he ends up hurling a lot of invective against Duchovny's faith and the general saintliness of the office environment that Duchovny has created.
                        At this point we're about an hour into the movie waiting and expecting The Rapture to begin any second, and we expect that Rapture to be announced by Trumpets blaring from the heavens etc.
                        After the firing there's a short word-less, chorally-scored scene of Duchovny and Rogers at home in a maximally calm, The-End-Is-Nigh-but-we-couldn't-be-happier prayer circle with their kid. We cut back to a cherubic Duchovny in the office (the next day or possible a few days later we assume) on some thunderous sound. Could it be The Rapture arriving? No! It's the blasts from fired guy shooting up the office. He shoots and kills a few people then Duchonovy runs in to where he is:
                        uchovny: Louis (imploringly)
                        Shooter: No speeches preacher.
                        Duchovny (raising his hands): I have a little girl.
                        Shooter: So what? (shoots Duchovny dead, checks that he's dead)
                        Cut to daughter greeting mourners at family home. Mimi Rogers and her daughter are calm and comforting everyone else..
                        The concept of a crazed shooter killing a lot of folks in an office is chilling and too real, I might also add.
                        I had to check the timeline on this, but it turns out that The Rapture's office-shooting scene may have been one of the first directly responding to the up-tick of such incidents in the '80s. While disgruntled worker/office shooters/rampage killers have always occurred (once every decade or so in the US) there was a flurry in the late '80s and early '90s that really got people talking and nervous - a series of post office-related massacres (hence the grim humor of 'going postal') and a horrible stalking-related case in CA where the guy had the full military armor/1000s of rounds of ammo degree of preparedness for mayhem. The latter story was made into a pretty good and disturbing docu-drama,TV-movie in 1993, 'I Can Make You Love Me', w/ Brooke Shields as the stalkee and John-Boy Walton himself, Richard Thomas as the stalker. I remember that TV-movie being a bit of an event because of its novelty. But The Rapture's scene was 2 years ahead of that

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                          ecarle — 9 years ago(October 05, 2016 07:45 PM)

                          What I mainly remember but not why it happened, or to who was a long terrifying sequence of a crazed shooter killing a lot of folks in an office. Am I right? Was someone close to the Rogers character killed?
                          That's one of the best and most memorable scenes for sure: pre-X-files, David Duchovny playing Mimi Rogers's husband (a sceptical swinger-type whom Rogers has been able to convert to her hyper-Christianity, and with whom she now - there's a '6 years later' intertitle - has a kid and a thriving business) is the shooter's final victim that we see.
                          Aha. David Duchovny has some of that Dylan McDermitt look to him. Interesting that they played office shooter victims in two separate films.
                          The shooter isn't random, he's one of Duchovny's employees that he has to fire. There's a long-ish scene where we see Duchovny firing him as compassionately as it's possible to do so (explaining how they've tried to work with guy, got him to go to AA, etc. but the work's still terrible) but the guy just gets more and more angry and he ends up hurling a lot of invective against Duchovny's faith and the general saintliness of the office environment that Duchovny has created.
                          Yes, I remember this now. Firing an employee is always a tricky bit of business, but nowadays I suppose it can stand as a life-endangering task.
                          Could it be The Rapture arriving? No! It's the blasts from fired guy shooting up the office. He shoots and kills a few people then Duchonovy runs in to where he is:
                          Bait and switch? I cannot recall if The Rapture was actually portrayed in what was a modestly budgeted film. (Ah, hell, besides the office shooting and the sex scenes, I can't remember anything. And all I remember of the sex scenes is that they were there.)
                          uchovny: Louis (imploringly)
                          Shooter: No speeches preacher.
                          Duchovny (raising his hands): I have a little girl.
                          Shooter: So what? (shoots Duchovny dead, checks that he's dead)
                          Cut to daughter greeting mourners at family home. Mimi Rogers and her daughter are calm and comforting everyone else..
                          A sad invocation of what Hitchcock himself covered in Psycho and Frenzy: there's no reasoning with someone gone mad who is out to kill you.
                          The concept of a crazed shooter killing a lot of folks in an office is chilling and too real, I might also add.
                          I had to check the timeline on this, but it turns out that The Rapture's office-shooting scene may have been one of the first directly responding to the up-tick of such incidents in the '80s. While disgruntled worker/office shooters/rampage killers have always occurred (once every decade or so in the US) there was a flurry in the late '80s and early '90s that really got people talking and nervous - a series of post office-related massacres (hence the grim humor of 'going postal')
                          The post office ones were particularly scary in suggesting that there was something about the work pressure there that was "ready to blow." One massacre inspired another and another.
                          I've always been incredibly polite to post office workers, no matter how slow they go!
                          In a different context, I've sometimes felt that the beloved 4 guys versus 200 massacre that climaxes The Wild Bunch could be seen as the Bunch "going postal." Yes, their friend has been tortured and killed, but they are middle-aged men at the end with no prospects
                          and a horrible stalking-related case in CA where the guy had the full military armor/1000s of rounds of ammo degree of preparedness for mayhem. The latter story was made into a pretty good and disturbing docu-drama,TV-movie in 1993, 'I Can Make You Love Me', w/ Brooke Shields as the stalkee and John-Boy Walton himself, Richard Thomas as the stalker. I remember that TV-movie being a bit of an event because of its novelty. But The Rapture's scene was 2 years ahead of that
                          Hmmmdidn't see that one. Well, office shootings are "in the air" with everything else that's horrible out there right now. But evidently, the odds are still with us that this WON'T happen to us

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                            swanstep — 9 years ago(September 17, 2016 04:20 AM)

                            901 Crank: High Voltage Mark Neveldine, Brian Taylor, 2009
                            Unbelievably horrible, unless perhaps you see it with a group and you're all stoned out of your gourds, Crank 2 is padded out with various sorts of nonsense and is finally the sort of 90 minute film that is really 80 minutes + ten minutes of credits laced with bloopers.
                            I actually watched Crank (2006) in preparation for this. It's considerably better. Crank 2 just repeats most of Crank's greatest hits but with much amplified cartoonishness and with no real regard fr wither plot or character, becoming I suppose something like a live-action, hard-R, video-game or Bugs Bunny or Wile E. Coyote movie.
                            Cranks 2's video-game-y, hyper-kinetic style does remind one a little of Edgar Wright's own Scott Pilgrim (also a failure in my view) but the plain fact of the matter is that Wright's just a lot better at such stuff than Neveldine and Taylor are. I remember N&T getting a bit of buzz out of the Crank films - they had some high-profile fans like Wright! - but that was clearly nuts as their subsequent (three duds in a row) career proves.

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                              swanstep — 9 years ago(September 20, 2016 09:10 AM)

                              918 The Arbor Clio Barnard, 2010
                              Absolutely shattering, innovative documentary about the life and family of precocious English voice-of-the-struggling-working-class playwright, Andrea Dunbar (who dies age 29). Becomes a case-study of cycles of hopelessness, abuse, and tragedy that's truly upsetting. Documentary works by having actors largely lipsync to tapes of Dunbar and her family and friends talking through Dunbar's life and those of her kids. It won't be everyone's cup of tea, but if The Arbor sounds at all like your sort of thing, it will be. It's a superb piece of work on a difficult subject-matter, one that probably will be remembered as one of the canonical documentaries henceforth. (It's the complete opposite of The Wolfpack from further down Wright's list!)

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                                swanstep — 9 years ago(September 26, 2016 06:39 AM)

                                993 The Gift Joel Edgerton, 2015
                                A very impressive thriller debut written and directed by (as well as co-starring) Edgerton. Owes a fair bit to Haneke's Cach I'd say, or, put another way, The Gift feels like the exact mid-point between Cach and standard Hollywood insinuating-Psycho-inside films going back to at least Strangers On A Train. Good stuff.
                                Suddenly for me there's reason to look forward to Edgerton's new film Loving about the Loving v. Virginia US Supreme Court Case that struck down all laws (such as Virginia's) forbidding inter-racial marriages. I'd kind of written Loving off as purest Oscar-Bait, but Edgerton showed in The Gift that he's got some serious chops and is one to watch so even if it is Oscar-bait it could be a very superior example. If it is then Edgerton himself may quickly start racking up awards as fellow actors vote for one of their own (following in the footsteps of Redford, Beatty, Costner, Gibson, Affleck, etc.).
                                Update: Oops, Loving is written and directed by Jeff Nichols (Take Shelter, Mud, Midnight Special); Edgerton only stars.

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                                  swanstep — 9 years ago(September 27, 2016 09:50 PM)

                                  561 Breathless Jim McBride, 1983
                                  An interesting film that I'll need to see again (and meanwhile rewatch Godard's original) before I can reach a final verdict I'd been looking forward to seeing this for a while since I vaguely remember the film getting poorly reviewed in 1983 and yet I've been aware since the '90s that it has its high-profile fans, most notably QT and Mark Kermode. I guess my way into the film (given that it has little of the timeless, ineffable cool of Godard's original) has therefore been to see it as trying to be a mixture of True Romance and Pulp Fiction before its time. (with a bit of Kill Bill 2 anticipation for good measure). True Romance rewrites and sexes up Badands much the way Breathless (1983) does Breathless (1960), and True Romances's way of using both music and pop-cultural references are both strongly in evidence in Breathless (1983). The use of multi-cultural 'Southlands' LA locations feels like Pulp Fiction (although the bits of PF it feels like most are, unfortunately, the Butch and Fabienne bits! The female lead in Breathless (1983) is Fabienne stretched out to 80 minutes!). First Time Through then I couldn't really say if I liked B (1983) or not; it's something to be ahead of your time but it doesn't necessarily make you good! Anyhow, it's a good sign that something makes you want to see it again, and Breathless definitely does that.
                                  886 The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters Seth Gordon, 2007
                                  Terrifically entertaining if insubstantial doc. about the world of the world champions of Donkey Kong and other arcade games. Well-edited and doesn't overstay its welcome.
                                  Glad to have seen both of these.

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                                    swanstep — 9 years ago(October 05, 2016 04:49 AM)

                                    957 The Counselor Ridley Scott, 2013
                                    Ha, I remember this one getting slammed by the critics when it came out enough so that I never even considered seeing it (Scott's been a pretty erratic director since the mid-'80s). Well, The Counselor turns out to be very watchable even somewhat fascinating (even though at least on first viewing the mechanics of the main caper and the double- and triple-crosses are still pretty obscure to me, to the point where I wasn't completely sure who was doing most of the killing at the end of the film). I'll certainly watch it again sometime soon.
                                    The Counselor wr. by Cormac McCarthy is kind working the same beat as McCarthy's No Country for Old Men, and also things like Traffic and Sicario, but with a Double Indemnity/Body Heat layer over the top of the (by now) usual border-land spectacular violence. If that sounds like your kind of thing then this film probably will be. Interesting dialogues throughout are the principal compensation for not completely understanding in real-time the plot/caper mechanics.

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                                      swanstep — 9 years ago(October 08, 2016 02:25 AM)

                                      954 Only Lovers Left Alive Jim Jarmusch, 2013
                                      A languid vampire tale of no particular distinction in my view. Swinton and Hiddleston are both amazing physical and acting specimens, some of the production design is fun to eyeball, and there's some interesting music, but with little story to speak of and only a few repetitive ideas, OLLA feels like a 30-40 minute exercise needlessly stretched out over two hours.
                                      I'm intrigued by the fact that OLLA made Wright's list but the somewhat similar A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night (2014) - the b/w indie Iranian vampire flick shot in L.A.! - did not. The latter had a few problems, but it still struck me as having most of the virtues of OLLA while being rather more fun, and getting through its paces in about 25 mins less. Hmmm.

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                                        swanstep — 9 years ago(October 15, 2016 04:57 AM)

                                        906 Henri-Georges Clouzot's Inferno Serge Bromberg, Ruxandra Medrea, 2009
                                        A fascinating hybrid of documentary and lost-film-reconstruction. In 1964, Clouzot sets out to make his master statement that'll top Vertigo and Marienbad and 81/2. Inferno/Hell/L'Enfer. He gets unprecedented support from an American studio (officially budget is unlimited), and afters month of camera tests and make-up experimentation with the actors, Clouzot heads to his big location with no less than three complete ace film-crews..and things fall apart. Clouzot has become so intrigued with all his new research and exploration that he's barely able to complete scenes. Actors are forced through hundreds of takes and eventually start walking off set, famous DPs do the same, and eventually Clouzot has a big heart attack which closes down production. Clouzot survives but he'll never be the same after the hugely expensive L'Enfer disaster. This doc. reconstructs as much as possible from the 175 reels that were shot (that includes the months of test footage).and most of it looks amazing. (A good source of frame-grabs for image-avatars! Hence my own recent change in this department.) If Clouzot had been able to complete the film it doubtless would have at least been one of the most visually sensational films of the '60s.
                                        The main problems I have with the doc. are that it leaves out a few big chunks of the story as far as I'm concerned. The big subject of L'Enfer is jealousy and its mind-bending-ness. I find it weird that the film never mentions that the great scandalous avant-garde, death-of-the-author French novel of the late '50s was Robbe-Grillet's (writer of Marienbad) Jealousy/La jalousie which plunges you into a twisted-by-jealousy mind in a then new way. That has to have been a big background inspiration for Clouzot, yet it's never mentioned in the film.
                                        Something else the film never mentions: in 1994 Chabrol made (with Clouzot's wife's permission) his own film, L'Enfer, from Clouzot's script.and it's excellent. More normal than/less far out/psychedelic than what Clouzot was trying for.it's still a dynamite film.and it is the whole original script so it's really useful to see it before seeing the kind of half-reconstruction of Clouzot's intended L'Enfer here.
                                        Anyhow, H-G Clouzot's Inferno (2009) is fascinating if you're into Clouzot and '60s film and/or tales of Directors losing their minds and their films. It wouldn't make my top 1000 list but it's still my sort of thing.
                                        Update: The doc. is currently available in full on youtube (you have to click in the right button to get the english subtitles):
                                        Someone has also put up (with a techno soundtrack) about 10 minutes of some of the greatest hits from Clouzot's test footage here:
                                        955 Prisoners Denis Villeneuve, 2013
                                        Pretty solid, long police procedural welded to a kind of commentary on the use of torture in the Global War on Terror. Not sure, first time through what it was actually saying about all that, especially given that the film elided the consequences for all but the main torturer. Villeneuve has pretty much been given the keys to Hollywood after this and Sicario: he's got the new sci-fi Arrival coming out shortly and he's current filming
                                        Blade Runner 2049
                                        . He's definitely proficient but maybe doesn't have quite the eye and editing chops of a Ridley Scott or a Fincher. Put another way, he's more a Fleisher than a Hitchcock. But, hell, these days we'll take a Fleisher! Villeneuve is one of the few people getting to make relatively big-budget non-superhero, original script films period, and we have to salute the guy for having achieved that status. Still wouldn't put Prisoners on any major lists myself but it's worth seeing.

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                                          swanstep — 9 years ago(October 19, 2016 04:11 AM)

                                          842 Ong-Bak Prachya Pinkaew, 2003
                                          A Thai Martial Arts/Parkour/Boxing action-film. the sort of film that insists on replaying any especially sensational kick or blow from 5 or 6 different angles. Not my sort of thing and not in the same league I'd say as The Raid: Redemption (2011) (also on Wright's list), a martial arts epic that does a much better job at characterization, story, themes, you name it.
                                          Ong-Bak is fun enough, and doubtless Thailand deserved to have its Jackie Chan or Jet Li, but this is not a film I'll watch again, nor will I track down Ong-Bak 2,3,4
                                          Thinking back to 2003 and looking at what did not make Wright's list from that year including Pirates of The Carribean 1, Dogville, Capturing the Friedmans, Fog of War, Bad Santa, Mystic River, maybe even The Station Agent and ThirteenI think I'd take any/all of those ahead of Ong-Bak.
                                          In general tho' there's quite a bit of martial arts stuff on Wright's list (QT has the same weakness I believe). I may have to face that, with only very rare exceptions (like The Raid as I mentioned above), that whole genre is a bit of blind-spot for me the way musicals are for some other people. I don't think I'm going to be able to follow through my notional plan to watch everything previously unseen on Wright's list; henceforth I'll mostly pass over anything that's obviously martial artsy.

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