A REALLY BAD BAD MOVIE …
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HHFR — 20 years ago(July 20, 2005 03:34 AM)
i
m sorry that you think in that way because i like that movie so much but i ask a question why do you see movies ? i mean that when you watch a movie you dont like to think about it ?
this film is full of concept if you like thinking go ahead -
The_Dying_Flutchman — 20 years ago(January 10, 2006 10:05 AM)
You sound like someone who is primarily interested in phillistine pig ignorance. Either that or yer very young. Even so yew will drink yer milk uncultured.
Nothing exists more beautifully than nothing. -
dbaboci — 20 years ago(January 26, 2006 11:09 PM)
I don't think it is about being cultured or uncultured. It is about how you understand the movie. Personally after i watch a movie, and i like it or i do not understand it i research it to see how other people have understood it in order to try and understand it even more
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amominak — 20 years ago(February 05, 2006 03:58 AM)
Amen! I felt truly lost at the end of this movie. I guess I'd better not see any more Passolini. I only saw it because a book I recently read kept referring to this movie. Hmmmm.. as a sidenote, I thought it appeared to have been filmed in english and dubbed over in italian..maybe just me but, it sure looked that way.
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trickyhappyelf — 19 years ago(November 13, 2006 11:06 PM)
nope it wasn't. Almost All Italian films of this time were dubbed over in post-production. Therefore the actors that spoke english in real life, spoke english when fiming, others spoke italian, others just counted to ten over and over. Lots of times the script wasn't even finished when directors shot the movie
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sessoconkafka — 20 years ago(March 10, 2006 04:12 PM)
"Teorema" is not an ordinary movie. It conveys a pretty deep message that's not so easy to understand (especially if you haven't been living in Italy in the late sixties). It works on complex metaphors that are not exhaustively explained. Yet its poignancy should not be denied. Not bad at all: Just different.
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squelcho — 19 years ago(April 28, 2006 02:31 PM)
It's said that Takashi Miike based Visitor Q loosely on Teorema.
I can see the resemblance, but Miike's humour is a welcome antidote to the stiff artiness of Pasolini's film.
I appreciate that it's from a different era, with different situationist goals, but purely as a movie, it failed to hold my interest with its clumsy symbolism.
Bunuel did it more humourously, Fellini did it more subtly, and Pasolini's finest moments were definitely elsewhere.
No doubt the intrinsic iconoclasm was very daring for its day, but Pasolini's deconstruction of church and state makes for a somewhat bland and predictable outcome.
I certainly don't agree with the OP, but neither do I think it's a masterpiece.
To my mind, it's an enigmatic footnote in the career of a director with much bigger fish to fry. Ditto Terence Stamp. -
cinesimonj — 12 years ago(July 23, 2013 09:06 AM)
That would be a relevant question if everyone understood things the same way, and found understanding things exactly as easy as each other.
For the life of me, I'll never fathom how people can think that 'good' or in this case 'well made' means 'don't have to think'.
I guess you also think that every painting or book you don't understand automatically makes it a bad book or painting. -
loufster — 19 years ago(May 06, 2006 03:02 PM)
Erm it's 'You can lead a whore to culture, but you can't make her think'. If you're going to mock someone for their lack of sophistication, you should at least get your quote straight.
I don't think you need to restate the 'horse' part either. Kind of ruins the joke. Sorry, was just passing, and couldn't help noticing -
ChoirBoyOC — 19 years ago(January 08, 2007 10:26 AM)
Late to the party, I realize, but you've both got the quote wrong. The story is that Dorothy Parker was asked to use the word "horticulture" in a sentence, and came up with the pun:
"You can lead a horticulture, but you can't make her think." -
cliffdwellersociety — 19 years ago(October 15, 2006 07:27 PM)
what do those of you who think this is offensive think of pasolini's Gospel According to Saint Matthew? it was also considered blasphemous when released, but personally it's the only movie about the bible i would ever claim to like, let alone love (which i think i do). see it, if you haven't. i'm not being perverse; you get the sermon on the mount verbatim (in translation), and yet a far more radical picture of your jesus than even the last temptation of christ (!, i'm told). i wonder.
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smith-684 — 19 years ago(October 23, 2006 05:01 PM)
One of my film instructors told us that if we don't get a movie or don't like it we should examine why we feel that way. Think about the films you didn't care for on first viewing and trying watching a few of them again and see if you change your mind. I have done this several times and, with few exceptions, realized that watching a film in a different setting, on a different day, a different season of the year perhaps, changed my perspective drastically.