Let's try that again, leaving now to go see —
#90, or #1582, 2024's "Drive-Away Dolls."
Previously: https://beepboop.one/@Alexis/111992056460307692
So, I go through directors' and actors' filmographies, franchises, whole genres, the way I do to create context for myself, to get a grasp on the Story of that director, actor, genre, etcetera.
I say this to create context for my suspicion that I'm probably a little out of my depth with exploitation films.
Anyway, here we are, still listening along to Blank Check, starting Jonathan Demme, it's --
#91, or #1583, 1974 women-in-prison picture "Caged Heat."
Me, when I remember there's a big number coming up on the movie thread: Obviously I'm doing something special for this big number.
Me, when I forgot there was a big number coming up until just now and so didn't line anything up, which is fine because "big numbers" are just data we assign meaning to based on meaningless patterns: It's --
#100, or #1592, 1979 Jonathan Demme picture "Last Embrace."
🍽️ #110: "Noriko's Dinner Table" (2005)
I would simply not run away to Tokyo solely on the basis of some conversations I had with a total stranger on faux 2channel.
...Wait, I've done that several times, just not to Tokyo and it wasn't running away, and also they were my friends who I'd known for years.
🍽️ #110: "Noriko's Dinner Table" (2005)
I honestly did not feel like "Suicide Club" left that much unanswered, and where it did I didn't feel like I needed the answers
and the answers this comes up with aren't that interesting -- "Suicide Club" isn't a better film in any way for it all having been organised by this I.C. Corps.
🍽️ #110: "Noriko's Dinner Table" (2005)
@Alexis strongly agree that the connection to SC detracts from the experience. I kept wondering what I’d missed in SC that was relevant here, but … there’s nothing there.
But, wow, I’ve never seen the performative aspect of identity laid so bare. Been trying to drag @pauline through this one for a year now.
🍽️ #110: "Noriko's Dinner Table" (2005)
@nicole @pauline The "Suicide Club" stuff makes it a messy picture, but I think I'm gonna be thinking about a lot of this for a long time.
I was a little exhausted by it and should've picked a better day for it, but honestly, totally worth the time and effort. Incredible film. (Maybe even moreso if you don't think of it as a "Suicide Club" followup, really.)