Foreign films you liked?
#101
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French comedies set me rolling in the aisles. Has anyone seen "The Mad Adventures of Rabbi Jacob?" It's a hoot, with a great lesson in tolerance. Here's some info on it:
http://www.francevision.com/defunes/rabbij.htm
I find Fellini movies quite evocative. I feel like I am there with his characters.
And then there are the great Japanese films of Kirusawa, from the Seventh Samarai to Ran, which sweep me away.
Lots of great films from around the world!
http://www.francevision.com/defunes/rabbij.htm
I find Fellini movies quite evocative. I feel like I am there with his characters.
And then there are the great Japanese films of Kirusawa, from the Seventh Samarai to Ran, which sweep me away.
Lots of great films from around the world!
#102
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NEIL, The "Savoy"? At interval instead of the usual "candy" bar, they would have French pastry and perculated coffee and we thought we were sooo sophisticated! ( I shudder to confess I think I even wore a cravat once or twice...how wanky is that!?). Also there was the Lido in George Street and the Gala in Pitt Street.Ah happy memories! I used to love the Bergman movies too . All my friemnds thought I was mad but I put it down to my Danish ancestry!Cheers.
#104
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I'll stop the thread hijack now, but thanks Peter - the Savoy it was, the place for any budding young pseud to be seen (I should know). A cravat! That would have beaten my malodorous duffel coat and cords hands down.
So from an American perspective films from the UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand are technically foreign but not quite foreign enough to be really foreign?
Well, Hollywood employed a lot of foreign talent even in the old days, and the business is even more trans-national now. Although "Doctor Zhivago" was technically an American flick it's hard not to think of it as British. Likewise I have trouble thinking of "The Piano" as an Australian and not New Zealand movie.
So from an American perspective films from the UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand are technically foreign but not quite foreign enough to be really foreign?
Well, Hollywood employed a lot of foreign talent even in the old days, and the business is even more trans-national now. Although "Doctor Zhivago" was technically an American flick it's hard not to think of it as British. Likewise I have trouble thinking of "The Piano" as an Australian and not New Zealand movie.
#106
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Alan Parker and Dick Clement are Irish? That'll be news to them.
I suppose that it proves that outside of Ameriaca and a few very small countries all films are mainly colaborative.
eg - Ridley and Toney scott are Engliush but you'd never know from th films. So I 'll add another "foreign" film - Bladerunner.
"I have seen attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. I have seen C-beams glitter in the darkness at the Tannhauser Gate. All these moments will be lost in time like tears in rain. Time to die."
Beat THAT!
I suppose that it proves that outside of Ameriaca and a few very small countries all films are mainly colaborative.
eg - Ridley and Toney scott are Engliush but you'd never know from th films. So I 'll add another "foreign" film - Bladerunner.
"I have seen attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. I have seen C-beams glitter in the darkness at the Tannhauser Gate. All these moments will be lost in time like tears in rain. Time to die."
Beat THAT!
#110
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Well! The list goes on...and thanks for input by so many about good foreign films. Interesting question re: Brit,
Australian, Canadian, Irish etc. movies
...how "foreign" does a film need to be? Because it is in English doesn't mean it is less foreign, does it?
I must add a few more foreign films I've enjoyed that may have not been mentioned (I think):
Smilla's Sense of Snow
Whale Rider
Man Without a Past
Stone Reader
Osama
The Station Agent
The Fast Runner
Character
Central Station
Monsoon Wedding
The Shipping News
Spellbound
The Road Home
Barbarian Invasion
Close to Eden
(I think these are all foreign)
Coming up for viewing at a local small theatre or university: Kolya, Ladies in Lavender, Red Lights, Notre Musique.
Ozarksbill
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Australian, Canadian, Irish etc. movies
...how "foreign" does a film need to be? Because it is in English doesn't mean it is less foreign, does it?
I must add a few more foreign films I've enjoyed that may have not been mentioned (I think):
Smilla's Sense of Snow
Whale Rider
Man Without a Past
Stone Reader
Osama
The Station Agent
The Fast Runner
Character
Central Station
Monsoon Wedding
The Shipping News
Spellbound
The Road Home
Barbarian Invasion
Close to Eden
(I think these are all foreign)
Coming up for viewing at a local small theatre or university: Kolya, Ladies in Lavender, Red Lights, Notre Musique.
Ozarksbill
[email protected]
#111
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Me again. If I'm trying to pick up a couple of films for someone who absolutely adored "Bread and Tulips" but wasn't enchanted with "Amalie", can anyone sort of point me to my best bets? Thanks. J.
#113
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Ozarksbill, the problem is that not all the contributors to this thread are Americans. So for some of us, Hollywood flicks are technically "foreign films" but British, or Australian, may not be.
When I think "foreign" I tend to think anything subtitled. Scottish TV shows, and some films set in the north of England, perhaps should be subtitled, but even so I don't think of them as "foreign" either. Some American films depict lives more alien to mine that many European movies, but again the word "foreign" doesn't spring to mind.
The fact that so many English and Australian actors these days can believably play Americans (example, Toni Collette in "In Her Shoes" or Anthony LaPaglia in his TV roles), and so many Americans can handle English characters, illustrates how important a shared language can be.
When I think "foreign" I tend to think anything subtitled. Scottish TV shows, and some films set in the north of England, perhaps should be subtitled, but even so I don't think of them as "foreign" either. Some American films depict lives more alien to mine that many European movies, but again the word "foreign" doesn't spring to mind.
The fact that so many English and Australian actors these days can believably play Americans (example, Toni Collette in "In Her Shoes" or Anthony LaPaglia in his TV roles), and so many Americans can handle English characters, illustrates how important a shared language can be.
#115
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jmw44, "Enchanted April"has a similar plot to "Bread & Tulips"- but it is English women running away to Italy for a month vacation during the 1920's- actually trying to take a vacation from "marriage" and the mundane- and being unappreciated.
"Christ Stopped at Eboli" might work as well, its a study in small town Southern Italian authority in work and family structures, much more than a study of war.
And then watch "Cinema Paradiso" as a follow up view of the movies and fun in the same type of Italian village during the similar era.
Also "A Very Long Engagement" might work. It's the story of a French woman who refuses to believe her engaged beau and love of her life had been killed in WWI.
"Christ Stopped at Eboli" might work as well, its a study in small town Southern Italian authority in work and family structures, much more than a study of war.
And then watch "Cinema Paradiso" as a follow up view of the movies and fun in the same type of Italian village during the similar era.
Also "A Very Long Engagement" might work. It's the story of a French woman who refuses to believe her engaged beau and love of her life had been killed in WWI.
#117
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How obtuse of me! My apologies to Neil OZ and others...I do know that some Fodor people aren't Americans and therefore have a different perspective on what is foreign. Honestly, not all Americans are ego-centric I hope.
We have tended toward non-Hollywoodish indy and foreign films but there are some excellent American ones, of course.
Just back from seeing "Ladies in Lavender" with good old Maggie and Judy.
Nice quiet entertainment. Tomorrow night: "Kolya."
Ozarksbill
We have tended toward non-Hollywoodish indy and foreign films but there are some excellent American ones, of course.
Just back from seeing "Ladies in Lavender" with good old Maggie and Judy.
Nice quiet entertainment. Tomorrow night: "Kolya."
Ozarksbill
#119
I thought it was terrible. They had all the stuff that was not true like the art contest, and they had him die after being beaten up. He died of his excesses and TB. Jeanne was buried with him in the movie. In real life it was ten years later. The actors who played all his artist cronies et al were so bad.