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any Woody Allen fans?
 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2007-02-07 09:47 [#02046463]
Points: 24588 Status: Lurker



Over the past year, I've really started to get into the
films of Woody Allen. As a bonus, his films are really quite
cheap to buy on DVD, most of them being priced between £5
and £10.

I don't know if I have a favourite, but the last DVD of his
I bought (before today) was Hannah & Her Sisters, which I
really enjoyed.

Today I bought Alice and Shadows & Fog.
Looking forward to bangin' em on tonight.


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2007-02-07 10:09 [#02046471]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



I generally like watching them when they're on tv, but I've
never bought any (does this make me a bad person?).

I love that one where the actor is "out of focus."


 

offline QRDL from Poland on 2007-02-07 10:10 [#02046474]
Points: 2838 Status: Lurker



Yep, I am a fan. But I had my great Allen's marathon 4 years
ago, so no fresh thoughts from me.


 

offline QRDL from Poland on 2007-02-07 10:11 [#02046475]
Points: 2838 Status: Lurker | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #02046471



That would be Zelig? Or no?



 

offline KEN from BIRMINGHAM (United Kingdom) on 2007-02-07 10:11 [#02046476]
Points: 1844 Status: Regular



'relationships are like sharks-if they stop moving they die.
and what i think we're looking at here is a dead shark'

which film of his was that in?


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2007-02-07 10:11 [#02046477]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to QRDL: #02046475 | Show recordbag



I have no idea.. titles generally don't stick that well to
my head (blu-tac helps).


 

offline fleetmouse from Horny for Truth on 2007-02-07 10:19 [#02046479]
Points: 18042 Status: Lurker | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #02046471



Oh, um, Zelig I think.

Woody's great. I thoroughly enjoyed Match Point. Lots of
people didn't like it and they're wrong and bad. I bet they
didn't like Eyes Wide Shut either. No one understands how to
approach 70s auteur filmmakers anymore. I blame reality TV
for destroying the faculty of imagination.


 

offline fleetmouse from Horny for Truth on 2007-02-07 10:19 [#02046480]
Points: 18042 Status: Lurker



oh... QRDL beat me to it. Duh!


 

offline redrum from the allman brothers band (Ireland) on 2007-02-07 10:20 [#02046481]
Points: 12878 Status: Addict



yeah.


 

offline aphextriplet from your mothers bedroom (United Kingdom) on 2007-02-07 10:39 [#02046488]
Points: 4731 Status: Lurker



i like his older ones. His newer ones are a bit boring.
After you've seen two or three, you realise they're all run
on the same formula. The worst ones are the ones where a
different actor plays the role that woody would have played
ten years earlier. Painful to watch.


 

offline QRDL from Poland on 2007-02-07 11:21 [#02046516]
Points: 2838 Status: Lurker | Followup to aphextriplet: #02046488



I quite fancies Anything Else


 

offline goDel from ɐpʎǝx (Seychelles) on 2007-02-07 11:23 [#02046518]
Points: 10225 Status: Lurker



i liked the one where a man murdered his wife, to be able to
go off with his much younger mistress.


 

offline staz on 2007-02-07 11:24 [#02046519]
Points: 9844 Status: Regular



Manhattan and Annie Hall are great, as well as a host of his
older comedies.


 

offline clint from Silencio... (United Kingdom) on 2007-02-07 12:01 [#02046540]
Points: 3447 Status: Lurker



Yeah I like him... Manhattan is a fave.


 

offline optimus prime on 2007-02-07 12:07 [#02046542]
Points: 6447 Status: Lurker



of his newer films i really, really enjoyed Sweet and
Lowdown.


 

offline bogala from NYC (United States) on 2007-02-07 12:32 [#02046550]
Points: 5125 Status: Regular



Love his films and I agree the ones playing other actors
playing wood y is painful. Especially when they try to do
his mannerisms. Ouch.

No one films NYC and its ambience like Woody, too.



 

offline dariusgriffin from cool on 2007-02-07 19:31 [#02046852]
Points: 12423 Status: Regular | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #02046471



Deconstructing Harry

NOT ZELIG

Woody Allen is some kind of hero and I seem to have seen 23
of his films, with only one or two I didn't like.


 

offline b6662966 from ? on 2007-02-07 20:26 [#02046856]
Points: 1110 Status: Lurker



Is he that old kike with glasses that makes movies?


 

offline darkpromenade from Australia on 2007-02-07 21:52 [#02046872]
Points: 2777 Status: Regular



he's good......... some of his movies are a bit hit and miss
but overall they are excellent......

whats the one set in the future? where he's dressed as a
sperm?


 

offline dariusgriffin from cool on 2007-02-07 22:12 [#02046875]
Points: 12423 Status: Regular | Followup to darkpromenade: #02046872



The one set in the future is Sleeper and the one where he's
dressed as a sperm is a segment of Everything You Always
Wanted to Know About Sex etc.


 

offline darkpromenade from Australia on 2007-02-07 22:34 [#02046878]
Points: 2777 Status: Regular | Followup to dariusgriffin: #02046875



ahhh, cool.........


 

offline FlyAgaric from the discovery (Africa) on 2007-02-08 02:33 [#02046923]
Points: 5776 Status: Regular



Woody Allen's movies are great. I own Annie Hall on dvd but
my local video rental has many older and newer movies from
the man. Infact, they have a whole Allen section and I rent
and rerent quite regularly. Of his more recent films I
enjoyed 'Melinda and Melinda' the most. I love how Will
Ferrel's character acted like Woody Allen. He played it real
well and made it funny. I prefer his older movies,
especially the ones with comical elements, like the Sleeper,
Everything you wanted to know about sex, Annie Hall etc.. .
Ones like 'Interiors' and 'Hannah and her Sisters' are bit a
heavy, but still very good. He's one of the most prolific
directors I know of and never ceases to make movies. It's
what he does and he does it well.


 

offline w M w from London (United Kingdom) on 2007-02-08 03:18 [#02046937]
Points: 21452 Status: Lurker



Ever since he stole my collection of sasquatch toenail
clippings, Woody Allen has been dead in my eyes.

Anyone else use google like a dictionary? I purposly search
for an obviously mispelled sasquitch and it says 'did you
mean sasquatch'


 

offline uzim on 2007-02-08 15:46 [#02047460]
Points: 17716 Status: Lurker



Sweet and Lowdown is my favourite, satiric and a bit
melancholic while remaining very funny throughout (ok, that
may well describe a lot of Woody Allen films — let's just
say it's my favourite).

Manhattan Murder Mystery, Mighty Aphrodite,
Small Time Crooks and The Curse of the Jade
Scorpion
were all either very good, or at least
entertaining from what i remember; Shadows and Fog
was very different and i liked it very much too... i think
the only one i've seen i had mixed feelings about was
Match Point. i quite liked the story (especially the
ending), but i didn't like the way it was treated. even
though i can understand why it has been treated this way (it
definitely makes sense with the story, but in the end i
didn't enjoy it much).


 

offline ebolawasher from Dublin (Ireland) on 2007-02-08 15:51 [#02047468]
Points: 229 Status: Lurker



I love Woody Allen for his work in film. You know, he has a
jazz band? Plays clarinet. I've never heard any of it, and I
doubt it's top class. He's not acclaimed for it, but it's
jazz for fuck sake. Try pleasing dem critics!


 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2007-02-08 16:03 [#02047492]
Points: 24588 Status: Lurker | Followup to FlyAgaric: #02046923



Ta - based on that, I went out and bought Melinda & Melinda
today :)


 

offline Co-existence from Bergen (Norway) on 2007-02-08 16:41 [#02047517]
Points: 3388 Status: Regular



I like his films, when they don't get too annoying that is.
I liked the one he made were he didn't cast himself....it
had that chick from lost in translation in it....match
point? A clever and entertaining story imo....but not
anything groundbreaking....




 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2007-02-08 20:32 [#02047628]
Points: 24588 Status: Lurker | Followup to marlowe: #02047492



OK, I just got through watching Melinda & Melinda.
Pretty damn good film; Will Ferrell was very good in it: I
liked the playful references between the two versions of
Melinda's story. And boy, that Laurel is gorgeous!


 

offline FlyAgaric from the discovery (Africa) on 2007-02-09 04:52 [#02047747]
Points: 5776 Status: Regular | Followup to marlowe: #02047628



Excellent. Glad you ejoyed the film :)


 

offline jonesy from Lisboa (Portugal) on 2007-02-09 05:42 [#02047769]
Points: 6650 Status: Lurker



I saw Scoop last week and it was fuckin' lame. Stay away.


 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2007-02-09 07:52 [#02047830]
Points: 24588 Status: Lurker



Just got through watching Alice. The scene at the
end, after she's left her husband and returned from
Calcutta, and is in the small kitchen with her children
really touched a nerve: very moving.


 

offline tolstoyed from the ocean on 2007-02-09 08:08 [#02047835]
Points: 50073 Status: Moderator



they're fun and i like them.


 

offline bogala from NYC (United States) on 2007-02-09 11:45 [#02047922]
Points: 5125 Status: Regular



Melinda & Melinda is not a good film. Not a good Woody film.


 

offline bogala from NYC (United States) on 2007-02-09 11:47 [#02047927]
Points: 5125 Status: Regular



I suggest Sleeper as one of his best. Basically anything He
is in from the 70's and 80's


 

offline bogala from NYC (United States) on 2007-02-09 12:45 [#02047965]
Points: 5125 Status: Regular



Oh also check out Wild Man Blues . Its a doc on his band
while he tours Europe. He's funny in that too.


 


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