Streaming Review: Jean-Luc Godard's Alphaville

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  • Опубліковано 4 сер 2024
  • Suddenly the word is Alphaville... and a secret agent is in a breathless race against the Masters of the Future. We review Jean-Luc Godard's Alphaville (1965)
    Streaming on: amzn.to/3QIwU5C
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    Summary: Lemmy Caution, an American private-eye, arrives in Alphaville, a futuristic city on another planet. His very American character is at odds with the city's ruler, an evil scientist named Von Braun, who has outlawed love and self-expression.
    This video contains affiliate links. If you click on one of them, I'll receive a commission.
    A special thanks to our Dark Cultist Patreon supporters.
    SHADOWS: Paul Keating, Johnny Compton, Adi Wood, Rodney J Kelly, Andreas Buckley, Shaun Turcott, cody francis, Todd Y, Symon O'Hagan, James Spies, Walter Durham, Rick Walz, Gerald Cuesta, CineShadow Moonlight, John S. Savage, Al Champagne, Dragonfyree, Robert Hedges, E. P. Haury, Spooky Robot, Mark Osborn, Travis Stephenson, Adam Clark, Ossie Nelson, Mark Welsh, Michael Clark, Ida Umphers, Lightning Round, Ian Lewis, Cecelie, Jonathan Harrison, Darren Le Noble, Melanie Atherton Allen, Gappasaurus, Joe Porter, Scott Nesmith, Lisa Kuta, John L. Normand Richardson, Richard Sadler, Ken Smiley, John Hepp, Thom MacIntyre, Chantelle Corey, Logistical Nightmare, Joe Niedbala, Joseph Hines, Stephen Crane, Kali, Anthony Strocks, Dave Church, Sikander, Jasmine Shafer, Allan Liska, Goddessoftransitory, Rachemus, Chris Weakley, steve scibelli, Connor Brennan, Raven House Mystery, Heather and Michael Bailes, Colleen Crouch, ChaosOverlordZ, Dan D Doty, Joseph Dougherty, Chris Hewson, Hidden Trail Video.
    ACOLYTES: Jim Smith, Alex cornwell, James Miers, Al Dooley, Geoffrey of Clan Gunn, Peter Sondheim, Chris Anastasio, Tarami Bedona, Mark J. Matthews, Ariana Thompson, Andrew Hughes, Chris Baglin, Angelina Licchelli, Karl Bernhard, Mary Whitcher, Jihoon Suk, Kristiyan Butev, DENNIS L WORNICA, Rhea Fleming, Damon Linkous, David Gattis, Mark, Heather L., Larry Cloud, Rick Winters, Lloyd, Roger Edwards, Carl Wilson, James J Kelly, David work, The Craven Fop, Brian T., Jenny Swindells, Arbie A, Ivo, Jon, Brett Hopkins, Joost, James Van Sickle, Tim Edwards, Chris Max Hauge, Robert ALAN Bryan, Chris McGarel, Scott Underwood, Larry Willoughby, Mark Curtis, KwaidanFan, Daniel Adams, William, Miss Angela Hale, David Nevarrez, Dr Strange Blood, Barbara Mosley, Mark Maillet, John Wick, Kenneth Carlson, Ron Klym, James Vance, Joe Goes Over, Tom Lanckman, Nancy A. Collins, Gary Mercer, Ann Knight, Janna Nicole, Clarence Pitre, Fritz Rutz, Thomas Brown, Chris Fischer, D R Wellington, Matt P, Milton Knight, Michael Schmidt, C, Michael Dean Jackson, Gemma Crowley, Andrew Weber, Picatea, Jim Rockford, Kyle Olson, Ch'aska Huayhuaca, Johnathan Henning, Nils Muninsheim, David Pellot, Brian Kidd, Albertus Magnus, Janne Wass, Robert Freeborn, David Conner, Ford, Peter Grantham, Amber Wesley, Terry LeCroix, Tony Belmonte, Alex B, Mark Buckley, Uwe Marquardt, Russ Chandler, Simon Ash, Lavaughn Towell, Dave Smith, Melissa Hayes, Dark_Roast,
    Written and presented by Robin Bailes @robinbailes
    Directed and Edited by Graham Trelfer
    Lockdown Review S1E99
  • Комедії

КОМЕНТАРІ • 105

  • @kriitikko
    @kriitikko Рік тому +16

    My favorite noir mash-ups: Who Framed Roger Rabbit and Dark City.

  • @briansmith2163
    @briansmith2163 Рік тому +15

    I watched a review of Clockwork Orange that credited Kubrick for using existing modernist architecture instead of sets. I laughed because of COURSE Kubrick had seen Alphaville.

  • @carlwilkerson9722
    @carlwilkerson9722 Рік тому +22

    My stomach tied itself in a knot when I heard that Godard had died. Just not the kind of news I wanted to hear. OTOH, I admit I am curious as to how many Experience Points it takes to become a Level 3 Seductress.

    • @ramengamer4806
      @ramengamer4806 Рік тому +1

      @carlwilkerson9722 I believe that to be a Seductress of any level requires some points put into Speechcraft.

  • @RavenHouseMystery
    @RavenHouseMystery Рік тому +22

    Alphaville has always been kind of an enigma for me. I've seen it at least twice and yet I've never felt that I just saw something profound. The film is well made and the whole look of the city gives it the right touch of "future noir" that's maybe only a few years away. I guess Alphaville may fall into the same category as Rollerball (1975). It's not the story that is important, but the world in which our story takes place and how it may reflect on our society now.

    • @fernandomaron87
      @fernandomaron87 Рік тому +1

      Blade Runner as well

    • @mahatmarandy5977
      @mahatmarandy5977 Рік тому +1

      @@fernandomaron87 Blade Runner has a much clearer narrative and a much less ambiguous point. This is more like "A bunch of stuff that happens, then stops happening without much explanation."

    • @mahatmarandy5977
      @mahatmarandy5977 Рік тому +3

      I politely disagree. Rollerball (1975) was about hero worship and spectacle, which is used to distract people from more important concerns, and hence manipulate them. It's not particularly well made, so it's easy to miss that point, but that's the point of it as per the folks who made it.
      If I were looking to compare Alphaville to a classic American SF film, I'd say probably "Colossus: The Forbin Project," in which a computer takes over the world, which is presented as a horrifying thing, even though the movie makes it very clear that this is exactly what humanity wanted all along. In Alphaville, a computer controls the entire galaxy, and this is presented as a bad thing, though no one seems to mind much, and we don't know the circumstances that caused it (I always felt it was implied to have been like this for a very long time)
      That said, I really have no idea what Alphaville is about. Not a clue. I tend to put it in the "Weirdness for Weirdness Sake" category.

    • @RavenHouseMystery
      @RavenHouseMystery Рік тому

      @@mahatmarandy5977 Thanks for the insightful reply. I will make it a point to see Colossus: The Forbin Project as well.

    • @mahatmarandy5977
      @mahatmarandy5977 Рік тому +1

      @@RavenHouseMystery Oh, definitely do! It's just a wonderful forgotten classic!

  • @CourteousKitsch
    @CourteousKitsch Рік тому +4

    One of my favorite sci-fi films. Now I feel like doing a Godard marathon!

  • @marienbad2
    @marienbad2 Рік тому +8

    I love this film! It is so effortlessly chic, cool and stylish. I love how Caution seems as lost as we do in this strange world, yet seems to fir right in style-wise. It looks amazing and the black and white just heightens the feel of it.
    As for noir mash-up, perhaps the original Solyaris (Tarkowski version) could be considered somewhat noir-ish. Certainly the protagonist is confused by what it happening, and it all takes place in a sort of surreal other-universe. The Russian anti-war movie Ballad of a Soldier might also fit into this category as there are no heros in it (well, sorta - the protagonist is considered a hero at the start for what he did, but as the film progresses he becomes more of an anti-hero.)

  • @DamnedSilly
    @DamnedSilly Рік тому +13

    Variations on Noir are often attempted but seldom successful. The best usually only take elements while bringing something fresh. Oddly my favorite is probably _Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid_ because on one level it's pure in it's emulation and on another it's pure camp.

  • @splifftachyon4420
    @splifftachyon4420 Рік тому +4

    Great review! I love Alphaville. The first time I saw it was in a film course I took in university. RIP Monsieur Godard. Thank you for all that you gave to the world of film.

  • @alanbash2921
    @alanbash2921 Рік тому +1

    The Closing Minute is Unforgettable ....Especially The Closing MUSIC !

  • @gavinmillar816
    @gavinmillar816 Рік тому +5

    I grew up in the rather remote countryside of Northern Ireland. As I started to fall in love with cinema I found it incredibly hard to find any avenue to watch/purchase the films I was reading about with so much excitement.
    As a pre-teen in the mid to late 90s my mother went shopping in Belfast for the day and I came along so I could visit the various large scale virgin megastores and HMVs located there. Surely somewhere in these vast multi level stores there would be a section filled with all the works of great masters I had read so excitedly about.
    Scorsese had waxed lyrical about the French New Wave and I was a film noir and Sci fi fan. AlphaVille sounded so incredibly exciting. I had £20 with me and I wanted a copy on VHS ( dvd either didn't exist then or we didn't have a player yet)
    I nervously approached the much older boy at the till and asked if they had a copy for sale
    The store employee looked confused but taped a few keys on some computer then informed me. "We don't seem to have it. I've never heard of it. Whose in it ? I might be able to find it that way."
    I was a shy kid and I could feel my face turning red. I didn't know who was in it. I muttered something about Godard which just confused the poor lad at the till even more.
    I ran off empty handed to find my mum and returned home with a crushing sense of disappointment. Not that I hadn't got the movie. But that even in the biggest media store in a bustling metropolis like Belfast ( I know it a small city,but to young country boy me it was more than I could imagine) there was no one else to share my love of cinema with. I had expected the place to filled with chin stroking cigarette smoking movie buffs. Instead it was filled with loud teenagers trying to buy crash bandicoot.
    I still vividly remember how crushed I felt.
    I saw and enjoyed some Godard films years later at university, but ive still never seen Alphaville.

  • @seanledden4397
    @seanledden4397 Рік тому +4

    Good review of an enjoyably weird movie. But there's one sentence I want to focus on, "The brilliance of Alphaville is not its deconstruction of genres, it's the way it uses that deconstruction to make its director's point." I would argue that in Alphaville's case Godard wasn't deconstructing genres, but combining them. He transposed a noir crime thriller onto a future sci-fi mise-en-scene. Just as Scott did in Bladerunner. I would argue that in both cases "deconstruction" wasn't going on. As in both cases the directors loved the classics they were monkeying with. They were practicing a kind of creative cross-pollination. Genuine deconstruction, as with The Last Jedi, comes from contempt for the classics coupled with an adolescent conviction that merely breaking the rules makes something good.

  • @a.champagne6238
    @a.champagne6238 Рік тому +1

    Pulling this off my dvd shelf tonight. Bon soir, M. Godard

  • @fmac6441
    @fmac6441 Рік тому +4

    Apparently as ignorant as I am about the subject of the film, or very ironic, a Brazilian real estate company created a high-end closed community with that name.
    The venture worked and now Brazil is full of suburbia like places called Alphaville.

    • @ashleys9397
      @ashleys9397 Рік тому +1

      As I discovered myself on Wikipedia.

  • @paulforder591
    @paulforder591 11 місяців тому

    I've only seen bits and pieces of Alphaville. One day I'll see it in full. 😊🇫🇷

  • @vivalaminion2936
    @vivalaminion2936 Рік тому +2

    Do ya have to...do ya have to...do ya have to let it linger?

  • @williamblakehall5566
    @williamblakehall5566 Рік тому +2

    You say "noir mash-up" and I immediately think of Cast a Deadly Spell, a made-for-TV movie starring Fred Ward as a detective named Lovecraft, working in an alternate universe 1940s Los Angeles where magic is real and common, basically as a metaphor for corruption.

  • @leonptr
    @leonptr Рік тому +1

    I keep meaning to watch this

  • @jamescappio7434
    @jamescappio7434 Рік тому

    My favourite Godard and one of my very favourite movies-in my top 5, depending on how I'm feeling that day.

  • @euansmith3699
    @euansmith3699 Рік тому +1

    I saw Alphaville decades ago, on BB2 or C4, when I was a callow youth. The biggest impression I got was from the weird, gulping voice of the narrator. Strange stuff, but interesting.

  • @achecase
    @achecase Рік тому +1

    Thanks for the tip, just my cuppa.

  • @punchfisttop
    @punchfisttop Рік тому +4

    MY FAV FILM OF ALL TIME!!!!! EVER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @thrashpondopons8348
    @thrashpondopons8348 Рік тому

    This Movie is on my Film Bucket List!

  • @dirkstarbuck6126
    @dirkstarbuck6126 Рік тому +3

    I just wanna say before I watch this video, that I checked the movie out on IMDb when I saw this thumbnail. And even though I know the movie has nothing in common with Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep, the IMDb images strike me as being what a 1960s, faithful rendition of DADES would’ve looked like if it been made into a movie right after being published. Not that I don’t love Blade Runner, it’s one of my favorite movies, but I’ve always wondered what a movie closely crafted on the book might look like. And this is it!
    So… don’t know why I felt compelled to write that. But carry on…

    • @euansmith3699
      @euansmith3699 Рік тому +1

      VALIS compels you! WRITE!

    • @ashleys9397
      @ashleys9397 Рік тому +1

      I could really get behind a more literal adaptation of the great Philip K. Dick's DO ANDROIDS DREAM OF ELECTRIC SHEEP? As much as I've always loved BLADE RUNNER (which I've seen, like, a kazillion times more or less) , the screenplay took quite a few liberties with the original source novel; one must assume that this creative decision was due to commercial considerations. It's worth noting too that the late & equally great Harlan Ellison wrote an alternate BLADE RUNNER screen adaptation; now THAT might make for one helluva good flick. Somebody really oughta see about greenlighting the son of a bitch.
      Oh...and speaking of sheep, someone really should consider undertaking a film version of John Brunner's classic eco-catastrophe novel THE SHEEP LOOK UP. However, given its length, any halfway faithful adaptation might well face some logistical issues. (And just BTW your comments are right on the mark. Thanks for posting them.)

    • @dirkstarbuck6126
      @dirkstarbuck6126 Рік тому

      @@ashleys9397 A The Sheep Look Up movie would be terrifying!!

  • @normandrichardson3721
    @normandrichardson3721 Рік тому +2

    Angel Heart was a good noir mash up with horror

  • @coyoteartist
    @coyoteartist Рік тому +1

    I've never been lucky enough to see this although I remember reading many years ago about it. I recall a few years back, a book about the New York neighborhood of the same name and what I'd read of the movie coming to mind when I looked at it. I had the impression the movie was of a near future in which one man searched for the lost against brutalist despair. The book, being about a cop in the late '80s would have seemed a bookend then in a recent past in which one man search for the lost against crumbling despair. Also for some reason a band in the '80s named themselves after this movie.

  • @briansmith2163
    @briansmith2163 Рік тому

    Inherent Vice is a perfect example.

  • @peterschadenberg9045
    @peterschadenberg9045 Рік тому +4

    Don't get me wrong, I perfectly understand that Jean-Luc Godard was a maximumly important filmmaker. But boy his movies are really not my thing.

    • @ashleys9397
      @ashleys9397 Рік тому

      They ain't exactly this man's cuppa tea there neither, hoss.

  • @HotDogRock
    @HotDogRock Рік тому

    I love Alphaville, to me it's poetry.

  • @Malum09
    @Malum09 Рік тому +1

    Godard love for classic movies was really shown in the way that he very much avoided making his movies like that

  • @briansmith2163
    @briansmith2163 Рік тому

    Sorry to keep bringing up professor Leonard Heldreth, but the semester I took "Film and Literature" we focused on the "detective" genre, which has been very instructive for so many Noir - like films that have come, and continue to come, down the line. I recognize all of the tropes.

  • @rsacchi100
    @rsacchi100 6 місяців тому

    This looks like an interesting movie. It looks good.

  • @comentedonakeyboard
    @comentedonakeyboard Рік тому

    RIP Jean Luc

  • @mahatmarandy5977
    @mahatmarandy5977 Рік тому +2

    Just a quibble: I don't think the movie is in the future. I can't *swear* to that because there's an odd kind of dream logic going through the whole thing that sort of defies completely logical, definitive answers, but in the movie they mention that Lemmy is an American and he fought in Iwo Jima during WW2. He's driving a 1965 Ford Mustang, and of course he uses that vintage mid-60s 35mm camera you showed in a clip here. We're told that Alphaville is the capital of the galaxy, and that he *drove* to the planet from earth in some sort of sidereal interstitial gateway wormhole thing (Which we never see) and that he's heading back to it in the end.
    So I really think the movie takes place in the then-present, just on some other plane of reality that's connected to ours, but that we aren't really aware of.
    Just a thought.

    • @floydlooney6837
      @floydlooney6837 Рік тому

      That is interesting. In the end she could ask where he is going and be told he's going home. What will happen to us, she will ask. She will be told "I don't know, maybe he'll imagine us again one day".

    • @mahatmarandy5977
      @mahatmarandy5977 Рік тому +1

      @@floydlooney6837 I don't pretend to know. I have always had the very weird feeling that you can remember the outside world from Alphaville, but you can't remember Alphaville from the outside world. There's no reason to believe that, nothing in the movie implies it, it's just the odd dream logic of the film.
      You know when you have a recurring dream that you can't quite remember when you're awake, but as soon as you're having it again, you're like, "Oh, crap, this again" - on some level alphaville feels like that to me.

    • @floydlooney6837
      @floydlooney6837 Рік тому

      @@mahatmarandy5977 I think that sounds more interesting, I wonder if that was unintended. Might be an angle for anyone who might try a remake.

    • @ashleys9397
      @ashleys9397 Рік тому

      Actually he was driving a classic Ford Galaxie. You know..."Galaxie"..."Galaxy". Well, whatever. It's a nifty visual pun.

    • @mahatmarandy5977
      @mahatmarandy5977 Рік тому

      @@ashleys9397 Are you sure? [checking] Damn, you're right! I feel like a dope...

  • @haroldjones8521
    @haroldjones8521 Рік тому

    I met Goddard in 1972 when he was making a tour showing Tout Va Bien. He was a fascinating speaker, even though a lot was done through a translator. I loved Tout Va Bien. I was about the only one. I appreciated his sense of humor mixed with revolutionary politics. I was about the only one who liked the film. But I also loved Weekend.

  • @skylx0812
    @skylx0812 Рік тому

    All I know of Alphaville is the striking video to their hit song, "Forever Young". The lyric, _"Are you going to drop the bomb, or not?"_ defined my geenera-shun.
    ...yeah, we were kinda into ourselves

  • @chong2389
    @chong2389 Рік тому

    My favourite scene:
    Lemmy Caution shows a photo of Dr. von Braun to a passerby and says "Do you know this man?"
    Passerby: Look, says "Yes" and continues on his way.

  • @MrAlsachti
    @MrAlsachti Рік тому +3

    This is the only film by Goddard that I liked, but not for the reasons you would expect. I am French thus I watched (and listened to) the movie in its original version, without dubbing or subtitles. And the fact is (1) the sound is mediocre, (2) Eddie Constantine has an American accent, and (3) Alpha-60 has an awful voice. As a result, I didn't understand a word of what the characters were saying. I am not sure that the movie would have made more sense with the dialogues, but it was quite a surrealistic experience, and I made myself the promise to rewatch the film while smoking a joint (it has been 20 years and I didn't watch this film again.)
    (I remember the scene where Lemmy Caution walks through a corridor, opening doors, it was used in the 80s in the trailer of a French TV show about cinema)

    • @ashleys9397
      @ashleys9397 Рік тому

      But do you know why it sounds so awful? As it so happens Alpha 60 was voiced by a man with a mechanical voice box replacing his cancer-damaged larynx. (In the Southern parts of the U.S. these medical devices are colloquially known as "cancer kazoos".) The particular raspy voice effect was reportedly inspired by Fritz Lang's effective use of Dr, Mabuses's disembodied voice in the 1932 movie THE TESTAMENT OF DR. MABUSE.
      Let me in passing say that I too like ALPHAVILLE. I 've watched it several times in both its dubbed & subtitled versions---so I guess that must mean I really like it. It's also the only one of Godard's movies that I actually do like.

  • @rondemkiw4492
    @rondemkiw4492 Рік тому

    ALPHAVILLE seems to be a very loose spoof of AE van Vogt's THE WORLD OF NULL-A, which seems to have been a popular book in France.

  • @lakrids-pibe
    @lakrids-pibe Рік тому

    Lemmys mærkelige eventyr - Lemmy's strange aventure

  • @buzzawuzza3743
    @buzzawuzza3743 Рік тому +4

    Our crew of friends who are making our first horror film are planning on using some of these French New Wave techniques in our movie. Right now that means the chicks will be wearing very little.

    • @ashleys9397
      @ashleys9397 Рік тому

      Sounds like there's some real possibilities there. But if I may offer a bit of an admonition---Leave out all the cigarettes & all the cigarette smoking (which I refer to as "chaining coffin nails' as well as "jonesing for a cancer-rette"). So no ciggies & no smoky-smoky. It would really send the wrong message to young moviegoers. Oh...and just one other suggestion: Leave out those damn berets. UGH! I hate those faux bohemian French berets. So bury them. No fucking berets.

    • @buzzawuzza3743
      @buzzawuzza3743 Рік тому

      @@ashleys9397 No cigs??? No berets? Next thing you'll be saying no trench coats!! No one will be smoking in our film because no one can AFFORD cigs anymore! Thanks for the advice and stay cool!

  • @user-oq6jk7dm8o
    @user-oq6jk7dm8o Місяць тому

    Francis E. Dec brought me here.

  • @josephmatthews9866
    @josephmatthews9866 Рік тому +1

    this movie is set in the future? When I first saw it , the narrator said it was another planet.
    And that somehow , not explained , he drove to this planet by car . Strange, but , exceptable .
    ( perhaps I saw a different translation)
    when I saw this movie, back in college, it was called TARZAN VS I.B.M. ( really!! )

    • @DarkCornersReviews
      @DarkCornersReviews  Рік тому

      I'm sure I read somewhere that was Goddard's preferred title, but I can't remember where I read it/

  • @dbsommers1
    @dbsommers1 Рік тому

    Interesting choice.

  • @billmurray7473
    @billmurray7473 Рік тому

    I wonder if the director was the inspiration for the character of
    Jean-Luc Picard.
    What do YOU think?

  • @rodneykelly8768
    @rodneykelly8768 Рік тому

    You asked for a favorite "Mash-Up," here's mine-Science Fiction/Cosmic Horror. You might say that the two are the same thing, to which I would say, "Not Really." Two examples of science fiction/cosmic horror films are "The Event Horizon," and the "Alien" franchise. One is a haunted house, the other is an infestation. The only franchise that comes close to doing cosmic horror well is "Altered Carbon." The society in altered carbon is one that has enriched itself by plundering the equivalent of an Indian burial mound, and leaves you with the impression that this will not end well. In my opinion, the best cosmic horror is where a star spanning civilization realizes that it is nothing more than an ant hill, that's in Normandy France, during "D-Day."

  • @krzysztofporadzinski9183
    @krzysztofporadzinski9183 Рік тому +1

    Great movie. Who will win fight Braun's Alpha60 VS Forbin's Colossus?

    • @euansmith3699
      @euansmith3699 Рік тому +1

      WOPR, "A strange game. The only winning move is not to play."

    • @jimb2879
      @jimb2879 Рік тому +1

      Doesn't matter either way we lose

  • @kildogery
    @kildogery Рік тому +1

    This is literally one of the first films I downloaded, when I realised the internet was going to be the ultimate repository for all media I couldn't buy in Woolworths or rent from Global Video.
    Still haven't watched it though.
    It's the thought that counts.

    • @kildogery
      @kildogery Рік тому

      As in, I've had this on a hard drive for 20 years.

  • @Bigbadwhitecracker
    @Bigbadwhitecracker Рік тому

    Godard (and Fellini), to me, is one of those true artists that don't exist anymore in filmmaking. Personally, I have found him less accessible than others in his league such as Kurosowa, Welles. Breathless I thought was very distancing; I preferred the remake with Richard Gere which was almost shot for shot Godard's film, I think because I rooted for the characters in the remake. Godard and Felini must have been influenced by Brecht as far as the philosophy that art must present an issue in which you must confront and deal with in lieu of getting emotionally wrapped up in the story and forgetting about the social issue being presented.

  • @beyondz55
    @beyondz55 Рік тому

    Did this influence the film Delicatessen??

  • @a.champagne6238
    @a.champagne6238 Рік тому +1

    I wish someone would adapt Charles Bukowski's novel Pulp into a film. If done right, it could be the perfect noir mash up.
    If only I were ridiculously wealthy to the point where I could finance it...

    • @nedludd7622
      @nedludd7622 Рік тому

      There is a 1972 British movie "Pulp" with Michael Caine. It is a good mash-up of film noir.

    • @a.champagne6238
      @a.champagne6238 Рік тому

      @@nedludd7622 Bukowski's novel was written in 1994.

    • @nedludd7622
      @nedludd7622 Рік тому

      @@a.champagne6238 I know. I probably read it before you were born.

    • @a.champagne6238
      @a.champagne6238 Рік тому

      @@nedludd7622probably not unless you read it 13 years before it was written.

    • @ashleys9397
      @ashleys9397 Рік тому

      I think just about any of the Mighty Bukowski's novels would make for good movies, but only so long as any adaptation truly adhered to the spirit of the text. I also think that HAM ON RYE in particular could be turned into quite a fine movie, depending on the creative forces guiding the filmization. A tough & unsentimental coming of age story done Bukowski-style.

  • @lurkerrekrul
    @lurkerrekrul Рік тому

    I watched this many years ago and didn't really like it. As I recall, the dialog (or maybe it was the subtitles on the copy I watched) indicated that he was traveling to another planet (or galaxy?) by driving there. This immediately rubbed me the wrong way, because it seemed like a huge cop-out to suggest space travel and then just show him driving a normal car. If they had simply said that Alphaville was a city on Earth, I wouldn't have had a problem with it. I also found it ridiculous that Caution is supposed to be a "secret" agent, but he keeps pulling out a box camera and conspicuously taking photos of everything.
    I watched a lot of science fiction while growing up, much of it low budget. but Alphaville was a miss for me.

  • @jimb2879
    @jimb2879 Рік тому

    How about Cast a Deadly Spell. Noir/Lovecraft i saw the humor

  • @nedludd7622
    @nedludd7622 Рік тому

    Can "The Stalker" by Tarkovski be considered a film noir?

    • @lamecasuelas2
      @lamecasuelas2 Рік тому

      I don't think so. For me It's almost like a lovecraftian tale minus the monsters and the horror. Great movie though!

  • @ViaFerrataCH
    @ViaFerrataCH Рік тому

    I ran this one at our school film society but didn't like it, I guess I was just too young to understand it

  • @tuckerbowen4626
    @tuckerbowen4626 Рік тому

    "Much of the dialogue was improvised -- which the subtitles do occasionally struggle to keep up with"
    okay, but what's every _other_ movie's excuse?

  • @theelderskatesman4417
    @theelderskatesman4417 15 днів тому

    The title is misspelt in your thumbnail

  • @mauriciogutierrez2145
    @mauriciogutierrez2145 Рік тому

    I dont particularly like goddard movies but i think hes probably one of the most influential and important filmmakers and auteurs of all time and a huge loss for cinema

  • @BigSlimyBlob
    @BigSlimyBlob Рік тому

    How did I miss this review.
    Also... if you're illogical, you will be machine-gunned into a swimming pool where your corpse will be recovered by synchronized swimmers? Who came up with that, has he been machine-gunned into a swimming pool for coming up with it, and are we constantly machine-gunning politicians into swimming pools for continuing such an illogical practice?
    I can totally believe that some of the dialogue was improvised, a few of those sentences weren't quite proper French.

  • @SlutForInstantNoodles
    @SlutForInstantNoodles Рік тому

  • @NerdyWillowTree
    @NerdyWillowTree Рік тому +2

    I actively despise Godard, I find his films pretentious and pseudo intellectual, but I actually like Alphaville. I like the atmosphere, the black and white cinematography which transforms Paris into this dystopian nightmare world.

    • @fernandomaron87
      @fernandomaron87 Рік тому +1

      I like the first part of his career only. After the New Wave craze, he started to go on dubious and pretentious ways with his films

    • @ashleys9397
      @ashleys9397 Рік тому +1

      I'm in full agreement with you on that. I don't particularly like Godard's body of work for the very same reasons you cited. But I really like ALPHAVILLE. In fact I've watched it several times over the years.

    • @lamecasuelas2
      @lamecasuelas2 Рік тому

      He was annoyingly insufferable

  • @ChadwickTheChad
    @ChadwickTheChad Рік тому +2

    Oh neat, thanks, I've been looking for something to help me sleep.

    • @ashleys9397
      @ashleys9397 Рік тому

      Godard's movies usually have that somnolent effect on myself. But then just about any French New Wave picture would well suffice as a sleep-aide.

  • @kali3665
    @kali3665 Рік тому +1

    Rest in Power, Jean-Luc Godard.

    • @vivalaminion2936
      @vivalaminion2936 Рік тому +1

      Is rest in power from Black Panther? Can we stop with this cringe take on death?

  • @Schneekardinal
    @Schneekardinal Рік тому

    Concerning noir mash-ups: That neo-noir remake of Wizard of Gore is spectacular nonsense.

  • @ashleys9397
    @ashleys9397 Рік тому +1

    I ask all of you: What accounts for the continuing appeal of the French New Wave? What bizarre hidden mind-fucking alien influence compels highbrow cognoscenti and cinema arts professors to practically cream all over themselves while spewing ecstatically over the likes of Godard and Truffault and Bresson and Resnais and Rohmer and all the rest of their like ilk? Why do such people admire these intentionally tedious, largely inscrutable movies? For the average neophyte/first-timer , just a cursory viewing of a typical New Wave picture can turn into a profoundly discombobulating event: Black & white. Often muddy sound quality. Long camera takes. Long meaningful silences. Long blank/bored expressions. Long pensive sighs. Long traveling oblique stares. Long traveling stares doubling as knowing smirks. Existential angst. Ennui. Detachment. Indifference. Obscurity. Banal dialogue. Philosophical arguments. Slogans. Sartre. Marx. Mao. Cafes. Marx over cafe au lait. Cigarettes (Gauloises, n'est-ce pas?) More cigarettes. Lots of cigarettes. Smoking cigarettes. Smoking revolvers. Shades. Snap brim hats. Trench coats. Hoodlums. Gangsters. Waifs. Whores. Gamins. Ingenues. Young lovers. Old lovers. "Je t'aime, Je t'aime". Sex games. Infidelity. Adultery. "Amour". "Liasion" "Chansons d'amour" Betrayal. More betrayal. Despair. "Tristesse". Jean-Paul Belmondo. Jean-Pierre Leaud. Jean-Louis Trintignant. Yves Montand. Eddie Constantine. Anna Karina. Amouk Aimee. Jeanne Moreau. On and on and on...and on. So that's French New Wave all neatly itemized.
    Yep, there are some people who actually love this stuff. But I'm not one of them, and probably neither are you. And there has to be quite a few of you out there who have hated HATED New Wave films ever since your prim, snobby, stuck-up high school French teacher made you and your entire class sit and watch JULES ET JIM. Oh the inhumanity...Oh the horror...the horror.

    • @a.champagne6238
      @a.champagne6238 Рік тому

      It's influence was felt from the moment it launched. A Hard Day's Night is an example of a film done in the style of the New Wave.
      A more modern audience would think of those Calvin Klein commercials from the 80's and 90's when watching these films but time does that. What is cutting edge becomes standard eventually.

  • @sirequinox4874
    @sirequinox4874 Рік тому

    I was bored. It's a symphony of dullness pretending to be something more.

  • @tylermane77
    @tylermane77 Рік тому +1

    Godard was the most overrated filmmaker ever.