beer good
Well-Known Member
Crime And Punishment - the 1935 version with Peter Lorre as Raskolnikov. Surprisingly good; cutting an 800-page novel down to 80 minutes means getting rid of a lot of the stuff that makes it a great story, but they keep enough of the moral confusion and the sparring between Raskolnikov and the inspector (Edward Arnold) to make it feel like they actually wanted to do right by Dostoevsky. (The DVD cover seemed to promise a colourised version, but it was in glorious black & white.)
Speaking of black & white, I also watched Metropolis, the 2010 restoration, which is supposed to be 98-or-so-% complete, making it a full half hour longer than any other cut that's been available since the late 20s. And yes, it's an improvement on what was already an excellent film - sure, the "new" material is in bad shape and doesn't look nearly as sharp as the rest of the film (which looks incredible), but there are several previously missing subplots, revealing character moments, thematic expansions and just... y'know, more Metropolis. Should be on the Christmas list for anyone interested in movies.
I tried watching an old Godard movie, decided it sucked, and instead I re-watched Beavis And Butthead Do America. It was cool.
Speaking of black & white, I also watched Metropolis, the 2010 restoration, which is supposed to be 98-or-so-% complete, making it a full half hour longer than any other cut that's been available since the late 20s. And yes, it's an improvement on what was already an excellent film - sure, the "new" material is in bad shape and doesn't look nearly as sharp as the rest of the film (which looks incredible), but there are several previously missing subplots, revealing character moments, thematic expansions and just... y'know, more Metropolis. Should be on the Christmas list for anyone interested in movies.
I tried watching an old Godard movie, decided it sucked, and instead I re-watched Beavis And Butthead Do America. It was cool.