Episodes
Friday Nov 07, 2014
Spine 101: Cries and Whispers
Friday Nov 07, 2014
Friday Nov 07, 2014
After the delightful non sequitur of last week's film, Criterion throws us back into things with an emotional Bergman that Pat just can't connect with. The surprisingly vivid - for what we're used to from a Bergman film - Cries and Whispers (1972) won a well-deserved Oscar for it's cinematography while playing with themes of faith and redemption and femininity that Ingmar liked so much.
Friday Oct 31, 2014
Spine 100: Beastie Boys Video Anthology
Friday Oct 31, 2014
Friday Oct 31, 2014
It's Spine 100! To celebrate the milestone Criterion threw us a bone: The Beastie Boys Video Anthology, a collection of videos from the hip-hop trios first two decades. It's also basically the only DVD in history to actually utilize that "Alternative Angle" button on your DVD remote. Yeah, it's fancy and fun.
Friday Oct 24, 2014
Spine 99: Gimme Shelter
Friday Oct 24, 2014
Friday Oct 24, 2014
The "death" of an "era" with Gimme Shelter, the Maysles and Zwerin's account of the Stones' '69 US tour that ended in the only way it could.
Friday Oct 17, 2014
Spine 98: L'Avventura
Friday Oct 17, 2014
Friday Oct 17, 2014
Someday I may understand what Michelangelo Antonioni was saying in 1960's L'Avventura. That day is not today.
Friday Oct 10, 2014
Spine 97: Do the Right Thing
Friday Oct 10, 2014
Friday Oct 10, 2014
Watching Spike Lee's 1989 film about the racial tensions of a New York neighborhood seems timely. It always seems timely. I'd like for it to not seem timely. Let's work on that.
Friday Oct 03, 2014
Spine 96: Written on the Wind
Friday Oct 03, 2014
Friday Oct 03, 2014
Douglas Sirk and Rock Hudson are back this week and this time they're teaming up with Unsolved Mysteries' Robert Stack and the late Lauren Bacall for a weird tale of sexual issues and surrogate sons. 1956's Written on the Wind is, once again, a big studio melodrama that Sirk tries to indue with some sort of deeper satire, though with varying results this time around.
Friday Sep 26, 2014
Spine 95: All That Heaven Allows
Friday Sep 26, 2014
Friday Sep 26, 2014
Douglas Sirk made big studio melodramas that audiences ate up and critics hated. Until decades later when filmmakers like Quentin Tarantino and Rainer Werner Fassbinder decided he was awesome and now everyone's on board. All That Heaven Allows is a 1955 venture starring Jane Wyman as a rich widow who falls in love with her Thoreau-obsessed gardner, Rock Hudson. It's a beautiful film; Sirk and cinematographer Russell Metty craft perfect frames that tell the story better than the actual plot.
Friday Sep 19, 2014
Spine 94: I Know Where I'm Going!
Friday Sep 19, 2014
Friday Sep 19, 2014
A story as old as time itself! Woman wants to marry faceless rich dude, instead marries slightly less rich dude who's spent some amount of time berating her.
Friday Sep 12, 2014
Spine 93: Black Narcissus
Friday Sep 12, 2014
Friday Sep 12, 2014
Black Narcissus is a feverish technicolor condemnation of British imperialism in India. Well, that's one reading at least. At it's most basic it's about nuns that go crazy. Who doesn't love a story about insane nuns?
Sunday Sep 07, 2014
Spine 92: Fiend Without a Face
Sunday Sep 07, 2014
Sunday Sep 07, 2014
Arthur Crabtree's 1958 gorefest is the story of what happens when you mix telepathy and atomic energy.
Saturday Sep 06, 2014
Spine 91:The Blob
Saturday Sep 06, 2014
Saturday Sep 06, 2014
Steve McQueen's first starring role is this wonderfully campy 1958 indie horror film from Irvin Yeaworth, with just the best theme song.
Friday Sep 05, 2014
Spine 90: Kwaidan
Friday Sep 05, 2014
Friday Sep 05, 2014
Pat delves deep this week, seeking out Lafcadio Hearn's translations of Japanese folk ghost stories that Masaki Kobayashi's 1964 film Kwaidan are based on in order to better understand them and compare the film to its source. Pretty darn close, Pat would say if Pat were writing this.
Friday Aug 29, 2014
Spine 89: Sisters
Friday Aug 29, 2014
Friday Aug 29, 2014
Friday Aug 22, 2014
Spine 88: Ivan the Terrible Parts I and II
Friday Aug 22, 2014
Friday Aug 22, 2014
We're combining two films this week because one of the films does not exist as it's own proper Spine number in the Criterion Collection. Sergei Eisenstein's Ivan the Terrible (Part I 1944 and Part II 1958) is an historical epic about Josef Stalin's favorite Czar, and an early unifier of all of Russia, or all the Russias, as the case may be. The first film I'm sure Stalin loved as it paints Ivan as a strong leader with clear Stalinesque parallels. The second dives into the man's troubles and violent treatment of just about everyone he could treat violently, and Stalin stopped appreciating the comparison. Which is why the Part II wasn't released until five years after Stalin's death (and, sadly, ten years after Eisenstein's).
Friday Aug 15, 2014
Spine 87: Alexander Nevsky
Friday Aug 15, 2014
Friday Aug 15, 2014
Alexander Nevsky, one of Sergei Eisenstein's famous Soviet historical epics, is a monstrous and monstrously propagandistic film that has left all sorts of influence in its wake. Pat and I aren't really into it, even with it's massive battle sequences.
Friday Aug 08, 2014
Spine 85: Pygmalion
Friday Aug 08, 2014
Friday Aug 08, 2014
Pat and Adam watch Pygmalion and get distracted complaining about how people who actually agree with Henry Higgins still exist and shouldn't.
Friday Aug 01, 2014
Spine 84: Good Morning
Friday Aug 01, 2014
Friday Aug 01, 2014
Ozu's 1959 comedy Good Morning is about two young brothers who go on a silence strike until their parents agree to buy a television. It's also a pretty great window into suburban life in Japan in the Sixties. That combines to stand in a pretty stark contrast to the other Japanese films we've watched so far.
Saturday Jul 26, 2014
Spine 83: The Harder They Come
Saturday Jul 26, 2014
Saturday Jul 26, 2014
I think it's safe to say that Pat and I are outside the originally intended target audience of Perry Henzell's 1972 Jamaican gangster film The Harder They Come, but then we're outside the originally intended target audience for a lot of the movies we've watched and loved through the course of this project.
Saturday Jul 19, 2014
Spine 82: Hamlet
Saturday Jul 19, 2014
Saturday Jul 19, 2014
We've seen Olivier's nationalistic take on Shakespeare in Henry V, now we get to watch him channel German expressionism in Hamlet.
Friday Jul 11, 2014
Spine 81: Variety Lights
Friday Jul 11, 2014
Friday Jul 11, 2014
Federico Fellini's directorial debut, though co-directed with Italian great Alberto Lattuada, 1950's Variety Lights is as entertaining as any of Fellini's later work, if not quite as crazy as some of it. Still full of the crazy characters that fill his movie universes. Bittersweet to say the least, but a great film.
Thursday Jul 03, 2014
Spine 80: The Element of Crime
Thursday Jul 03, 2014
Thursday Jul 03, 2014
A rare treat on this week's Lost in Criterion: a film Pat loves and Adam just can't get into. Lars von Trier's feature-length debut The Element of Crime (1984) is a dystopian film so noir-like that it's more like a noir reduction, boiled down until it is thick with rain and contrast. People like it! Adam is not one of them.
Friday Jun 27, 2014
Spine 79: W. C. Fields - Six Short Films
Friday Jun 27, 2014
Friday Jun 27, 2014
We get another serving of the misanthropic drunk. The Golf Specialist (Monte Brice, 1930), The Pharmacist (Arthur Ripley, 1933), The Fatal Glass of Beer (Clyde Bruckman, 1933), The Barber Shop (Arthur Ripley, 1933), The Dentist (Leslie Pearce, 1932), and the silent Pool Sharks (Edwin Middleton, 1915). While some are better and more memorable than others, I think Pat and I enjoyed each much more than we liked The Bank Dick. The less time we spend with W. C. Fields the more we enjoy him.
Friday Jun 20, 2014
Spine 78: The Bank Dick
Friday Jun 20, 2014
Friday Jun 20, 2014
There's only one truly good scene in The Bank Dick, but fortunately it's almost the entire last act.
Friday Jun 13, 2014
Spine 77: And God Created Woman
Friday Jun 13, 2014
Friday Jun 13, 2014
This week we're watching Roger Vadim direct his then wife Brigitte Bardot in the festival of slut-shaming and misogyny that is And God Created Woman.
Saturday Jun 07, 2014
Spine 76: Brief Encounter
Saturday Jun 07, 2014
Saturday Jun 07, 2014
David Lean's 1945 adaptation of a Noel Coward play brings a great film, if you can get past the fact that it's about the emotional struggles of the bourgeois. I kid! Pat and I both loved Brief Encounter. It's a perfectly crafted story of an affair that leaves us emotionally drained and loving it.