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Quote from: jbaent on August 25, 2018, 08:15:49 AMQuote from: ds1984 on August 24, 2018, 10:41:05 PMGo and see Chicago.Has MK any involvement in it?It is good enough to avoid the need of any MK flavour inside.
Quote from: ds1984 on August 24, 2018, 10:41:05 PMGo and see Chicago.Has MK any involvement in it?
Go and see Chicago.
West side story, then. That's the one to see.And it has the song MK talks about in Romeo and Juliet "there's a place for us, somewhere"
Of course there is. It's just that an MK fan forum is maybe not the perfect place for that by all means .. LE
Actually, thanks to Mk doing the Local Hero score I got to know that great and charming little movie...I wonder how much nice films exists that we don't have any idea of them just because they didn't had anything claiming our attention...
Quote from: jbaent on August 25, 2018, 03:25:02 PMActually, thanks to Mk doing the Local Hero score I got to know that great and charming little movie...I wonder how much nice films exists that we don't have any idea of them just because they didn't had anything claiming our attention...Watch the Ealing films, especially Whisky Galore; Local Hero owes much to it. My favourite from Ealing Studios are probably The Ladykillers and The Man in the White Suit, but there are other classics such as The Lavender Hill Mob and Kind Hearts and Coronets. Most British films before the 80s have that charm to them. Britain has always punched above it's weight in filmmaking terms.
The ladykillers... I saw one with that title directed by Cohen brothers with Tom Hanks. I guess that was an updated version?
Quote from: jbaent on August 25, 2018, 08:28:57 PMThe ladykillers... I saw one with that title directed by Cohen brothers with Tom Hanks. I guess that was an updated version?I didn't bother with the remake. I couldn't understand why the Americans would want to do something so quintessentially British, especially when it was done so brilliantly in the first place.The Ealing films are typically about the little man triumphing over the big man despite all odds, just like Local Hero. Whisky Galore adds the Scottish Highland location and an "outsider" into the mix.
Quote from: dmg on August 25, 2018, 10:15:15 PMQuote from: jbaent on August 25, 2018, 08:28:57 PMThe ladykillers... I saw one with that title directed by Cohen brothers with Tom Hanks. I guess that was an updated version?I didn't bother with the remake. I couldn't understand why the Americans would want to do something so quintessentially British, especially when it was done so brilliantly in the first place.The Ealing films are typically about the little man triumphing over the big man despite all odds, just like Local Hero. Whisky Galore adds the Scottish Highland location and an "outsider" into the mix.Hollywood has run out of ideas and now they are paying the price for boycotting extremely talented and creative people just because they have different political views and agendas. As a result they have to resort to remakes and sequels nobody asked for.