Whilst we're talking debuts - Is Citizen Kane the GOAT debut by any filmmaker?
Sam Raimi directing the Evil Dead trilogy with no prior experience has got to be some great beginners luck since they are timeless.
I'd also like to throw in Terrence Malick's Badlands into contention too.
crazy how hitchcock made one spy film and its five thousand times better than every james bond movie
Cap!
y'all like musicals?
Of course.
Rocketman. It could be argued that it’s not technically a musical, but there are numerous song and dance numbers throughout the biopic that I would say prove otherwise.
O Brother Where Art Thou by the Coen bros is supposed to be a heat and it's one I need to check out.
You can't forget Singin' In The Rain too.
Look @Elric he typed all this after your posts about not taking his opinions seriously he's tryna get on your good side again !!
Because i engaged politely afterwards also I kind of had him mixed up with Sting when I said that
Also Dylan stan mutual
Hard Eight, The Master, Licorice Pizza, and Phantom Thread are the only films remaining of my PTA's watch list. I had a great time with Boogie Nights and TWBB, and not so much with his over offerings. Idk they didn't click with me.
How is Phantom Thread comparable to the backend of BIABH? Because to me, despite the obivous quality of the album it felt Bob kinda compromised by making one half of the album acoustic to not totally alienate his fanbase.
I don't really find Bob 'pretentious' and people who utter that complaint against him are filed in the same compartment as the people who say he can't sing. I understand people not being enthusiastic on his voice, but stating that he isn't able to sing just isn't remotely accurate.
Because the back end of Bringin It is dead serious on the surface but lowkey pretty goofy and then deeply affecting and romantic in turns.
Kind of had you mixed up with sting who talks s*** on all PTA and any film that's remotely ambiguous my bad.
Dylan been to the crossroads so anything he does is not pretentious
I concur. The Byrds's b******isation of Tambourine Man insults me as someone with active hearing.
do you feel that way about all of their music? One of the greatest bands of all time
crazy how hitchcock made one spy film and its five thousand times better than every james bond movie
Crazy how he learned to do it from Fritz Lang Dr Mabuse set the mold for all spy s*** including Hitch and Bond
For a modest budget of 3 million PTA really made a richly intimate and captivating film with Hard Eight
To me PTA's greatest skill beyond his technical prowess behind the camera is his knowledge that a film is generally won or lost in the casting process.
Any aspiring filmmaker could study and benefit a lot from Hard Eight by learning from the confidence and trust PTA shows when limited resources meet artistic enthusiasm.
The Master is up next!🍿👀
do you feel that way about all of their music? One of the greatest bands of all time
Ironically, I really dig their take on You Ain't Goin' Nowhere, perhaps even more so than Bob's various arrangements throughout the decades.
As far as their own work is concerned, I know nothing of it, besides their most well-known hits.
Ironically, I really dig their take on You Ain't Goin' Nowhere, perhaps even more so than Bob's various arrangements throughout the decades.
As far as their own work is concerned, I know nothing of it, besides their most well-known hits.
When they first started only one of them knew how to write songs and he lowkey should have been as a acclaimed and famous as Bob Dylan and Neil Young as far as the folk rock icons go
kanyetothe.com/threads/the-gene-clark-thread.3827521
I just gave this #2 song of 1965
Ironically, I really dig their take on You Ain't Goin' Nowhere, perhaps even more so than Bob's various arrangements throughout the decades.
As far as their own work is concerned, I know nothing of it, besides their most well-known hits.
Byrds have one of the most essential ‘60s discogs and I’m not even a stan