^Sorry got too carried away. I guess I pressured my brain to take in every alien thing you mentioned (Is Seinfeld a movie or a series in America? Zooey who? Ritual what? Where have all the flowers gone you say????) I exploded. lol It's that feeling when you're not yet done doing your first assignment then another one comes in, and another one. I can only take so much. I can engage immediately in banter about general subjects but when it comes to specifics, I have limited capacity. I've got a small brain lol. I do my work while posting in the forums that's why my head is quite heavy and messy and when I've got alien things to follow, my brain can't process, it gives up. lol I'll cool down soon and will include Ritual in my watchlist.
Hey ... go here:
timeanddate.com
I'm in PST San Francisco. Anything I post after 3:00pm your time is while I'm half asleep and will likely be unintelligible
I should be more careful with American pop culture references. Seinfeld was a TV series, and even if you knew about the series but didn't know that specific episode the reference would tell you nothing. It was a very very popular series and Americans reference it often. There are many who believe that every situation you might encounter in life ... there's a Seinfeld episode about it.
Ritual is a really good film, not sure if it's in your wheelhouse, though. I'm intrigued by these movies, usually made by men, that aren't too concerned about story as much as being little love poems to and about some young woman.
Millennium Mambo, Ritual, and
Green Tea are examples of impressive ones. The concept trickles down to more pedestrian ones like
Tremble All You Want. (There are movies like this about guys too, like many Ryan Gosling movies I suppose).
What was the story of
Tremble? = A young woman can't see the love in front of her because of her clinging to a past. Been there, done that. Think
Wanee and Junah. How do you set yourself apart from that as a film? The charisma of your actor(s) is huge. There's thoughtful little bits of script to hopefully enjoy (or not). I'm a consummate nicknamer myself, and I have a difficult time remembering people's names, so that aspect of
Tremble resonated with me. You should see what I do with all the Volleyball players I'm trying to remember, especially the ones whose names I have no idea how to pronounce, and I've never heard pronounced. It's easier for me to name someone with
what's memorable about them than it is to remember what it is they call themselves.
And there's the actual gruntwork of your movie making technique. In
Green Tea, it was Christopher Doyle's photography. In
Mambo a lot was the music, long takes, the rhythm of the movie. In
Ritual a lot is the photography, but not like beautiful Christopher Doyle photography. It's the set designs and the way there are framed for the shot. The use of railroad tracks, etc. The reason
Ritual kept popping into my head is because of the way it also turned the
MPDG inside out--in a completely different way than
Tremble. If you check that Wiki article, note the reference to
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. Anyhow, the gruntwork of
Tremble had all those time/space flourishes; lots of quick edits and odd closeups-----a lot of stuff I won't list here but think of it like this: In the three other movies I mention here, they all focus on the target in real time, like a voyeur.
Tremble was assembled post-production. Yes we see Mayu walking here and there, interacting with people, making funny faces, etc., but think about how much of it was done with tricky camera work. And sound design.
Another big big difference between
Tremble and the other films mentioned, is that in the others I was charmed by the character, straight up. In
Tremble I was charmed by the actress, her performance. So there's something the same but very very different about how/why Tremble succeeded for me. Not to mention the fact that
Tremble was written and directed by a woman.
Finally,
Where Have All the Flowers Gone is a film nobody has seen except me. I mentioned it because it is a surreal master class in that time/space continuum jumping thing.