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Layla ([personal profile] layla) wrote2007-04-17 09:03 am
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What are the five movies that captured your imagination?

This is cross-posted from my other LJ (for people who have me friended in both places and are getting spammed -- I'm sorry!) but it was too much fun not to share.

Snabbed from [livejournal.com profile] angw... What are the five movies that captured your imagination?

1. The Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring - What I've always loved about fantasy (and history as well) is the sense of staggering grandeur and wonder. I have never seen a movie that captured that so thoroughly. I was literally riveted to my seat from the opening credits. This movie captures the inner feeling that makes me want to write fantasy and SF in a way that no other movie has really done for me. The entire trilogy has that feeling to it, but the first one bowled me over so thoroughly because I was so afraid they'd screw up the book -- it was one of the first books my mother ever read to me, when I was four, and it was an indelible part of my childhood imagination-scape -- and rather than messing it up like Hollywood does with 90% of their "based on a book" movies and their fantasy movies ... they reached underneath the book and hit that exact tone that resonated with me so hard when I was a wide-eyed kid. I still get goosebumpy thinking about it.

2. The Sixth Sense - Because I'm a writer, I love plot craftsmanship, and this movie was just beautifully designed. It's the only movie I've seen three times at the theater, because after being blown away by the ending, I had to see how the underpinnings of the plot were laid. And I just had more admiration for the movie and its clever misdirection after seeing it over and over; every time I found something new that I hadn't noticed before.

3. Galaxy Express 999/Captain Harlock - I'm grouping these together; one is an animated movie, one is an anime, but they were made about the same time (late '70s) by the same guy (Leiji Matsumoto), and I saw them at about the same time, when I was around the age of 10. Even though I remember very little about them now, they had a huge impact on my imagination and ambitions. I had always adored comics and cartoons, and wanted to be a cartoonist or animator, but at that age I was frustrated and disillusioned with the childishness of Saturday morning cartoons and superhero comics, and starting to lose interest. Then I saw Matsumoto's animation -- the gorgeous spacescapes, the grand space battles, the slow melodramatic death scenes, the complicated and alleghorical plots with a billion shades of grey. I also saw Robotech at about the same time, and its more down-to-earth plotlines kick-started my imagination in a different sort of way, but there was something about Matsumoto's gorgeously designed space opera (and I do mean *opera*; it was totally an opera, only minus the music) that really woke up something in me. Even though I now know that a lot of the original story's anti-Western-imperialism sentiment was hacked out to cater to a Western audience, the grand clashing of empires and the sailing-ships-against-the-stars imagery have always stuck with me.

4. Metropolis (1927) - I was going to watch the first few minutes of this silent film on Turner Classic Movies and then go to bed -- it was 1 a.m., after all. Instead I was riveted for the whole two hours, and then I immediately had to buy it off Amazon.com and try to make all my friends watch it too. This movie fascinates me on two levels. One is what an incredible influence it had on the general "look" of every science fiction movie that followed it. This was the first true big-budget SF movie, and so much of its imagery -- female cyborgs, towering cityscapes with interlaced freeways and flying machines, underground cities, weird machines -- is basically the template for everything from Blade Runner to Battlestar Galactica. But the other thing that fascinated me about the movie is how I was totally sucked into the plot and the characters. It's a silent film, and they're all over-made-up and over-acted in the silent film way; I wasn't expecting to like and sympathize with the characters, or to be wowed by special effects when they basically consist of film splices and lights.

5. The Wizard of Oz - Another movie that was an indelible part of my kidscape. I haven't seen it in years -- probably because I watched it so much as a kid -- but even as a kid, having read the Baum books years before I saw the movie for the first time, I was wowed by the grace and skill with which the books were translated to the screen. The book was changed a lot for the movie, but all the changes were there for a reason and they worked. And now I'm humming "Follow the Yellow Brick Road", dammit.

Honorable Mention: Galaxy Quest - I'm a third-generation nerd -- my grandparents played Dungeons & Dragons; I was raised on Star Trek: TOS and underground comics and '70s New Wave SF -- so this was just the ultimate escapist, OMG-I-wish-I-was-there movie.
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[identity profile] elainegrey.livejournal.com 2007-04-17 05:07 pm (UTC)(link)
OK, have you *succeeded* in having your friends watch Metropolis? I chose it for a new years eve viewing some years ago and everyone fell asleep but me.

We recently rented it again and i mainly had time to watch the commentary/documentary sections -- the special effect efforts with mirrors were fascinating.

[identity profile] laylalawlor.livejournal.com 2007-04-17 05:15 pm (UTC)(link)
OK, have you *succeeded* in having your friends watch Metropolis?

No. *sigh* Nobody seems to be nearly as enthralled by the movie as I am. The usual reaction is more along the lines of "Silent film, auuugh, run away!" or "And you like this again, why?" or "*snooooore*" I'm so glad to find out that I'm not the only one who is twisted in this particular way!

On the other hand, if someone had come up to me a few years back and tried to make me sit down for a two-hour silent movie, I would probably have pelted them with popcorn and rented The Ring instead.

I haven't seen the commentary because I almost immediately ended up giving my DVD away to someone (I was moving at the time, and also still trying to be a Fritz Lang pusher) which just leaves me with the version that I videotaped off Turner Classics. Hmm, maybe I'll throw a copy into my next Amazon.com order...

[identity profile] tulleandtiaras.livejournal.com 2007-04-17 07:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh... I used to plan my afternoons around Captain Harlock and Robotech. *heavy sigh* I am almost looking forward to Ryan starting swing shifts so I can Netflix more childhood anime.

[identity profile] laylalawlor.livejournal.com 2007-04-18 08:38 am (UTC)(link)
I recently bought Mospeada (the original stand-alone anime that was used as Robotech's third storyline/character set) and really loved it. It's weird seeing it as its own series and not part of Robotech -- seeing how they took and changed elements to get it to fit with the overall Robotech storyline. And seeing what got cut out! There are scenes with frontal female nudity! You can't even show that on American TV for adults, let alone kids.

[identity profile] ttallan.livejournal.com 2007-04-17 08:28 pm (UTC)(link)
I can name five movies that captured my imagination when I was growing up. Nothing to do with how good they were-- these were just the ones that I glommed onto and drew a lot of inspiration from.

In no particular order:
1)Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.
2)The Star Wars trilogy (IV,V, and VI, I mean)
3)Real Genius
4)Ferris Bueler's Day Off
5)War Games

There may have been others, but these are the ones that spring to mind right now.

Oh, and
6)The Hobbit. But this was a TV special, so maybe it doesn't count.

[identity profile] laylalawlor.livejournal.com 2007-04-18 08:43 am (UTC)(link)
I always thought of The Hobbit as a movie (you're talking about the animated one, right?).

It's interesting what triggers people's creative side. One thing I've noticed is that the movies (books, TV, whatever) that really make me want to create are not necessarily the best out there. The really, really good ones just leave me awestruck and faintly depressed. The ones that trip my creative side are things like "Lord of the Rings", where it's a very viscerally striking but also somewhat narratively flawed work.

[identity profile] allanharvey.livejournal.com 2007-04-18 11:01 pm (UTC)(link)
1. 2001: A Space Odyssey. My favourite film. Huge in scope, with ideas that blow the mind. Made a life-long hard-SF reader.
2. Citizen Kane. Orson Welles's masterpiece. Visually arresting, with a multi-layered story to match. Rosebud.
3. Star Wars. We didn't call it "A New Hope" back then. The film that launched a million fans. I can recall that 30 year old visit to the cinema as if it were yesteday.
4. Blade Runner. Saw it on its first release when everyone hated it. Oh how times change, eh? Roy Batty's speech at the end ("Time... to die...") still makes me cry.
5. AI. I know a lot of people really disliked it, but I thought it was a wonderful film. In many ways it asked similar questions to Blade Runner about the nature of life, and what it means to be human.