Rio Bravo (1959)

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The fact that Rio Bravo is frequently placed near the top of lists of the best Westerns ever made is reason enough to see it but I was especially intrigued by how it made by Howard Hawks and John Wayne specifically as a response to High Noon. In case you don’t know, that film was about a sheriff who has to confront a powerful criminal gang and went around the  town to solicit help but everyone just made their excuses and minded their own business. This didn’t sit well with Wayne at all who called it un-American and even helped to run the screenwriter of the film, Carl Foreman, out of the country for being a Communist sympathizer.

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All About My Mother (1999)

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This was one my wife’s picks that she must have read about somewhere and it turned out to be a film with only female characters, including a couple of trans women. It was a surprising coincidence given that we’d only just watched Tokyo Godfathers the day before. Unfortunately it’s also similar to that film in that many points in its plot are connected through a series of implausible events that leave you gasping in disbelief and this time I don’t think that there’s supposed to be any magic involved.

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Tokyo Godfathers (2003)

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This marks the fourth film that I’ve watched by director Satoshi Kon though it’s been so long since we watched Millennium Actress that I barely remember any of it. I do recall quite well the ones that we watched more recently, Perfect Blue and Paprika, both of which heavily feature scenes that skirt the boundary between reality and the imagination. Tokyo Godfathers for the most part has no such scenes, making it a much more approachable and straightforward film, albeit also a lighter one.

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Come and See (1985)

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Each and every one of us has probably watched dozens of films about the Second World War but how many of them were from the Soviet point of view, by a predominantly Soviet cast and crew? Come and See is billed as a propaganda film because it was explicitly made to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the Soviet victory and to tell the world of the horrors inflicted in Belarus by German forces, a tragedy that the Soviets thought the world had ignored. Unlike so many such efforts however, under the direction of Elem Klimov, it was not only a commercial success but went on to be acknowledged as one of the best war films ever made.

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SWTOR: Imperial Agent

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Though I didn’t really like Star Wars: The Old Republic and felt that the story for the Jedi Knight class was lacklustre, I still went back to it for quite a while. Obviously I’m a bit of a glutton for punishment and there’s something about standard MMO gameplay that makes it low-hanging fruit. It’s just so easy and convenient to boot it up for just one more session of mindless playing. But it’s also because I looked what most people consider to be the best class story in the game and it’s pretty much unanimously the Imperial Agent. I decided that I needed to check it out for myself.

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It Happened One Night (1934)

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This one must have been added to our watch list after taking the Marriage and the Movies course last year but I can’t recall why exactly I did that. It was mentioned but wasn’t required watching in the course. I am aware that it’s a classic of the romantic comedy genre, being perhaps the grand-daddy of all stories in which the couple meets while travelling together. That alone may be a good reason to seek out this very old film.

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Housebound (2014)

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Despite my wife’s objections, I continue to occasionally add horror films to our watch list in the hopes of finding something that is decent. Housebound made the cut both because it was extremely well reviewed with many good comments made about it on Broken Forum and because it’s a New Zealand film. Let’s face it, when was the last time anyone has watched anything from that country that wasn’t set in Middle-Earth?

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The unexamined life is a life not worth living