Black Mirror

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The latest television series we’ve been watching has been this groundbreaking science-fiction series from the UK. Like Sherlock, it isn’t a series in the normal sense. There are only two seasons so far and each season has only three episodes each, with the first season originally airing all the way back in 2011. Plus there is a extra long Christmas special that just aired on the Christmas of 2014. So there isn’t much of it and it took them a long time to produce the content.

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The Congress (2013)

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Director Ari Folman is best known for Waltz with Bashir, an unnerving personal documentary of the Sabra and Shatila massacre done, done entirely in animation. The Congress is his latest work, a film combining live-action and animation and in which Robin Wright plays a version of herself as an aging actress who agrees to be scanned in order to make a digital copy of herself. Needless to say, this makes it a must-watch in my book.

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Punch-Drunk Love (2002)

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This is the last of the selections from the course list, bringing us into the modern era of Hollywood. Those who have followed along so far will note that I seem to have a skipped a couple of movies. We’ve previously watched the classic Adventures of Robin Hood and I didn’t feel it necessary to rewatch it. As for All That Heaven Allows, I’ve already written a post about it here.

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The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1936)

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With this selection, the course’s list leaves the black and white era behind and enters the world of color movies. In truth, while The Trail of the Lonesome Pine was indeed one of the earliest Hollywood movies to be filmed in color, Hollywood continued to regularly produce black and white movies well into the 1960s at least. There are many reasons for this and not all of them are stylistic. Cost is always a consideration and there were worries about technological limitations and whether or not particular directors and their crew were comfortable and experienced with working in color.

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Ida (2013)

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Despite technically being a 2013 release, Ida was seen by most critics in 2014 and consequently appeared in many lists of the best films of last year. Fifteen minutes in and it’s immediately apparent why so many critics loved it. Every shot in this film is composed with such exquisite care that every frame of it could stand alone as a work of art. Whether it’s a close-up shot of a face in a moving car, a girl walking on the stairs or a cabin in the snow, each scene shows as much craft as a painting. It’s just astounding.

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The unexamined life is a life not worth living