Another picture please, Ritter. (By the way, there must be an intermediate point between an entirely local film and such popular films).
Another picture please, Ritter. (By the way, there must be an intermediate point between an entirely local film and such popular films).
Last edited by mishkin; October 06, 2016 at 01:59 AM.
Indeed. Very nice film, no? If you are in for historical accuracy, maybe not so, but for a fun adventure, it is a great film. And at some points it might even be more accurate than some modern hollywood crap that tries hard to be and simply fails.
Hm, I thought Ladyhawke would be it, an intermediate, but let's try this one:
No tries? It is a horror film from the 60's, could also be considered a Christian film, I at least consider it, since it is themed around it.
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Oh man, it stars Vincent Price and Hazel Court...
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That sounds like the Raven but you pretty much gave it away. I'm not aware of any other films that have Vincent Price AND Hazel Court.
Then I guess my only other option is The Masque of the Red Death. It seems to match your description more.
dune?
I'm gonna go on a limb here and say some old Godzilla film.
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Wild Strawberries? (I am pretty sure it is a Bergman film).
(Maybe its time for a hint, Oda)
Last edited by mishkin; October 21, 2016 at 09:19 AM.
Some huge film makers were involved in helping to produce this movie as a favour for their friend.
Dreams, Kurosawa.
Kagemusha
Yup, specifically the scene where the Kagemusha dreams about the dead Takeda Shingen. First Shingen bursts out of the jar which contained his corpse and attacked the Kagemusha. He ran away from Shingen but then realized that Shingen was no longer behind him and had disappeared. Frantically the Kagemusha then started to search for Shingen but the assailant had vanished without a trace and the Kagemusha then felt despair for that reason and wandered like a lost child. The loss of the self in other words, despite the fact that he no longer acted as himself anymore but instead emulated someone else.
You see he became Shingen in an attempt to copy him, his shadow if you will, but when Shingen was gone he realized that he was nothing because there can be no shadow if someone is not there to cast it. In essence he then began to turn into the real Shingen because when you have a copy but the original no longer exists then one could say that the copy is now the original.
I'd never have guessed that.
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