
2005.09.18 • 02:47 • 5 com

This one still is a lot of fun to watch. I watched it for the first time when I was six or seven, with my grandfather, very late at night, and have watched it maybe 3 or 4 times in the last couple of years, and it's still amazing.
This time it was the new restored version with commentaries, and again the final graveyard1 scenes completely blewed me away. Such a mythic figure this man with no name, and Tuco, and Angel Eyes. Great fun.
Also in movies: Superbad • Das Boot • O Cheiro do Ralo • The Lathe of Heaven • Skammen • Sakura no mori no mankai no shita • O Ano em que meus Pais Saíram de Férias • The Fountain • Goh-hime • 10 Items or Less • Half Nelson • Hoffman • Silver Streak • F for Fake • Stranger than Fiction • Mulholland Dr • A Scanner Darkly • Scoop • Brazil • Stay • Film Geek • The Trial • Rikyu • Kuroi Ame • Tanin no kao • Don't Come Knocking • Jinruigaku nyumon: Erogotshi yori • Where the Truth Lies • Stalker • Tibet: Cry of the Snow Lion • Jesus Christ Superstar • Lila dit Ça • How to Get Ahead in Advertising • Equus • My Sassy Girl • Mysterious Skin • Bewitched • Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid • They Live • La Joven • Peeping Tom • What the #$*! Do We (K)now!? • Glen or Glenda • Casa de Areia • Melinda and Melinda
Shares tags with: — Please, tell me the airplane won’t crash. • Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche • Hwal • Lama John's Videogallery (Chagdud Tulku Rinpoche);
1. ^ Sometimes I think this one have some connections with vajrayana, I think Chagdud Tulku Rinpoche may have enjoyed it if he ever watched it.

Funniest mindless movie of the last few years. McLovin is the best, and the other guys grew on me.
In his job he needs to undervalue the suffering of others in order to make more money. Then there’s the smell, the ass and the eye. The degree of objectification of desire is in direct proportion to the self-debasement of the indulger. By degrading the other, he nullifies himself. The very indifference to the overjealous ones, the suppressed recalcitrant losers of the world, is what causes their victims to exist. Great disturbing movie.
A lost science fiction PBS movie with Taoist undertones is a real find, right? A guy discovers his dreams change reality—when he wakes up he finds himself in a world where the content of his dreams have actually happened. He of course gets scared after a couple of nightmares, seeks relief in drugs, and then, because of them, is lead to a psychiatrist. 
Here's for all the sissy Apple lovers out there... This is the ultimate design for my old Duron, which faithfully downloaded well over one terabyte (mostly movies, 1300+) always on 24/7/365 over the last four years. It also runs Apache and is a file and printer server, as well as a router for my home network (with four, also damn old and beautiful computers). Sometimes I dust it off with a vacuum cleaner.
I really enjoyed 
I have read the article on
In imdb a user commented: "Annoying little transition into some sort of regurgitated independent film values finds this shallow project from Brad Silberling offering little and providing less in this embarrassingly exploitive work." I agree, yet it is still watchable — even more so if you understand how clichê is the fabricated spontaneity in it. It is as if independent movie has aquired its own hollywood-like formulaicism. So it kind of becomes an interestingly consumated aesthetic portrail of so many cult-status fabricated stylishness examples we see around. Many people liked 






My father, so euphoric, watching the first scene.
Nothing nü under the sun, buddy :-)
Cheers!