tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5071867527573330005.post3412713326812137570..comments2023-05-04T09:51:55.265-04:00Comments on Andrew Stevovich: MovieUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5071867527573330005.post-88782243319558754242015-01-22T08:01:35.868-05:002015-01-22T08:01:35.868-05:00Wish I could be standing in front of this 75"...Wish I could be standing in front of this 75" theatre. Choosing to put this story on such a large scale reinforces the actual experience of being there; had it been on the small size the message would have come over as a whisper ... like watching a movie on your phone instead of a big flat screen. Tell me why the fellow in the film looks afraid? Revolted? Certainly not happy to have the woman on top? Sometimes I don't know if you're inserting one of your private amusements or if the scene is just what it is at first look. Part of the fun of knowing your penchants. <br />- Christine Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5071867527573330005.post-85077390935228811592014-12-20T20:40:51.305-05:002014-12-20T20:40:51.305-05:00There's something disquieting about this conce...There's something disquieting about this concentrated glimpse of urban life. "Movie" is saying a lot in disarmingly simple terms: a quiet subject infused with an uncanny disaffection. The picture is a great accomplishment, both in its austerity and its eloquence. Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com