Level Extreme platform
Subscription
Corporate profile
Products & Services
Support
Legal
Français
Bourne again
Message
 
 
To
10/05/2009 12:45:17
General information
Forum:
TV & Series
Category:
DVD
Title:
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01398894
Message ID:
01398970
Views:
43
>>>>>>>>Today I was at Target for some provisions and on a whim bought a DVD trilogy of the Bourne movies. They are selling it for about $22. I am taking a brief intermission from the first one. It is probably not an overstatement to say it is among the best thrillers in recent years. Very tightly written (based on a schlock novel), a couple dozen classic scenes. The second and third installments were directed by Paul Greengrass in a visual style every other action director has been trying to emulate since. Terrific flicks, as good and entertaining as the early Bond movies.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>I loved the books until the author died and they were written by other authors under his name. I enjoyed every movie, but to be frank, the visual style after the first drove me nuts. I hate all the camera movement. Too jerky and difficult to focus. Headache!
>>>>>>
>>>>>>True, although I don't think we are really talking about that many scenes. The influence on other directors is undeniable.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>As far as Robert Ludlum, see my reply to John B. I give him credit for plotting but did not like his writing style at all. "Hammer them over the head." I like a little nuance, a little grace.
>>>>>
>>>>>The Bourne films are that rare thing. Better than the book. I read a couple of Ludlum books after people here where recommending them and I thought they where c___p
>>>>
>>>>We are on the same page.
>>>>
>>>>FWIW my favorite is Graham Greene. He wrote beautifully without overdoing it and depicted moral ambiguity in a way I like. There was even a word given to the world he described -- Greeneland.
>>>>
>>>>Oddly enough, probably the most famous line from the many movies made from his novels was not from the book but ad-libbed by Orson Welles -- the bit in "The Third Man" about cuckoo clocks.
>>>
>>>I like Graham Greene too.
>>>
>>>This is a good spy movie
>>>
>>>http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0059749/
>>>
>>>The spy who came in from the cold.
>>
>>I have the Criterion edition but have not watched it yet. Just made a note to bring it back here next week.
>>
>>Can I safely assume we both like John LeCarre?
>
>Yes.
>
>Also as Charles mentioned another one I liked was Len Deighton.
>
>Harry Palmer was my kind of spy. The films where good as well apart from the Ken Russel one which was partly good and partly Ken Russel.

The only thing I ever saw directed by him was "Tommy", and that was strange enough ;-)
Previous
Reply
Map
View

Click here to load this message in the networking platform