To alleviate the rumors: last week's #FridayMovie was cancelled due to me re-enacting Midsommar, and this week's is cancelled for reasons stemming from the worrying words "computer won't start"
As consolation, I will give you that the most midsummer movie of all time is Melancholia (2011)
It also serves as an opposite to Armageddon (1998). All movies have an opposite, whether they warrant one or not. Figuring out which it is, is a fun and creative pastime for all ages
I realized that it has been a while since I updated the list of previous winners, so I updated it. If you find yourself in want of an extremely selective list of movie recs for a rainy day, here is one
*This list is incomplete. You can help by adding to it
https://longersky.com/2025/01/16/a-semi-randomized-list-of-movies-to-maybe-watch-sometime/
Life events conspired to cancel the #FridayMovie poll this week
but, fear not dear viewer, this low-stakes ancient tradition will return next week, at full strength and with undiminished signal, so stay tuned and feed your friends
I dreamt I posted it, but didn't post it
aka
there is no #FridayMovie poll this week, and next week is sidetracked by me watching Princess Mononoke on the biggest screen in town
this seems like the way
A fun part about this being a once a week thing is that each entry on the list happened at a specific time, and so when I read it I go
oh yeah, that movie was that week, when such and such happened
History truly is a process in the present
https://longersky.com/2025/01/16/a-semi-randomized-list-of-movies-to-maybe-watch-sometime/
The full title is
The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension (1984)
I apologize for any confusion this omission might have caused
Modern science is usually conceived of as taking place in clean, sterile laboratories, far away from the experience of common folks. In the 30s, however, you could set up you experimental interdimensional hypercar superlaser skunkworks in any affordable abandoned warehouse in the less reputable industrial district you wanted, and/or could afford on a minimum wage
Also, minimum wages were way higher back then, due to decades of inflation. You could afford to do madcap science on a single wage
Fun fact: in the times before computers and calculators, there used to be books that were nothing but tables and tables of trigonometry. If you needed to do a certain calculation, but didn't quite have the time to go through all the motions, you could look up the correct number and go from there
The oversized spineless book depicted here is not too far off from what such publications used to look like
I love how this movie has gone from 1) plausible-deniability area 51, to 2) a mental asylum of some description, to 3) New Jersey
'tis a good thing we got that initial text crawl, it might've been confusing otherwise
this movie came out seven years before Terminator 2
a feller could be forgiven for thinking that some Influences might have occurred (John Connor, yoyo/cyberdyne, etc
also: logging on
I once heard Buckaroo Banzai described as "a comic-book movie stuffed with callbacks for the true fans and impenetrable to the lay viewer, but there's no comic book and no true fans."
@sargoth Thanks for the fun thread!
As an aside, and totally unrelated, how do we feel about guys who hook up with their murdered wives' long-lost twin sisters?
Left: a door
Right: also a door, mere half a second later
I am fully transitioning as we speak
@sargoth I have lost here.
Why for the love all of everything that is good don't people want a film with Harry Dean Stanton, The Circle Jerks as the nightclub band, and a soundtrack by Iggy Pop...