The Lists Project

An ongoing project to survey the best films of individual decades, genres, and filmmakers
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domino harvey
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Joined: Wed Jan 11, 2006 6:42 pm

Re: The Lists Project

#901 Post by domino harvey »

Westerns are next, and we can follow that with horror if that's where the tide is going. After that, I'd in no order like us to do musicals and war films if there's interest. Other genre suggestions are of course encouraged
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tojoed
Joined: Wed Jan 16, 2008 3:47 pm
Location: Cambridge, England

Re: The Lists Project

#902 Post by tojoed »

I suppose "comedy" is such a personal thing, but do you think it would be worth a go?
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antnield
Joined: Tue Jun 28, 2005 5:59 pm
Location: Cheltenham, England

Re: The Lists Project

#903 Post by antnield »

A documentary project should provoke some interesting discussion - and an interesting outcome. I really couldn't imagine what the Top 10 would be, whereas I'm sure many could wager on how the top of most genre lists would generally turn out.
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Matt
Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 4:58 pm

Re: The Lists Project

#904 Post by Matt »

I'm very much up for musicals. Comedy, just in general, might be too broad. Suppose we limited ourselves to "romantic comedy," which would incorporate most screwball films, pretty much all Lubitsch, and more. Granted, just about everything from the last thirty years to which that label has been applied makes everyone here gag, but it encompasses a lot of great cinema. Action/adventure films would be fun, as would sci-fi. Both of those would bring out tastes of forum members we rarely see expressed. Something else that might appeal--and would be just as contentious as defining noir--is camp films. Or another way of framing that could be "so bad they're great" films.

It could be interesting to alternate "light" genres with "heavy" genres. I think after noir, Westerns, and horror, I'm going to need to be put on meds just to get out of bed in the morning.
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Lemmy Caution
Joined: Wed Mar 29, 2006 7:26 am
Location: East of Shanghai

Re: The Lists Project

#905 Post by Lemmy Caution »

antnield wrote:A documentary project should provoke some interesting discussion - and an interesting outcome. I really couldn't imagine what the Top 10 would be, whereas I'm sure many could wager on how the top of most genre lists would generally turn out.
Ooooh, seconded!
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knives
Joined: Sat Sep 06, 2008 10:49 pm

Re: The Lists Project

#906 Post by knives »

Matt wrote:I'm very much up for musicals. Comedy, just in general, might be too broad. Suppose we limited ourselves to "romantic comedy," which would incorporate most screwball films, pretty much all Lubitsch, and more. Granted, just about everything from the last thirty years to which that label has been applied makes everyone here gag, but it encompasses a lot of great cinema. Action/adventure films would be fun, as would sci-fi. Both of those would bring out tastes of forum members we rarely see expressed. Something else that might appeal--and would be just as contentious as defining noir--is camp films. Or another way of framing that could be "so bad they're great" films.
I really like the idea of splitting the broad genres. In a way we're already doing that by having a separate noir list. If we do go down this path I think splitting horror between supernatural and psychological would be best. While not as broad as comedy there are a lot of fish in that sea.
Also Action and adventure films I feel should be separate as should ramance from comedy, maybe different romatic-comedy and romantic-drama list. There really are a hundred ways to slice comedy though. Maybe romcoms, satire, and the absurd. Not sure where to put or describe the talky sort of comedy that's become popular now-a-days.
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domino harvey
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Re: The Lists Project

#907 Post by domino harvey »

I think that's all getting a bit carried away...
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Matt
Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 4:58 pm

Re: The Lists Project

#908 Post by Matt »

domino harvey wrote:I think that's all getting a bit carried away...
Which part? I have been restraining myself from suggesting limiting horror to gothic horror, at least for the first list, but that's mainly because I don't want to have to watch a bunch of Fulci nonsense.
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Yojimbo
Joined: Fri Jul 04, 2008 2:06 pm
Location: Ireland

Re: The Lists Project

#909 Post by Yojimbo »

domino harvey wrote:Westerns are next, and we can follow that with horror if that's where the tide is going. After that, I'd in no order like us to do musicals and war films if there's interest. Other genre suggestions are of course encouraged
hmm, Westerns

'Treasure of the Sierra Madre', oui ou non?
'Lonely Are The Brave', oui ou non?

speaking of war films, its only since purchasing a DVD player, only about 5 or 6 years ago, now, that I've come to appreciate just how many great war films there are out there
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Yojimbo
Joined: Fri Jul 04, 2008 2:06 pm
Location: Ireland

Re: The Lists Project

#910 Post by Yojimbo »

knives wrote:
Matt wrote:I'm very much up for musicals. Comedy, just in general, might be too broad. Suppose we limited ourselves to "romantic comedy," which would incorporate most screwball films, pretty much all Lubitsch, and more. Granted, just about everything from the last thirty years to which that label has been applied makes everyone here gag, but it encompasses a lot of great cinema. Action/adventure films would be fun, as would sci-fi. Both of those would bring out tastes of forum members we rarely see expressed. Something else that might appeal--and would be just as contentious as defining noir--is camp films. Or another way of framing that could be "so bad they're great" films.
I really like the idea of splitting the broad genres. In a way we're already doing that by having a separate noir list. If we do go down this path I think splitting horror between supernatural and psychological would be best. While not as broad as comedy there are a lot of fish in that sea.
Also Action and adventure films I feel should be separate as should ramance from comedy, maybe different romatic-comedy and romantic-drama list. There really are a hundred ways to slice comedy though. Maybe romcoms, satire, and the absurd. Not sure where to put or describe the talky sort of comedy that's become popular now-a-days.
where to put the great Fred and Ginger films?
because the comedic aspects, especially their superb cast of character actor support, contributes greatly to their greatness, for me
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domino harvey
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Joined: Wed Jan 11, 2006 6:42 pm

Re: The Lists Project

#911 Post by domino harvey »

Matt wrote:
domino harvey wrote:I think that's all getting a bit carried away...
Which part? I have been restraining myself from suggesting limiting horror to gothic horror, at least for the first list, but that's mainly because I don't want to have to watch a bunch of Fulci nonsense.
Isn't horror just as subjective as noir? Limiting the scope at the outset makes for limited variations and surprises to my eyes-- aren't individual interpretations of the term part of the interest? Also, if we divide genres so specific like this, I think the genre project will fizzle out and die an early death. I know you're a librarian, but I think the widest we can make each genre while still being inclusive, the better. But whatever way it comes down, we won't have to worry about this for almost a year, given that the third genre, be it horror (whatever incarnation) or whatever comes after westerns, is still a while away...
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zedz
Joined: Sun Nov 07, 2004 11:24 pm

Re: The Lists Project

#912 Post by zedz »

Also, I've never bothered to figure out whether or not a given horror film is 'psychological' or 'supernatural' and I don't want to have to start now. What the hell would you do with The Innocents?
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Yojimbo
Joined: Fri Jul 04, 2008 2:06 pm
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Re: The Lists Project

#913 Post by Yojimbo »

zedz wrote:Also, I've never bothered to figure out whether or not a given horror film is 'psychological' or 'supernatural' and I don't want to have to start now. What the hell would you do with The Innocents?
well, unless you believe in 'ghosts', what supernatural horror film isn't, in effect, psychological?
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Mr Sausage
Has Risen from the Grave
Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2004 1:02 am
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Re: The Lists Project

#914 Post by Mr Sausage »

Yojimbo wrote:
zedz wrote:Also, I've never bothered to figure out whether or not a given horror film is 'psychological' or 'supernatural' and I don't want to have to start now. What the hell would you do with The Innocents?
well, unless you believe in 'ghosts', what supernatural horror film isn't, in effect, psychological?
Except what we believe of our world is irrelevant next to what a movie takes as true for its world.
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Yojimbo
Joined: Fri Jul 04, 2008 2:06 pm
Location: Ireland

Re: The Lists Project

#915 Post by Yojimbo »

Mr_sausage wrote:
Yojimbo wrote:
zedz wrote:Also, I've never bothered to figure out whether or not a given horror film is 'psychological' or 'supernatural' and I don't want to have to start now. What the hell would you do with The Innocents?
well, unless you believe in 'ghosts', what supernatural horror film isn't, in effect, psychological?
Except what we believe of our world is irrelevant next to what a movie takes as true for its world.
Just put it all down to psychology
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colinr0380
Joined: Mon Nov 08, 2004 8:30 pm
Location: Chapel-en-le-Frith, Derbyshire, UK

Re: The Lists Project

#916 Post by colinr0380 »

And unfortunately for Matt limiting to 'gothic' horror would not mean an escape from Lucio Fulci since The House By The Cemetery, for all its gore, is as gothic as they come - creaky old houses, bat attacks, ghosts, psychic links between children, creepy photographs etc (the recent, bizarrely awful Amityville Horror remake appears to have stolen a lot of material from this film).

And if we broke horror up into its component parts where would we classify the utterly lunatic Naked Werewolf Woman, which begins as a Hammer film period piece full of torch wielding villagers and Witchfinder General-esque werewolf woman burnings, turns into a modern day country house/lesbian bedroom farce mystery, swerves off into Exorcist/lunatic asylum territory, does a bit of rape/revenge stuff and then burns itself out in a blaze of glory with a gunfight sequence in a spaghetti western town?
Last edited by colinr0380 on Thu Jun 10, 2010 4:33 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Matt
Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 4:58 pm

Re: The Lists Project

#917 Post by Matt »

I really wasn't serious about subdividing horror, which is why I never actually suggested it. I was serious about having a comedy list limited to romantic comedies, though. And that's why I asked domino to clarify what part of knives' post on the last page was objectionable. Yes, horror is probably too difficult to subdivide, but comedy is such a large genre and so subjective (would we get any kind of consensus?) that limiting a first comedy list to romantic comedy seems reasonable. But yeah, we don't have to worry about this now. Shouldn't we all be watching noirs right now?

And to answer Yojimbo's question about the Fred & Ginger films, I don't think a film's appearance on one list should preclude its inclusion on another. Could you imagine putting Top Hat on a romantic comedy list but excluding it from a musicals list with those great Irving Berlin songs? Or vice-versa?

And domino, I'll let that "I know you're a librarian" comment slide because I'm sure you didn't mean it as an insult, but not all librarians (not even most) want obsessively and narrowly to categorize everything. In fact, the popular DVD collection at my library is shelved strictly alphabetically by title, with not even a division between documentary and feature films.
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Zazou dans le Metro
Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 2:01 pm
Location: In the middle of an Elyssian Field

Re: The Lists Project

#918 Post by Zazou dans le Metro »

Me, I'm keeping to the decades lists. It's safer there..... or maybe there's some ontological rumblings gonna start over there too. Or should that be phenomenological or just old fashioned empirical with a dash of existentialism? Will the clock strike at midnight on December 31st 1929 or will we be locked in some Althusserian netherworld of ideological mayhem. Where's Sausage with his Webster's when you need him.
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colinr0380
Joined: Mon Nov 08, 2004 8:30 pm
Location: Chapel-en-le-Frith, Derbyshire, UK

Re: The Lists Project

#919 Post by colinr0380 »

Don't worry Matt - and Naked Werewolf Woman is a complete anomaly anyway (I just thought of it since both that and House By The Cemetery feature Dagmar Lassander. She does look particularly striking in the Werewolf Woman film, but there is the drawback that she turns into a furry, buxom teddy bear at a couple of points!)
...not all librarians (not even most) want obsessively and narrowly to categorize everything. In fact, the popular DVD collection at my library is shelved strictly alphabetically by title, with not even a division between documentary and feature films.
These days I don't think even filmmakers have a distinction between documentary and fiction films!

From my limited librarian experience discussions mostly seemed to be about funds for material specifically related to courses and managing shelf space rather than arguments about how to order the work on their shelves, which had usually been set in stone for a long time and mostly dictated by the space available and shape of the building!
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domino harvey
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Joined: Wed Jan 11, 2006 6:42 pm

Re: The Lists Project

#920 Post by domino harvey »

RE: Matt, my objection was to the subdivision of horror, much for the same reasons I don't want to get involved in the "What is noir debates" anymore than I want to participate in a Roman Polanski morality thread. Doing a romantic comedy genre and then that's it, as in we don't intend to revisit the comedy well, sounds fine to me. If it was to be one in an envisioned six part comedy genre series: vom. It does seem that there would be a lot of overlap between it and the musicals list, though...
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knives
Joined: Sat Sep 06, 2008 10:49 pm

Re: The Lists Project

#921 Post by knives »

The less critically welcomed, but potentially just as fun slapstick (or some other comedy thing) than to avoid as much overlapping? Anyways, Romance at large probably deserves its own thing. Maybe or pick from the drama section, which would nicely cause us to avoid biopics.
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domino harvey
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Re: The Lists Project

#922 Post by domino harvey »

I like that, just "Romance"
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reno dakota
Joined: Mon Mar 17, 2008 3:30 pm

Re: The Lists Project

#923 Post by reno dakota »

Matt wrote:In fact, the popular DVD collection at my library is shelved strictly alphabetically by title, with not even a division between documentary and feature films.
How is the unpopular DVD collection shelved? ( . . . sorry, I couldn't resist :wink: )
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Matt
Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 4:58 pm

Re: The Lists Project

#924 Post by Matt »

knives wrote:Romance at large probably deserves its own thing.
domino harvey wrote:I like that, just "Romance"
And at this development, I regret ever putting fingertips to keyboard on the subject of subdividing.

Reno, our nonfiction films on Vietnam atrocities, female circumcision, and sexual harassment training, as well as all silent films, nature programs that aren't Life or Planet Earth, and Otto Preminger movies are all shelved behind the circulation desk in Library of Congress call number order.
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puxzkkx
Joined: Fri Jul 17, 2009 4:33 am

Re: The Lists Project

#925 Post by puxzkkx »

Performances lists - would those be something the forum would be interested in?
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