Mine were the "great"Kubrick films. CWO and 2001 are absolute rubbish.
Kubrick: Paths of Glory. Along with All Quiet on the Western Front, one of the best anti war films ever made.
Mine were the "great"Kubrick films. CWO and 2001 are absolute rubbish.
I've enjoyed CWO more with each additional viewing. I've had the opposite result with 2001. My first reaction to 2001 was, "Not sure what just happened, but I am intrigued". 3 or 4 viewings later it was, "F##k you, you ***#ing piece of s##t!".
A Clockwork Orange is perhaps the most disturbing and yet enthralling movies I've ever seen.
I've never seen the movie version of Lord of the Flies but if they did as good a job with that movie as the author did with the book, that's another movie that would fit the "disturbing yet enthralling" category. Though it's hard to imagine the irony of the boys being "rescued" by a warship during wartime would resonate as much on film as it did in text.
I've never seen it (or, somehow, read it) but I've heard the movie is not nearly as disturbing as the book.
In that vein, another thing that's really disturbing is the 19th century public (meaning: private) school 1971 BBC TV serial "Tom Brown's School Days." It portrays the hazing of younger boys by the older boys, hinting at if not actually showing rape, in a way that as a 12 or 13-year old watching it completely freaked me out.
Less than a month ago, the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) suspended its accreditation of the Brazilian Doping Control Laboratory, which was supposed to handle all drug tests related to the Rio Olympics. WADA—which is as inept and corrupt a sporting body as you’ll find on this planet—cited a vague and unspecified “non-conformity” in its reasoning for pulling the plug on the only lab anywhere close to Rio de Janeiro.
Today, they changed their minds and decided to reinstate the lab.
Technically, they were already banned.
It's just that the appeals court upheld the ban. Now the other half of the fun begins -- what decision is made for the rest of the Russian athletes?
Ban them too.
....And The Banned Played On
There was a story on the artistic synchronized swimmers getting the shaft on BBC. Pretty clearly they never did anything wrong but if the whole team is banned they will be too.
Though I actually am conflicted when I think about it seriously. For awhile I thought that laws that require motorcycle riders to wear helmets might be an infringement on personal liberty ("no other victim but the reckless person himself" type of tripe), until I heard from an EMT that when they respond to a crash with a helmetless cyclist involved, the cyclist isn't the only one affected by his/her choice not to wear a helmet, it is a gruesome task for them to deal with the mess he left behind. I changed my mind about the law after that, it isn't solely to protect the cyclists after all....
http://deadspin.com/rio-olympics-athletes-village-declared-uninhabitable-1784219622
And so it begins...
I'm curious to see how the next two weeks play out. Are things really as bad as they are made out to be? Once the games got rolling after a few days, all the horrors of Sochi seemed to die out. Hopefully Rio will follow that route. At least with social media we can see for ourselves and we don't need to rely on NBC.