Brendan Hodges Profile picture
Jun 18, 2023 15 tweets 7 min read Read on X
I’m home taking care of a sick girlfriend, come at me twitter

ngl.link/metaplex815
Mostly! Luckily it isn’t Covid, tested negative and no fever. Just a nasty cold. Lots of soup, Gatorade, etc. Hopefully she recovers in a few days. Image
I am the biggest Kurosawa guy, and and I have this gorgeous print of him (and Toshiro Mifune) from @studiotstella hanging in my apartment. ImageImage
Too big a question for tweet, but Netflix and streaming trained audiences to be less inclined to go to the movies, from short theatrical windows to so much novel programming. Dumping so many movies on D+ / HBOMax was the final nail in the coffin. Things are recovering, but slowly Image
LOTR (Tolkien)
Blood Meridian (McCarthy)
Underworld (DeLillo)
Brothers Karamazov (Dostoyevsky)
Wind-Up Bird Chronicle (Murakami)
War and Peace (Tolstoy)
2666 (Bolaño)
Moby Dick (Melville)
Infinite Jest (DFW)
If on a Winter’s Night a Traveler (Calvino)
Pale Fire (Nabokov) Image
Lots of book questions!

East of Eden (Steinbeck)
The Remains of the Day (Ishiguro)
The High Window (Chandler)
Gilead (Robinson)
The Temple of the Golden Pavillion (Mishima)
Fifty-Two Stories (Chekhov)
The Moonstone (Collins)
The Savage Detectives (Bolaño) Image
I’d say MIAMI VICE but I’d have to hand that off to @BilgeEbiri, but:

MINORITY REPORT
HEAT
PRINCESS MONONOKE
DUNKIRK
YI YI Image
Steven Spielberg. I know how this sounds, but I genuinely believe most of his work has been under-appraised and not treated too seriously as “art” worthy of rigorous study until relatively recently in his career. Movie to movie the strongest filmography of any guy to do it. Image
Do I always come off as cynical? Would love to hear from others in this. Most of my published writing and threads are on popular genre film, and if anything I think I’m easier to please than many critics / writers. 39% of my LB ratings are a 4/5 lol. Image
I don’t really have a single favorite, but here’s some I adore and my favorite of each

Gena Rowlands (favorite: A WOMAN UNDER THE INFLUENCE)

Maggie Cheung (favorite: IN THE MOOD FOR LOVE)

Ingrid Bergman (favorite: JOURNEY TO ITALY / CASABLANCA)

Cate Blanchett (TAR) Image
pushy! Sadly no pets, the apartment building doesn’t allow dogs, but here’s the last one I had: he was a very arrogant corgi named Bob. When he was being bad: simply “Robert.” But when he was being a Good Boy: King Robert, the first of his name. ImageImageImage
I loved DECISION TO LEAVE. It made my top ten last year, including a screenshot of the excerpt in the tweet and link to the full piece here:

nextbestpicture.com/nbp-top-10s-of… ImageImage
Here’s a bunch of filmmakers I love who don’t get enough attention, at least on twitter:

Robert Siodmak, King Hu, Costa-Gavras, Tsui Hark, Nicolas Roeg, Hideo Gosha, Fred Zinnemann, Seijun Suzuki, John Frankenheimer, David Mamet (the stuff he directed), Henri-Georges Clouzot Image
I get asked this more than any other question. My brutally honest take is this: as it stands, film criticism is a hobby that for lucky and/or talented people can supplement your income. For the vast majority, it is not, and never will be, a career. It’s sad, but it’s the truth. Image
Korean cinema has been a huge cultural import for 20 years. They make a lot of subversive, stylistically daring genre movies that deal with heavy and often universal themes, and more recently, class struggle. There’s an easy accessibility there not all international cinema has. Image

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More from @metaplexmovies

Jun 25, 2024
now that FURIOSA is out on VOD I wanted to clarify what I meant by "mini-oners," IE Spielbergian shots that effortlessly combine multiple setups but aren't full-bore tracking shots, by sharing some of the best in the movie, starting with this one:
FURIOSA (shockingly) begins with a series of longer-takes, with Miller instantly differentiating the visual language and rhythm from the cut-cut-cut kineticism of FURY ROAD. This shot begins as a close-up before craning to an epic tableau, the visual climax of the opening scene:
This shot of Dementus casing Gastown might be one of the most Spielberg-feeling shots of the movie, beginning as a tight medium, moving into a two-shot, craning into a wide, tracking forward with a group, then craning over a cliff-face into another huge wide shot:
Read 8 tweets
Mar 13, 2024
is it safe to say that I thought DUNE: PART TWO was exhilarating and rousing cinema but sometimes at the cost of over-simplifying the moral complexity of the book, and at its worst felt like a didactic caricature of radicalized belief rather than a moving deconstruction of it
There's a lot in DUNE: PART TWO I love, but I struggled with how cleanly Villeneuve points the moral compass of the storytelling: anyone "pro Messiah" is unfeelingly evil (Lady Jessica) or comically blind (Stilgar) and anyone "anti Messiah" is noble and sympathetic (Chani).
Chani has been reduced to a pull-string doll who every other scene recites how much she hates prophecies and messiahs, with little to no interiority to speak of. Nearly nobody besides Paul has an arc in DUNE: PART TWO, and instead their rigid beliefs are either validated or not.
Read 10 tweets
Aug 8, 2023
Revisited SORCERER and again just eviscerated by it. Freidkin turns the jungle into a malignant presence, causality and fate manifest as pure elemental terror. Some of the wildest, most incomprehensibly captured footage in the history of movies. For me, Freidkin's greatest film.


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SORCERER is as much a horror movie as THE EXORCIST. Friedkin's hyper-vivid, totally tactile sense of cinematic style makes his nightmares feel real, every location oozing expressionist threat, danger and malice. Sections of it are among the most physically intense I've ever seen.


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I don't have time to do a full-bore thread on SORCERER, but this wonderful essay by my man @aHeartOfGould is as definitive as it gets

brightwalldarkroom.com/2019/05/31/wil…
Read 4 tweets
Jun 19, 2023
Something weird is happening with box office tracking. Others have pointed it out, but ~all~ live-action superhero movies are underperforming tracking, while most non-superhero movies are making more. Something is broken. I made a list of most major releases so far this year: Image
Tracking always has a certain margin of error. It's rarely perfect. But two things strike me as especially unusual: the discrepancy of what movies over or under perform (IE, live-action superhero movies), and when movies fall outside that standard deviation, it's WAY off.
Part of it is surely that tracking is getting less reliable data. I'm guessing that's partly how telemarketing surged during the pandemic, and phone carriers now constantly flag spam (it's called STIR/SHAKEN), but that doesn't explain the full picture of what's happening.
Read 4 tweets
Jun 18, 2023
With THE FLASH, ELEMENTAL and TRANSFORMERS underperforming, the hardest lesson for studios is if an audience isn't given a strong reason to see something, they simply will not go. "Let's just go to the movies" does not exist. We need movies that demand the big screen experience.
There's a reason ACROSS THE SPIDER-VERSE is crushing it: it's a true audio-visual spectacle that rewards the biggest screens. Movies need to justify the big screen experience more than ever, and I hope Hollywood takes the right lessons to approve visually bold programming.
This summer is proving studios can't throw money at franchised projects and bank on a return: many of the biggest hits cost a below-average 100 million (MARIO, SPIDER-VERSE, JOHN WICK, the upcoming BARBIE & OPPENHEIMER). It's not about cost, it's about appeal, artistry, or both.
Read 7 tweets
Jun 17, 2023
This is obvious to say, but the color and stylization of design, movement and creativity that's only possible in animation nearly never translates to live action, and in the process mostly reaffirms the beauty and possibility of animation as a medium. I wish they'd just stop. ImageImageImageImage
It speaks to how incredible the animation was in ATLA that Joaquim Dos Santos––who directed half the finale, and a bunch otherwise––just co-directed ACROSS THE SPIDER-VERSE. This show's look and rhythm is so animation-specific, live-action will always struggle to do it justice. Image
I genuinely believe adapting animation to live-action is harder than adapting literature: it's a transposition between totally different visual mediums. That requires a ground-up reimagining of how things should look, move and feel like, and its a near impossible balance. ImageImageImageImage
Read 4 tweets

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