yu's Talk


  • johnjoyc
    u der
    posted 534 days ago
  • johnjoyc
    hai
    how r u
    posted 534 days ago
  • farhan20002002
    hi
    posted 539 days ago
  • frarjeh2003
    hi
    how are you ?
    can i chatyou ?
    posted 553 days ago
  • antotharakan
    gai this anto from india
    posted 559 days ago
  • jfvirey
    Hi,

    I just found a German website on which you can download "Earthlings" (which I did) and a few other (shorter) vegan documentaries:

    http://veg-tv.info/Accueil

    JF
    posted 560 days ago
  • jfvirey
    Come see this movie with me...
    Hi,

    I haven't seen this film yet, but I intend to. I thought you might be interested.

    JF
    Unser täglich Brot (Our Daily Bread) Unser täglich Brot (Our Daily Bread)
    by Jean-François
    "Our Daily Bread" is a film I find it difficult to review, because I don't know what it is, I don't know what it is about, and I don't know what its point is.

    I don't think it is a documentary, in that its primary aim does not seem to be to document its subject. The absence of a voiceover has the effect of letting the viewer guess what it is he is seeing, and deprives him of any meaningful statistics or pieces of context that might help him understand the meaning and relevance of what is being shown.

    I would guess therefore that this film is a piece of modern art, which tries to elicit a mood by piecing together still shots of the food industry that evoke echoes of such films as THX 1138, Metropolis, Aliens, Silent Running, Modern Times and the works of Jacques Tati. In a way, it hijacks the documentary genre by turning it into an inside joke for movie buffs.

    "Our Daily Bread" is not an activist film. At best, it will disillusion viewers whose image of food production comes from the mythology created by advertising, something I personally didn't need as I try to avoid all advertising in whatever form it may come.

    The film is not even particularly concerned about animals, though it does show scenes of animal cruelty that might convert its less morally anesthesized viewers to veganism. The emotion it seeks to elicit is not anger at the injustice of our treatment of animals. There were images I just couldn't watch, but they were a minority. I would call them obscene- gory couplings of machines and beasts. Many of the scenes I believe intended to show the mere incongruity of our food industry. Both the animals and the human employees have been displaced, cut off from their natural environment, and forced to live in conditions that turn them into food-producing automata, either as victims or as killers or mutilators of carcasses.

    Remember too that this is not an undercover film, and that therefore you are not being shown what modern companies do not want you to see. This is just what they are not too ashamed of, rightly or wrongly.

    And then there are scenes that are just impressive for the cleverness of the technology they show - unless of course you are a technophobe or have a fear of robots, in which case they will blend more neatly into the rest of the movie.

    I didn't find the film uninteresting, and I might understand its point some day, unless it is just to make the viewer go 0_o.
    posted 560 days ago
  • JakeMcFly
    Thank you.
    posted 561 days ago
  • jfvirey
    Hi,

    I just came across this:

    http://www.cinemawithoutborders.com/news/139/ARTICLE/1547/2008-04-09.html

    The whole site seems interesting.

    JF
    posted 561 days ago
  • jfvirey
    Hi,

    Yes, I think BSG is my favorite series of the moment (together with Ghost in the Shell SAC), but I may be a little late in the show compared to you, as I can only watch it on DVD. The latest season I saw is 3, and you may be referring to season 4.
    There were some episodes I didn't like in season 2, but as a whole, I think the series is brilliant. As you can see, I root for the dissident Cylons, those who make babies.

    JF
    posted 563 days ago
  • jfvirey
    Hi,

    When I saw you had added him to your favorite actors, I had no idea of his name, but I immediately recognized his face. I was surprised to see that I have seen him in ten of the movies listed on his Flixster page, in addition to "Martin Chuzzlewit", which was the first title that came to my mind with him in it. What I like about him in this film is that he plays a very ridiculous man, a hypocrite who gets thoroughly humiliated, and I think this requires guts.

    JF
    posted 567 days ago
  • skwisimasiku
    hello. cud we get in touch- friends
    posted 567 days ago
  • jfvirey
    Hi,

    Wilkinson has a rather important role in the 1994 TV adaptation of Dickens' "Martin Chuzzlewit", available on DVD.

    Thanks for becoming a Friend,

    JF
    posted 568 days ago
  • xmkatx
    that sucks that i keep leaving early! next time... never again! we left early after the forbidden kingdom too XD

    are you kidding? i can't even name 1 azn kid who was like that. where are you from? every azn i knew were thugs!! i wish i knew azn gawths, just cuz i am sick of all the corny thugs!

    i don't think i saw ANYONE with a Y2K? shirt.
    posted 601 days ago