
Does anyone know of any good film private BitTorrent tracker?
days of being wild (1990, hong kong) & directed by: wong kar-wai
“To convey the hostile response Munch’s work often received during his lifetime, Watkins recruited Norwegians who genuinely disliked the paintings”
Night+ Day in Hong Kong; Fallen Angels(1995) + Chunking Express(1994)
”You’re right, because to me Chungking Express and Fallen Angels are one film that should be three hours long. I always think these two films should be seen together as a double bill. In fact, people asked me during an interview for Chungking Express: “You’ve made these two stories which have no relationship at all to each other, how can you connect them?” And I said, “The main characters of Chungking Express are not Fay Wang or Takashi Kaneshiro, but the city itself, the night and day of Hong Kong. Chungking Express and Fallen Angels together are the bright and dark of Hong Kong.” I see the films as inter-reversible, the character of Fay Wang could be the character of Takashi in Fallen Angels; Brigitte Lin in Chungking could be Leon Lai in Fallen Angels. All of their characters are inter-reversible. Also, in Chungking we were shooting from a very long distance with long lenses, but the characters seem close to us”. -Wong Kar Wai
“I used to think there was a kind of bird that, once born, would keep flying until death. The fact is that the bird hasn’t gone anywhere. It was dead from the beginning”.
Days of Being Wild (1990, Hong Kong) Directed by: Wong Kar-wai
Another thing:
I automatically despise anyone who likes a film because of how it is “presented” for example, some guy told me on a date “he liked In The Mood For love” because it didn’t necessarily have a plot”
LIKING A FILM IS A RESPONSE TO HOW A FILM MAKES YOU FEEL, NOT IF IT DOESN’T HAVE A PLOT ON PURPOSE, OR IF IT WAS SHOT WITH A SPECIFIC ANGLE WITH A SPECIFIC FUCKING CAMERA LENS, POINTING DIRECTLY INTO THE SUN.
So glad I found a decent man who isn’t as superficial with a brain of a small gnat AKA a hipster.
Fallen Angels (1995, Hong Kong) Dir: Wong Kar-wai