Friday, December 10, 2010
In the Mood for Love - James Clarke
Tuesday, December 7, 2010
Extra Credit -- Beca G.
In the Mood for Love - Jen
Extra Credit - Jen
After the Wedding - Jen
Extra Credit- Jeremy Brinson
Do the Right Thing - Jen
In The Mood For Love - Amber Merrell
I definitely see a resemblance this film has to silent films in that the movie says so much without dialogue. The scenes where they pass each other without saying a word; or where they sit, sadness dripping from their faces; or they are shown at work, distracted by their home lives all illustrate meaning and further the themes of the film without using dialogue. However, I do think the dialogue is very important in this film. Their conversations show how intimate and yet still somehow professional they are towards one another. Thus, I would suggest that this film is something new that mixes silent, visual qualities with meaningful dialogue to create a complex, evocative piece that inspires many emotions and deep thought.
Extra Credit - J. Miley
In the Mood for Love - J. Miley
Extra Credit - Amber Merrell
I also greatly enjoy the actors in these older movies, though many of them are personality stars. I do prefer actor stars over personality stars, but I make exceptions for these classic movies. Most of my favorite actors are actually from recent films, so there is a disconnect between my favorite style of film and my favorite actors. The exception is James Stewart, who has always been one of my favorite actors, even though he is a personality actor. I love watching him play his roles. He has me convinced every time, though he does get a little over-dramatic at times. It does not matter; I think he’s fantastic regardless. The actors who can make me feel good and be absorbed in the story become my favorites.
In the Mood for Love - Beca G.
In the still of Mr. Mo-Wan looking in the mirror, there are tons of gorgeous elements in the shot that help to reflect a complexity in feeling that the story itself does not have. In the mirror, the viewer gets two versions of a similar feeling. Mr. Mo-Wan looks confused and a bit pained – his wife is having an affair, and he is finding himself falling for his wife’s lover’s wife. It’s all so complicated – especially since the two live next door to one another, an easy way to get caught by the respective apartment owners that they are renting from. Everything else in the shot is blurred except for the very clear view of his reflection, and it mirrors the theme that while everything seems very complicated and fuzzy regarding he and Mrs. Chan’s relationship.
One of the other shots that I thought was particularly beautiful was the one where Mrs. Chan is standing in the window. Clearly, the actress is a beautiful woman, yet the simplicity of her standing in the window, drinking a glass of water, while contemplating is also in focus against the contrast of all the fuzzy greenery. The same them is reiterated – the personal struggles of the two main characters, not only in coming to grips with the betrayal of their spouses, but also coming to terms with their strange relationship with each other.
*PS – Can I also say that the costuming in this film was beautiful? Mrs. Chan’s dresses were very emulative of her character – gorgeous, yet still uptight and formal all the time. She was always dressed and made up, and I thought this said a lot about her character – not only in a prissy way, but also in the fact that she seemed a little austere and cold. It wasn’t until the last fourth of the film that she cried, and in the next few scenes her hair was looser, and we see her take off her shoes – a gradual sense of letting go.
Extra Credit - Craig Walters
For me I truly love thought provoking films that make statements about life, whether tangibly or intangibly, politically or personally. I find a movie that can make an audience think, if even for a moment, about themselves or the world they live in, or heading towards in the case of 2001, to hold the most ground in my eyes. Therefore, I am not more conscious of the cinematography, but rather the intent of such elements on the film itself.
In The Mood For Love - Craig Walters
The first image of the two walking down a dark street also speaks volumes towards their hidden love, which will slowly diffuse into the shadows as their characters do in this image. It also speaks to the lingering of hidden emotions amongst their peers as they continually sneak about to avoid any social repercussions. The difficulty of their lives build a wall, which they broke want to break, but can’t for their obligations.
Extra Credit- Amanda Carman
Now, with the added understanding of film I have gained with this class, I am better able to recognize the more complicated aspects of film composition. I can question why a particular angle was chosen for a shot or how the use of sound contributes to the overall effect of the film. However, story still remains paramount in my mind, and my appreciation of the other aspects of the film is given through the lens of how it contributes to the telling of the story. I tend to prefer Formalist films for this reason, as their use of the freedom to manipulate the medium allows for a wide range of interesting means with which to tell stories. I tend to prefer films that are either very fantastical or deeply psychological in nature, films which take you out of your comfortable world and into an entirely different realm, whether it be a fantasy realm or a realm of experience that is simply not yours. My favorite films are the ones that force me to reflect, wonder, cry, mourn, or sit gibbering in a corner hoping that the world is not really that terrible, films like The Fountain, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Moulin Rouge, Pan's Labyrinth, and Requiem for a Dream, and these films are beautifully crafted to grab your interest and pull you into a carefully choreographed dance with the characters and concepts represented within them.
In the Mood for Love- Amanda Carman
The use of mirrors is particularly interesting as a parallel to the plot and a subtle commentary on theme. The unusual characteristic of the plot of this film is the relationship between the two main characters; it is not a relationship of blossoming love (at least not til the end), nor is it even a normal friendship. Though they frequently encounter each other while passing each other in the noodle shop and being in proximity with each other as neighbors, their acquaintance is cultivated by the mutual discovery that their spouses are cheating with each other. Their relationship develops as they attempt to recreate the development of their spouses' adulterous relations, so at several instances in the film it is unclear whether the event you're viewing is reality or a charade. Shooting many of the shots through the perspective of the mirror highlights this strange ambiguity between what is real and what is facsimile.
Shortly after the screenshot represented in the prompt, there is another shot of the reflection of his reflection in another mirror. During this scene, the warning "never get caught between two mirrors" came to mind, the idea being that the infinite reflections that occur between two mirrors traps the soul. In this scene, Mr. Chow is working on his martial arts serial, an important connection that arose between them in that it has nothing to do with reenacting the development of the relationship between their unfaithful spouses. In this sense, the couple has allowed themselves to be caught between two metaphorical mirrors: the reenactment which allows them to better see their spouses' motivations and actions, and the mutual interest in the martial arts serial which allows them to better see each other. It is here that they lose the soul of their original intent, their promise not to do to their spouses what was done to them.
Monday, December 6, 2010
In The Mood For Love - Parker Sealy
Two images that really struck me as being the most powerful out of the ones at the bottom were 1. The man’s reflection in the mirror image and 2. The women grabbing her shoes and the shot is from under the bed. I feel like in this movie, the visual storytelling was all from the outside’s perspective. All that was being narrated was being narrated from our perspective, as the audience. As she grabbed her shoes, we could see as if we were spying on her. The same with the reflection. We were looking at him from behind just like in scary movies when the guy looks in the mirror and sees the reflection of a murderer or someone in the mirror, you expect them to show someone looking in the mirror at him but then you realize that person is you, the viewer. They are the most powerful because it really helps to demonstrate the sense of voyeurism. As for the connections? Sure, there are connections. With or without sound, this sense of voyeurism would still be present. We feel as if we are peering into their lives just as they feel they have to peer into their spouses because they are cheating. We get a sense of what they are going through which can be delivered with or without sound. We can appreciate the cinematography in that aspect. We clearly feel the way we do throughout the film because of the camera angles and proxemics so sound is not super necessary. We still have the same feeling that we do.
Days of Heaven - James Clarke
Do The Right Thing - James Clarke
If there is one character in this film that bothers me more than any other, it is Buggin Out. If there was a foil to the ignorant and bigoted rednecks of the world, this would be it. The ignorant, poor, and under-informed oppressed guy. Not only do all of the other characters in the film (with the exception of Radio) tell him that he is full of it and needs to do something with his life besides complain, but his sole role in the film is that of the antagonist. Now the worst 'bad guy' in the film is clearly the cop that kills Radio, but I do not think that short part is the antagonist of the story itself. Society often feeds on the voices of those who are the loudest, and Buggin Out is definitely a voice to be heard in the community. He could be a voice for reason, but, like all of the other characters in this domino effect of a storyline, he does not do the right thing. His antagonizing Radio and Sal and the other characters is a key factor in the breakdown at the pizzeria.
Sunday, December 5, 2010
In the Mood for Love- Greg Weinstein
For instance, one of the greatest visceral images in the film is the red curtain, which is always swaying in the wind, an act of the heart just as the spouses may or may not be swaying themselves. Just like Pyramus and Thisbe, forbidden to meet except through a wall, as our two lovers are forbidden to act on their desires, even though their spouses have, yet the ecstasy and instensity, built up by the shooting appears to be too much for them. This is paralleled with the seclusion of the cheating spouses' faces and how the audience can never see them, perhaps an illusion to their shame and their secrecies. The same red curtain always swaying back and forth in the wind thus seems to allude to our character's loneliness throughout the film, right up until Chow speaks into the hollow tree and then muddles it up to stay there alone, never to be heard from by anyone else. This loneliness is also displayed in the beginning before Chow and So really meet, as they are both always eating alone, depressed thus leading to their inevitable hookup. This is the defining moment of the film, as the audience knows what should happen, we have seen it so many times in Hollywood movies, where the couple's passion finally erupts into the most sensual scene one can imagine, but this doesn't happen here. The audience never sees this and is thus, left alone at the end of the film without any conclusion or finality to our want of these two lovelorn characters to get together. It is this sympathy for the characters that Wong Kar Wai cleverly and expertly develops throughout the movie, always keeping us on the edge of our seats, just like good movies should.
Extra Credit- Greg Weinstein
This affects one viewing of the material as some enthusiasts tend to care more about a story that is not tampered with or that they could see walking down the street as opposed to movies that are different or imaginative. I, on the otherhand hold no pretense when it comes to movies. No, what makes a great movie for me is how it resonates with me and whether I can sit through it for two hours or more and then come back to it later on if I so choosed to. My preferences don't fall more towards action or comedy or drama or classics or new or foreign or domestic or cheap or expensive or who is starring in it or making it. I care more about what is on the screen and if it is a good movie that makes me cry, laugh, think, feel, happy, mad, or pumped then I am going to put myself behind it and I will take two hours or more out of my day to watch it or spend the necessary dollars to see. For instance, a couple of weeks ago my girlfriend and I were in Savannah and the Savannah film festival was there and on that particular day 127 hours was showing, and I have been wanting to see that ever since I saw the trailer. Unfortunately, the festival has been sold out for weeks, but the theatre has a line where people can wait to see if there are empty seats. So we got there 2 and a half hours before it started and we were still the 4th couple in line, but we waited the entire time and we ended up seeing it and loving it. The same thing happened with a friend and I when we wanted to see the midnight showing for Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkhaban but we weren't allowed to see a midnight showing due to our age, but we waited and we eventually found a couple who took pity on us. The point being it could be a huge movie that billions of people will see like Harry Potter or considerably less like 127 Hours, if the movie strikes a chord then that will be the movie I will go to any lengths to see. And probably the two films that have most influenced my film watching have been Bridge on the River Kwai and 12 Angry Men. Those movies were just it for me with their stories, directing, and acting that transcended anything else. Seeing movies like these that are just different and breathtaking make everything else seem better after you've seen the work that goes into movies like these and more and the result they can put on reels. I believe cinema is there to make everything else seem better, if its how much better our life is or look what this person did, or just how amazing something is, and its that amazing because people like us, members of the audience, grew up and did what they saw 20, 30, 40+ years prior. Cinema is that escape.
Extra Credit - Bradley Strickland
I really enjoy films that lean towards realism. I really enjoy first person narration, voyeurism, and “art that conceals art.” Jean Renior’s films are particularly great because he evokes realism to use film as a critique – a mirror of sorts. These films force deep questions on the audience because of how real the film and the characters appear to be. Often the subject hits close to home, leaving a lasting impact. Classical paradigm films are great escapes for me, but often they do not leave lasting impacts or force me to think about a particular question. Thus, I am not as likely to pay to see this on the big screen. I feel that I watch them and a few weeks later forget them (but I really enjoy older Walt Disney animation and Pixar films). I do enjoy films with particular political ideologies and intense emotional situations. The film, Sicko by Michael Moore, is one that exemplifies this. I also love nature documentaries. We can see real life things on the screen that we normally never would be able to. Often these are rare images that make me feel privileged and enlightened. However, I also enjoy more formalist movies as well. The film Hero directed by Yimou Zhang comes to mind. I marvel at the martial arts acrobatics that appear to be dances and the beautiful battles (hint of perversity) that are full of colors. This film emphasizes the visual rhetoric to tell the story (which has a very complex and convoluted plot line). Though you can see it in Realism, distortion, exaggeration, and blending of illusion and reality is much more common in Formalism. For some reason I really enjoy this. I value each type of film in different situations and I feel each is necessary for a particular subject.
In summary, Realism is useful to critique society and systems (though it can be very discrete and quite about it). Often Formalism can do the same critique but is more convoluted and confusing in its approach, which can lead to misinterpretation or an overlook. Classical films can provide us with sometimes needed escapes from the pressures of real world and reality.
However, there are certain types of films I cannot stand, particularly pure avant-garde films. They do not provide an escape for me and often lead me feeling like I have wasted time. I cannot stand watching Belson's films or swirling images and computer graphics. I also do not enjoy films that are overly gory horror films.
There are certain stars that I would go see a movie for like Anthony Hopkins (personality star) and Tom Hanks (actor star). I must admit that often I do not even know the director of a particular movie. However, I really enjoy Tarantino and Clint Eastwood as directors and would go see a film solely because they directed it. Often for me it is the subject that will convince me to go see a movie. I enjoy gangster movies particularly (American Gangster and Road to Perdition). I know it is weird, but I think, as a society, as individuals, we enjoy a hint of seeing things we would not do or people we could not become (1930s and 1980s gangsters). I also really enjoy musicals (Chicago and The Producers). I think this is because I enjoy music so much.
Saturday, December 4, 2010
In The Mood For Love - Atlee
Their partners are never shown clearly in the film. The cheating husband is actually never in a frame of the film, but we do here his voice, and the cheating wife is also never clearly shown. This is obviously a comment on the view of both of their actions. Adultery is obvious a negative aspect throughout the film. Which I think Chow and Su are held in high regard because even though their partners are cheating they never take any action towards each other. It seems that whenever the audience expects them to have some type of physical action with each other, the simply end of have a cigarette to show the frustration that they are both feeling, not only because of they actions of each of their partners, but also because of the route that their own relationship with each other is taking. Neither I believe set out to fall in love with each other, and honestly when they did express their love for each other I was somewhat surprised because they hadn't each shown that they even liked each other very much, much less loved one another.
In the Mood for Love - Bradley Strickland
In the Mood for Love, is Wong Kar-wai’s movement into a new paradigm for film while taking from the visual awe of classic cinema. He moves away from the distractions of complex dialogue and intricate stories. Instead, the film evokes a mood, feelings of longing and a sense of restrained passion. We are enveloped into the characters’ lives by a visual rhetoric that becomes more important, perhaps, than the narrative.
Kar-wai uses the intensity of the film’s cinematography to emphasize the symbolism within the film, rather than relying on its narrative. The beautiful red curtain billowing in the wind is a powerful image, a symbol of perversity. It signifies the repressed love, restrained passion, by our two stars. It shows the separation of two destined lovers by the red curtain of their perverse marriages to someone else (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red, under Eastern and African traditions). The flowing curtain thus becomes the visual emphasis of a sense of romantic longing between our two characters. The film makes us constantly long for something to happen, some outburst of sexual passion that we are used to in romantic Hollywood films, but it never does.
The slow motion scenes that are scattered within the film are part of Kar-wai’s revisionist approach of “the romance film.” These scenes highlight Maggie’s beauty, while at the same time their slowness emphasizes a sense of longing. We become entranced every single time she walks down each step, getting closer and closer to… nothing. Perhaps the most powerful image in the entire film is when the two characters pass a glance to each other going opposite ways on this staircase. The entire film is embodied in this one shot, all the sense of longing, restraint, repression, and regret. The ultimate perversity of their association as neighbors and their marriages is that these conventions prevent them from stopping their lives to answer any questions to love, to take more than a glance.
In the Mood for Love -Jess S.
In the Mood for Love- Jess N
Another image, more a whole shot, that seemed powerful was that of them leaning against the wall on opposite sides. The camera pans back and forth showing both of them with the wall in between. This shot has power without any words because you can physically see the separation between them, the wall, and the anxiety, stress, and longing written all over their faces and in their body language which almost mirror each other. The audience can see the tear between the two, the longing and want, the desire to be together, yet the struggle and need to remain separated because they don't want to be like their spouses.
I do see the similarities between Wong's film and silent cinema, especially in the use of facial expressions and body language to convey how the characters are feeling and the struggle they are dealing with. Yet, there is something different about Wong's film that I can't quite put a finger on, maybe it's that his film has a more subtle way of conveying the feeling. The characters are not over-exaggerating the expressions, it's just the camera's close up and the scene around them that helps to convey the mood and what they are feeling.
I must say, watching this film reminded me a lot of a family reunion with my dad's side of the family with all the similar speaking, the way they gather together for everything and set the food out where everything is on the table and each person has their own small bowl of rice and just picks at the other plates as they go all sharing off of them, the fast loud talking and everyone talking over each other, and the dresses the women wear and their hairstyles are all similar to the way Vietnamese women do theirs and the traditional Vietnamese dress we wear. It was quite funny to me all the shots at the table where they are playing games and everyone's sitting around having a good time because that is exactly what happens at my relatives' houses, and also how nosy and in other people's business is quite characteristic of them too.
Extra Credit - Jess N
If I'm going to shell out $10 to go see a movie in theaters, it must have a good story line, usually yet again within the Classical style, those that seem real on one level, but if you delve deeper, you realize such things don't actually happen very often, but I also like big name actors/actresses. I'm more likely to go see the film if I know who's in it and like their other works. I guess you could say I like the typical girly movie with a love story and a happy ending, but also those with a great musical/dance performance.
I think a movie should have some of emotional connection to the person watching it to make it a great film, no matter what style or genre it is. I want a film that leaves an impression, one that makes me think, yeah I'd watch that again, or I can't wait to see that again! There must be a good story line or plot and I appreciate good acting, unless of course, it's a documentary or something not involving actual actors. If it's a musical/dance film, I am more interested in the talent and abilities of those within the film, whether singer or actor, than I am in the story line, as most of them do not really have such great plots; they're more concerned with the performance than a great story line which does bother me a little as I like a good story line, something that has some thought put into it, but if the dancing or singing impresses me than I will like it anyway.
Honestly, I'm not much of a movie buff...sitting in class, I have heard of, even less seen, almost none of the films mentioned. I really don't know many directors or even think about who is the director of a film when I think about going to see a movie. I don't really think about the technicalities or what goes in to a film, the significance, the symbolism, the colors and their meanings all seem to escape me. I guess I am just one of those that watches the top layer of the film, grazing over the surface of it, what it before my eyes, and never bothers to delve deeper into what the director was thinking or trying to convey through the film. I must say though, this class has given me a greater appreciation for film and sparked my interest in other genres of film, things I would never think to see before taking this class. It has expanded my very narrow taste in film and made me look at films in a different way. I actually think about the meanings behind the film now which I've never thought about before.
Friday, December 3, 2010
Extra Credit! -Jess S.
I think the best films are the ones that latch on to some part of you and don’t let go-the ones that make you think about them obsessively for days until you can shake them off long enough to detach yourself from those thoughts. For me, though, it doesn’t have to be a really shocking indie or even a deep Hollywood production to have this effect. It all depends on the narrative and how it’s presented. Even if there’s no ‘flair’ at all- if it’s not a big budget film- if it’s based around something that intrigues me and it makes an impact, I’m there. I’m kind of torn between both the “life as it is” films and the made-up worlds of some films. The more I think about it, though, I’m more likely to gravitate toward the “life as it is” films. I’m also somewhat torn between the Classical Paradigm and the more mysterious convention, although I guess if I’m going with “life as it is”, I’m most often headed for the Classical Paradigm films. Of course I like the Hollywood Studio era, but more often than not it’s the grit and low-budget productions that grip me the most. Along with that, I typically marvel over the colors and the depth of the “real world” in film more than the computer-generated realism.
I hate to be so neutral, but in those cases where I like the director AND the star, that will win me over. If it’s one or the other, I’ll most likely go with the star if I don’t know much about the director. I would most definitely pay more for the actor star than the personality star. I would absolutely pay more to go see a Tim Burton film with Johnny Depp as the star (because who else would the actor star be?) before I would head out to see a film with Will Ferrell, no matter the director. Also, anything literary wins me over- if it’s true to the original line. I also like films with some sort of psychological ties built in, whether it’s something with actor stars like Girl, Interrupted or something that’s more indie-esque, like Peter Mullan’s The Magdalene Sisters. Political films aren’t usually my thing, but I did really enjoy Do the Right Thing. Overall, I think that if a film is creative and original and intuitive, I’ll take a chance on it.
Extra Credit - James Clarke
After The Wedding - James Clarke
In the Mood for Love (Wong Kar Wai, 2000, Hong Kong, 98 minutes)
Extra Credit - Atlee
I do go through periods where I may go see a movie based on the star or the director, but it has been a while since I have done that. And yes, I would go see a movie because of the personality of that star. But there are much bigger reasons to go see a movie other than just a star. These are so difficult to answer and somewhat frustrating because I don't feel like I think about anything when seeing a preview or hear about a movie. I just see the preview and think that's crap or that will be awesome. I don't look at colors or compositions of shots and what they might mean even when watching the movies themselves. I find very little hidden meaning stuff because I don't thing it contributes very much to the story. Like the use of color in Do the Right thing with the reds and yellows. I guess that there could have been some subconcious recognition that those colors focus on the hotness of the neighborhood, but I really doubt it. They complained that it was hot and were constantly sweating so I know its hot, and the colors just fit with an African American community, they have no comment on the climate. Symbolism, I think, is about 95% just crap that people make up. I read an interview with Christopher Nolan a few days ago, and they were asking him about certain questions that fans had about his movie Inception, and as the interviewer was asking him these questions, he seemed really confused about what he was being asked. *Spoiler Alert* He was asked if Dom was still trapped in inception at the end of the movie because his kids were the same age and the top didn't stop spinning. He said no because the kids were different because they were working with 2 different sets of kids and that they were in different clothes and that the top just seemed like the right place to end the movie. And the rest of the questions were him shooting down other theories that people had about the movie. I think people constantly try to over analyze films and their hidden meanings (although some films do have them).
If a films has a clear political intent, I am far less likely to go see it. I do not care what you think. Entertain me and leave me alone. I wouldn't have gone to see Do the Right Thing in theaters. Happy feet, along with several other animated movies are slipping in their messages at the ends of movies. Is nothing sacred? Can't I watch a penguin dance in peace? Although I actually do care about recycling and the environment to a degree that annoys my parents to no end.
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
Extra Credit - Parker Sealy
I have absolutely no idea how to answer this. The reason for this is because I have no idea. As I am reading these questions about what I like more about film, there is no way for me to answer it on a black and white scale. I think that if you are a true moviegoer then you have to be open minded to all aspects of the cinema. When I go to see a film I have several rules (or something of that nature). One is that I never listen to critics. I respect critics and read their critiques like its my job but it is mostly to hear them out before going to see it regardless of what they said. If they say that it isn’t worth my time and put out good arguments then I will just wait for it to be on DVD so that I don’t have to pay as much. Another is that I won’t not go see a movie if I don’t like the actor. Now that one, of course, is iffy. I will refuse to see a movie if an actor that I don’t like is in it but that’s usually because I don’t particularly enjoy the plot of the films they do. For example, I am not a huge Will Ferrell fan. I loved Anchorman but some of his other films are awful. This makes me hate him and refuse to go see some of his films but if he were to try something new then maybe I would give it a go. Unfortunately he is type casted so I probably will avoid him for right now at least. There are others but they are irrelevant to answer your question. So let me answer some of the questions you asked to further elaborate on why I am having trouble producing a straightforward answer. First, do I like realistic films over those that create a world of make belief? That depends. I like documentaries if done well and are able to hold the audiences attention. I love Morgan Spurlock and really loved Super Size Me and his show, 30 Days. I still love, however, films such as Harry Potter and any movie that clearly is not real because I do love that imaginary life that is other than my own. Do I prefer Hollywood films over Indies? Um no, I like them both. It simply depends on the plot and if I can find the indie and hear about it in the first place. Would I rather be thinking about rich color and elegant compositions of award winning cinematography or the stunning realism of a computer generated landscape when I leave the theater? Well, that depends on what I went to see which wouldn’t be determined by that. I love the intriguing aspects of cinematography but I also love learning about new technology that comes about to perfect the film viewing experience. Would I go see a film for $10 because of its director or actor? Both. I love directors. Some of my favorite directors are Tim Burton, Edgar Wright, and Quentin Terantino. I also love actors and I look at both when choosing a film. I also go see actors for their attractiveness but also because of their personality or because of how good they are and able to take on a role. My favorite actors are Johnny Depp and Joseph Gordon- Levitt because of their versatility in acting but I would definitely go see a film just because Johnny Depp is in it. That is also how I find out about indie films. I IMDB actors and see what they have been in especially if they are know for their versatility. I guess I may have some similarities in all my favorite movies (which are too many to name…) but honestly I love watching every type of movie and consider myself very open minded when I go choose a film. I essentially want to watch every type. I do like to watch actors for their versatility and I do like to watch foreign films and maybe I do avoid political films but I probably watch some as well and like them. In order to decide to go see a movie, I look at actors, directors, and plot then go from there but they range from realism to avant-garde so I am very versatile when it comes to watching films. I hope that kind of sort of answers the question.