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refugee
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Topic: Coming of Age Posted: October 02 2011 at 07:40 |
I think that My Life as a Dog fits in here. An excellent children’s movie for grown-ups – that’s extremely Swedish.
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He say nothing is quite what it seems;
I say nothing is nothing
(Peter Hammill)
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Slartibartfast
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Posted: October 02 2011 at 06:55 |
Me either, still I love that movie. 
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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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ExittheLemming
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Posted: October 02 2011 at 04:50 |
Billy Liar (1963) directed by John Schlesinger from an adaptation of the Keith Waterhouse novel Look Back In Anger (1958) directed by Tony Richardson from an adaptation of the John Osborne play
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The Dark Elf
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Posted: October 02 2011 at 04:27 |
There are many such films that were adaptations from books:
The Lord of the RIngs
Great Expectations
All's Quiet on the Western Front
Harry Potter
Tom Jones
And many others...
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...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...
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Vompatti
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Posted: October 02 2011 at 03:58 |
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Atavachron
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Posted: October 02 2011 at 02:56 |
Finnforest wrote:
Ghost World |
Jim; I always felt like the end suggested the characters were dead, which made the title make sense..did you get that too or was I just imagining? (I know the comic book but never really read it)
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40footwolf
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Posted: October 02 2011 at 02:32 |
Atavachron wrote:
40footwolf wrote:
I don't think the coming-of-age genre has disappeared or gotten worse: I think it's just been adapted into other genres. In the movies I've mentioned, for example, it takes the form of a fantasy movie and two crime films, but they're still at their heart movies about young people coming to terms with their man/womanhood. In fact, in that light, I'd say that the '00s was maybe the best decade for CoA films there ever was. | that could be true- I guess it's hard not be most impacted by the films seen in one's youth, whenever they were actually made
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Very true. One of my other favorite coming of age movie's that I just barely left off the list is Francois Truffaut's Small Change.
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Heaven's made a cesspool of us all.
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Atavachron
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Posted: October 02 2011 at 00:44 |
40footwolf wrote:
I don't think the coming-of-age genre has disappeared or gotten worse: I think it's just been adapted into other genres. In the movies I've mentioned, for example, it takes the form of a fantasy movie and two crime films, but they're still at their heart movies about young people coming to terms with their man/womanhood. In fact, in that light, I'd say that the '00s was maybe the best decade for CoA films there ever was. |
that could be true- I guess it's hard not be most impacted by the films seen in one's youth, whenever they were actually made
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40footwolf
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Posted: October 02 2011 at 00:36 |
My favorites are:
- This is England
- Spirited Away
- City of God
- The Motel
- La Haine
- Superbad
- Half-Nelson
- Adventureland
- Harold and Maude
- Breaking Away
I don't think the coming-of-age genre has disappeared or gotten worse: I think it's just been adapted into other genres. In the movies I've mentioned, for example, it takes the form of a fantasy movie and two crime films, but they're still at their heart movies about young people coming to terms with their man/womanhood. In fact, in that light, I'd say that the '00s was maybe the best decade for CoA films there ever was.
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Heaven's made a cesspool of us all.
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Atavachron
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Posted: October 01 2011 at 23:55 |
Dead Poets Society is one I've grown to like more .. and another neat rarity is 1964's The World of Henry Orient with Peter Sellers as a conductor and the object of two teenage girls' infatuation until they nearly wreck his high society lifestyle. Beautiful score from Elmer Bernstein.
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Atavachron
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Posted: October 01 2011 at 18:55 |
^ I should see Good Will Hunting again, I wasn't so impressed with it the first time (though I am a Damon fan, The Talented Mr Ripley, Bourne Identity)
Anyone know a cult film called Bless the Beasts and the Children ?; Bill Mumy and a pack of misfit kids run amok in the California hills on a mission to set a heard of Buffalo free. This is weird '70s coming-of-age at its most disturbed and dark, kinda like Last Summer or Badlands but with much younger kids.
Edited by Atavachron - October 01 2011 at 18:56
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stonebeard
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Posted: October 01 2011 at 18:41 |
colorofmoney91 wrote:
Slartibartfast wrote:
Finnforest wrote:
Clerks
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This.
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I wouldn't really call Clerks a coming of age movie. There's no real life lessons learned and no real loss of innocence. I would argue that Clerks 2 has more of that. Both are some of my favorite movies.
I would think Good Will Hunting is the best argument for a coming of age movie not taking place in one's early teens, which I generally think most movies of these type fit.
Edited by stonebeard - October 01 2011 at 18:42
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colorofmoney91
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Posted: October 01 2011 at 17:23 |
Slartibartfast wrote:
Finnforest wrote:
Clerks
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This.
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VanderGraafKommandöh
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Posted: October 01 2011 at 08:12 |
Andyman1125 wrote:
Bildungsroman, that's the literary term. |
I said that yesterday. Do keep up!  Looking at the wiki page, some Bildungsroman novels have been made into films, some include: The Kite Runner Jane Eyre Sons and Lovers David Copperfield The Picture of Dorian Gray Of Human Bondage To Kill a Mockingbird Oranges are Not the Only Fruit (as a BBC Adaptation) The Swiss Family Robinson
Edited by James - October 01 2011 at 08:16
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Slartibartfast
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Posted: October 01 2011 at 07:21 |
Finnforest wrote:
Clerks
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This.
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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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colorofmoney91
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Posted: October 01 2011 at 06:40 |
Friday?
I don't really know about any coming of age films.
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Henry Plainview
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Posted: October 01 2011 at 01:55 |
JJLehto wrote:
Indeed, and short response to Henry: Like I said it's not "really" coming of age as we know it but still....I see the relevance. Personally, I DO see it as accurate for us. Not that we're gunna go insane and start fight clubs to get out anger but well...we are coming of age Henners in a pretty bleak state, and FC feels like it's accurate of our country, ya know? Well guess you don't because I'm not sure but makes sense in my head. yadda yadda who knows |
I agree it's relevant for the thread, but it is not really relevant for 2011. Tyler Durden saw modern society as antiseptic, orderly, and grinding. There was no real risk in your life, you just needed to work at a corporation for 50 years, pounding away every day in mediocre paperwork, and then die of diabetes in a retirement home, spending your final days watching reruns of Matlock. He wanted to live in a world where your survival was not guaranteed, and thus every day was uncertain and thus exciting. So he injected chaos into everything he could and attempted to bring down modern civilization. Well guess what? Your life is pretty uncertain, America is crumbling, and that soul-crushing job looks a lot better when you have been unemployed for 3 years. Next time you're in McDonald's, look at the poster for the Monopoly promotion. Assuming they're all the same, it will say "Lose the second job--one million dollars". We are no longer living in the world he was rebelling against. I think Tyler would be very happy with the progress we've made without him and would be firebombing buildings at Tea Party rallies and Occupy Wall St. (And the whole point of the movie was that he was wrong, anyway...)
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if you own a sodastream i hate you
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JJLehto
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Posted: October 01 2011 at 01:21 |
Atavachron wrote:
^ agreed-- a very significant movie, and a breakthrough part for Norton
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Indeed, and short response to Henry: Like I said it's not "really" coming of age as we know it but still....I see the relevance. Personally, I DO see it as accurate for us. Not that we're gunna go insane and start fight clubs to get out anger but well...we are coming of age Henners in a pretty bleak state, and FC feels like it's accurate of our country, ya know? Well guess you don't because I'm not sure but makes sense in my head. yadda yadda who knows Also, another class CoA is The Breakfast Club. I never saw it until I was in college and not as powerful as I'd think years back, (and ok kinda cliched) but it's a pretty good movie.
Edited by JJLehto - October 01 2011 at 01:22
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Vompatti
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Posted: October 01 2011 at 00:54 |
Atavachron wrote:
Vompatti wrote:
Alice in the Cities
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One of my favorites from Wenders.
Do you know The Tin Drum ? (by Schlondorff)
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Yes.
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Epignosis
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Posted: September 30 2011 at 20:17 |
Memoirs of a Geisha is a fine novel. The movie failed to do it justice.
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