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Weird Movies

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Poll Question: Which movie is the weirdest?
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BaldJean View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote BaldJean Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Topic: Weird Movies
    Posted: September 18 2021 at 18:05
these are some of the weirdest movies I have ever seen. which one is your favorite?

"Auch Zwerge haben klein angefangen" ("Even Dwarfs Started Small") by Werner Herzog
"La montaña sagrada" ("The Holy Mountain") by Alejandro Jodorowsky
"El Topo" ("The Mole") by Alejandro Jodorowsky
"Themroc" by Claude Faraldo
"¡Viva la muerte!" ("Long Live Death!") by Fernando Arrabal
"Mulholland Drive" by David Lynch
"Eraserhead" by David Lynch
"Week End" by Jean-Luc Godard
"Zardoz" by John Boorman
"De Wisselwachter" ("The Pointsman") by Jos Stelling
"Naked Lunch" by David Cronenberg
"eXistenZ" by David Cronenberg
"Malpertuis" by Harry Kümel
"De vierde man" ("The Fourth Man") by Paul Verhoeven
"Repulsion" by Roman Polanski
"Le charme discret de la bourgeoisie" ("The Discreet Charme of the Bourgeousie") by Luis Buñuel
"Le Fantôme de la liberté" ("The Phantom of Liberty") by Luis Buñuel
"Belle de Jour" by Luis Buñuel
"L'Année dernière à Marienbad" ("Last Year in Marienbad") by Alain Resnais
"Něco z Alenky" ("Something from Alice") by Jan Švankmajer

take your pick


Edited by BaldJean - September 19 2021 at 06:59


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2021 at 18:41
Hi,

I have seen these so that's 11 from your list. And it is really hard for me to make a choice at this point.

"La montaña sagrada" ("The Holy Mountain") by Alejandro Jodorowsky
"El Topo" ("The Mole") by Alejandro Jodorowsky
"Eraserhead" by David Lynch
"Week End" by Jean-Luc Godard
"Zardoz" by John Boorman
"Naked Lunch" by David Cronenberg
"Repulsion" by Roman Polanski
"Le charme discret de la bourgeoisie" ("The Discreet Charme of the Bourgeousie") by Luis Buñuel
"Le Fantôme de la liberté" ("The Phantom of Liberty") by Luis Buñuel
"Belle de Jour" by Luis Buñuel
"L'Année dernière à Marienbad" ("Last Year in Marienbad") by Alain Resnais

Not sure that I consider anything out there as "weird", although some films are very difficult to interpret and understand. For example, I just saw Jean-Luc Godard's "Notre Musique" and it is not exactly a film in that we are expecting some story and acting. It is, in some ways, more of a "personal documentary", and in many ways it is typical Godard. Totally original and making use of film to create something that is not quite done or seen in film. "Weekend", is only strange in the way that Godard does his thing and uses his thoughts, by changing things midstream, like going backwards to redo a scene. Very Godard, and I don't find it strange or weird ... just that I know many folks can not watch these things and get much out of them, because the way they are designed is way out there. Same thing for "Godard's King Lear", which would fit as a very weird film, specially with the cast.

"Naked Lunch" was going to be an issue right from the start as the book is very difficult, and I really think that it being done in the hands of an American Director was a bad idea and choice. I find the film not really that great and the book is way better to your imagination and mine.

Bunuel ... likely my favorite director of all, his material is very intuitive, up to his changing the script over night (and not telling the actors!), and then filming it with sight unseen dialogue which did wonders for a lot of his films, and only Catherine Deneuve has ever mentioned that I am aware of and discusses it in her book, when they did "Belle de Jour". "Discreet Charm" is a riot ... but you really have to feel like this film is inside the minds of everyone, not ours, thus, the ending is senseless for all of us, since we can not make right or left off anything else. But it is a wonderful thing, with great moments. "The Fantom of Liberty" is one of my favorite films, in that it really speaks to what art was at one time and then lecame nothing after Picasso with his "Guernica" when all art work became just lines and colors and lost its "story". 

Jodorowsky ... makes more sense when you see the special about him, and his work and him explaining some of the moments in his films and how it came about. A lot of it came out of his experimental theater in Mexico that apparently was shut down (eventually) because the members of the cast were openly having sex and what not on stage during the shows as a part of the play. But you can see is allowing the experimental side work itself in the films, as they tend to extend a scene a bit more than otherwise, specially when in most films these are done with a few lines of dialogue instead, which makes it easier for you and I to understand, but it takes away the visualness and the flow of the work, otherwise.

Resnais ... I'm still not sure how to talk about that film. I likely have to see it again, since I saw that way back when and it was likely way over my head.

Polanski ... not one of my favorite directors, but his camera use is almost second to none, and it is so vivid and scary so many times, as to make his films stronger. But, I really am not sure that his films are as weird as we think ... and perhaps they are bits and pieces of his memories each and every time, and sometimes he transposes it to a woman as is the case in this film mentioned.

Nice listing, btw ... I like it.

"My 20th Century" is a film that would qualify as strange and weird, but mostly it was different. 

"Delicatessen" and "The City of Lost Children" qualify as weird, although the first seems to love having alternative takes on Monty Python, and the 2nd one is far out and so true ... about the educational values and systems in many countries that take it all out of children ... 


Edited by moshkito - September 18 2021 at 18:41
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Logan Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2021 at 19:16
^ David Cronenberg is a Canadian director (we Canadians often hate being called Americans) and I like his take on Naked Lunch, but then I am not only a big Cronenberg fan but also a Peter Weller fan.  As for eXistenZ, I said this in another thread today that it reminded me of Videodrome, but I much prefer Videodrome.

Lots I enjoy in the list, and had been especially into David Lynch films of late, but I have a weird obsession with ZardoZ.

Here is part of a very silly little review of it I wrote several for another forum several years before joining this one (I wanted to remove some spoilers because those diapers are spoiled, or soiled enough).

A really big, toothy, and freaky stone head magnificently soars through the azure sky. A group of men in red diapers (Exterminators) rush to meet it. Wearing masks with the same visage as the stone head, they gather worshipfully before the Stone head which gracefully lands. With a booming voice it addresses the Exterminators: “The gun is good. The penis is evil. The penis shoots seeds, and makes new life, and poisons the earth with a plague of men, as o­nce it was. But the gun shoots death, and purifies the earth. Now go forth and kill.” The stone head, which is Zardoz and the Exterminator’s god, spews forth guns which they greedily lap up.

The Exterminator Zed (Sean Connery like you’ve never seen him before) secretly enters the head which is the o­nly path into the Vortex – a land of immortals (the Eternals) with big mental powers and scanty clothing.

He has worked in the service of Zardoz, cleansing the Earth of Brutals (the masses outside the Vortex) but has learned that it was all based o­n a lie and seeks revenge! But while Zed resents the underhanded manipulation by the immortal denizens of the Vortex, who was manipulating the Eternals? And to what ends?

“We’ve all been used!”
“And re-used.”
“And abused!”
“And amused.”

It seems that Zardoz, by director John Boorman who went o­n to make Excalibur, is a love it or hate it film – truly weird, truly different, and I think, truly wonderful. The final scenes are incredibly moving and powerful.

It’s a very surreal, satirical, sometimes disturbing, sometimes just plain bad, but ultimately poignant film, and a personal favourite. If fear of seeing Sean Connery in a bright red diaper AND a wedding dress doesn’t deter you, be warned, there are lots of topless females frolicking about, and a depraved orgy scene with seniors involved.

Scene to look out for: Super-human Zed punches through a transparent  plastic sheet while those near him stare in disbelief and say, “It can’t be done, it’s impossible.” 



Edited by Logan - September 18 2021 at 19:46
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote siLLy puPPy Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2021 at 19:46
I don't think anything gets weirder than John Waters' Pink Flamingos

I haven't seen most of your list

If i had to pick one that i have seen Eraserhead certainly is very strange

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote JD Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2021 at 21:19
I have to agree with Greg on his Cronenberg/Weller comments

"David Cronenberg is a Canadian director (we Canadians often edit(always)JD hate being called Americans) and I like his take on Naked Lunch, but then I am not only a big Cronenberg fan but also a Peter Weller fan."

And Eraserhead has always been a mindf#@k for me.
But for a truly weird film on a whole other level I'll volunteer:

Caligula 1979
Now there was some weird 5hit !
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Progishness Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2021 at 23:56
Voted Other - this ranks as one of the oddest movies I've ever seen.

Society (Brian Yuzna, 1989)


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Chloë Grace Moretz as Mindy McCready aka 'Hit Girl' in Kick-Ass 2
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Shadowyzard Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2021 at 04:03
I've watched tons of weird movies. From the list, Malpertuis and eXistenZ are my favourites. (I'm not familiar with most of them.)

Begotten (1989) was a weird and extremely disturbing movie.

Yesterday I watched Nirvana (1997), which was added as one of my absolute favourite movies; very weird too.

Il nido del ragno (1988) was also shockingly weird, especially its ending was very unusual for me at the time.

From the 2000s, Xchange (2001) sprang to my mind. Very weird and enjoyable (for me) sci-fi.

I'll vote for Malpertuis, but another day I could vote for eXistenZ.

Edited by Shadowyzard - September 19 2021 at 04:05
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote BaldJean Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2021 at 04:03
"Něco z Alenky" ("Something from Alice") by Jan Švankmajer is by far the creepiest adaptation of "Alice in Wonderland" I have ever seen. Kristýna Kohoutová, the girl who plays Alice, is absolutely brilliant in her role.

here a link to the movie:


extremely creepy, isn't it?


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Shadowyzard Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2021 at 04:07
I accidentally voted for "De veerde man". Big smile

Edit: Nope (I voted for Malpertuis and misread it afterwards.) or an admin intervention.


Edited by Shadowyzard - September 19 2021 at 08:48
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote suitkees Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2021 at 05:17
It should be "De vierde man" (just like the German "vierte", but we use a "d" instead of a "t")... Great film, indeed (one of his best, imo).

For once, I've seen all the films in a list... "Weird" is maybe not a notion I would use for some of them, but I see what you mean; at least, they're all rather unconventional and that is of course what makes them interesting. All of them.
Godard's Week-end is fun in its godardian way. Jos Stelling is special (maybe I prefer De illusionist - you can see it here; no dialogues so accessible to everyone, with its decent dose of weirdness!). Luis Buñuel, of course - maybe I prefer the subversive weirdness of Le Fantôme de la liberté... I very much like David Lynch's work but these two are not my favourite ones. Švankmajer's film is a jewel!

But for me, a film that is very high on my all time classics list is L'année dernière à Marienbad. I'm a fan in general of most of the work of Alain Robbe-Grillet (his novels and his films - he wrote the script for Marienbad) and this film is visually stunning (Sacha Vierny!) and of course the story, well, it's not just messed up, it is completely gone awry, impossible to reconstruct some kind of chronology, etc. An exceptional film, in my book.


Edited by suitkees - September 19 2021 at 05:50

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Hrychu Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2021 at 05:33
i haven't seen any of these
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Shadowyzard Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2021 at 05:41
BTW, I said that I haven't watched most of these, but I'm not sure honestly. The movie names "escape me" unless they are in Turkish or English; with the exception of the ones that I'm a fan of. I then memorize their non-English or non-Turkish (original) names.
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