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On the top of my head, I cannot think of any other prolific and talented director who has made only great films. All of my favorite directors (including Kusturica, Polanski, Scorsese, the Coen brothers, Lynch...) have made some crappy movies. I can only think of Kubrick as the only great prolific filmmaker with a perfect filmography
The answer is Ingmar Bergman.
As much as I love Oldboy, I'm starting to think that Lady Vengeance was a better, more "achieved" film. What did you think of it?
Who is Lelush? What is "redicule"? I'm assuming you mean "Ridicule" by Patrice Leconte...
Fuuma . . . I cannot remember the name of a fairly recent Japanese film, from about two or three years ago. It dealt with a man whose wife collected couture garments, obsessively, simply to admire their beauty. In the end, her husband dies in a car crash while admiring a detail on one of his wife's garments. Slow, absorbing, sensitive and poignant. Disturbing, as well. Too bad I can't remember the name. http://i34.photobucket.com/albums/d1...20faces/22.gif
Thanks, Fuuma. I loved that movie. Stayed with me, for quite some time.
Dkzzz: I haven't seen Barfly but really think Rourke is one of the strongest American actors presently working. That's the Buckowski adaptation, right?
P.S. I have never seen an Asian movie that I could get into. They all look completely foreign to me in their aesthetics and especially humor.
On the subject of older japanese film, I haven't seen Kobayashi mentioned once. Maybe I missed it? I saw all the other famous directors from the 50's and 60's but not Koybayashi. Harakiri and Kwaidan are easily two of my favorite films from that time period. The "Hoichi the Earless" story in Kwaidan is amazing.
I feel the same about Rourke.