02.29.08
Metropolis
This review refers to both the silent film and the novel. If I get around to the anime film, you’ll be the first to know.
I have this great set of DVDs at home - 50 Classic Horror movies, for which I paid like $20. By “classic” they mean “so old that the rights were hella cheap”, meaning there are some true classics, some bad-hysterical, and some bad-awful films packed onto these discs. They were initially purchased to aid in my quest to watch all of Wicked Magazine’s list of most influential horror films*, but I’ve found myself watching the other discs as well.
I decided on Metropolis one recent afternoon home alone on the basis of two facts: that I kept hearing it referenced by self important film snobs, who never seemed to actually know what it was about, and that it’s a silent film. I’d never really sat down and watched a silent movie before, and my curiosity for a new experience beat out my desire to laugh (or wince, depending on whose opinion you believe) at The Beast of Yucca Flats. Read the rest of this entry »