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The Wolverine (2013) opens with Logan at Hiroshima and instantly grounds him in real history, that moment carries more weight than most of the film that follows. So many strong pieces scattered through it, but it never quite clicks as a whole.

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Wim Wenders on 'Bad Day at Black Rock' (1955): "A dusty American colour film by John Sturges where everything’s so right and correct that it is almost unbearable. You could say of this John Sturges film that it doesn’t show a succession of images, but of sentences. A whole dozen of these sentences are written up in the display cases of the theatres showing 'Bad Day at Black Rock' Stills of old colour films have a peculiar charm, because they seem completely detached from the film and tend to look more like old hand coloured postcards than the actual scenes in the film. You can recognize, though, with surprise, the stills from 'Bad Day at Black Rock' when you’re watching the actual film; you can even spot the precise moment they captured. The film retains the impression that the coloured photographs have left behind. All the way through it looks hand-painted. The backdrops of the landscape that constantly show through windows or doors have more in common with paintings by Magritte than with the real landscape shown in the outdoor scenes. But even these look much more like a mile-wide, sky-high stage-set built in a gigantic studio. This endless artificiality confused me a lot at the beginning of the film, because I could only trace it back to the colours. It was only after a while that I suddenly discovered what was really happening in this film, when I saw the worn-out seats in the foyer of the hotel in Black Rock: these seats didn’t simply stand around there, they stood around as precisely the chairs that had to be there, the ashtray beside them was the only possible ashtray for these seats, the one-armed bandit was the only conceivable slot-machine for a hotel like that in a town in the Mid West. Every thing in this film, by itself, was the most exact and the most right and the most suitable that could be. Every object was so right that it could form a completely self-contained sentence, it could be distinguished from all the others around it, but for precisely this reason it suited everything else perfectly. In this film all details were really details!" ('Re: Bad Day at Black Rock', Wim Wenders, 1970)

DepressedBergman

66,878 Aufrufe • vor 7 Monaten