tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2017832040275963428.post3065635413703540729..comments2023-10-28T11:09:18.671+05:30Comments on Cinemascope: Dead Man [1995]Shubhajithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02040495040897333606noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2017832040275963428.post-81961238282993266662013-06-17T23:56:46.366+05:302013-06-17T23:56:46.366+05:30Thanks a lot for the appreciation. Yes, I'd re...Thanks a lot for the appreciation. Yes, I'd really love to know how this stands up upon your revisit. I really loved its cheeky deconstruction & subversion of the genre's icons & types.Shubhajithttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02040495040897333606noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2017832040275963428.post-5820082532164494522013-06-17T09:57:51.763+05:302013-06-17T09:57:51.763+05:30"He used the format to compose a lyrical tone..."He used the format to compose a lyrical tone poem, to cheekily subvert its conventions and myths, and to use the canvas for his wryly humorous, absurdist, idiosyncratic and existentialist musings."<br /><br />Wow, that is some brilliant, observant sentence there Shubhajit! I should really like this film more than I do (I plan to watch over the upcoming weeks in fact) but for some reason prior viewings have left me cold. It's certainly a unique and original work, and will no doubt do very well for the western polling. Sam Julianonoreply@blogger.com