November 29, 2009

Two-Lane Blacktop (1971): In Cars.

ilovehotdogs:

Remember that terrible song that said “If life is a highway, I wanna ride it all night long”? I hate to admit that it somewhat sums up Two-Lane Blacktop and that this Tom Cochrane character was onto something. Featuring little dialogue or music, it is all about the beautiful vintage cars, the drivers, and the journey. Though there were two (musical) elephants in the room (James Taylor and Dennis Wilson of the Beach Boys) I fell in love with the supporting characters of Warren Oates and Laurie Bird.

With her floppy sheep dog like bangs, fine features and need for attention, Bird is perfect as “The Girl”, a hitchhiker who joins the men on their aimless road journey. And Oates’ character: “G.T.O.” being a well to do yet lonely liar was pretty charming. It’s also interesting that none of the characters are ever addressed by their names and even in the credits are listed simply as “The Driver” (Taylor) “The Mechanic” (Wilson) “The Girl” (Bird) and “G.T.O” (Oates). I’m guessing that this film is what Vincent Gallo’s The Brown Bunny aspired to be.

Here in my car
I feel safest of all
I can lock all my doors
It’s the only way to live
In cars

-Gary Numan

November 19, 2009

Dillinger (1973)

  • John Dillinger: What would you do if you could do anything in the world?
  • Billie Frechette: I don't know, maybe go dancing with you again.
  • John Dillinger: All right, if that's what you want, we'll go into Chicago tonight, have dinner and go dancing.
  • Billie Frechette: Johnnie, you can't go into Chicago!
  • John Dillinger: Why not? If I can go there to rob banks I can go there to go dancing with my girl.
November 3, 2009
November 3, 2009
skeetonmischa:

Sam Peckinpah directing Warren Oates on the set of The Wild Bunch
via www.cinemaisdope.com

skeetonmischa:

Sam Peckinpah directing Warren Oates on the set of The Wild Bunch

via www.cinemaisdope.com

November 1, 2009
arctichysteria:

Warren Oates & Harry Dean Stanton (two of my faves) in a good ‘ol fashion cockfight
Cockfighter (Monte Hellman 1974)

arctichysteria:

Warren Oates & Harry Dean Stanton (two of my faves) in a good ‘ol fashion cockfight

Cockfighter (Monte Hellman 1974)

October 12, 2009
grimmertown:

Warren Oates by Maria Forde.

grimmertown:

Warren Oates by Maria Forde.
October 11, 2009
k-troll:

Confession:  I once had a crush on a guy because he looked like Warren Oates, then fell out of the crush for the same reason.

k-troll:

Confession:  I once had a crush on a guy because he looked like Warren Oates, then fell out of the crush for the same reason.
October 9, 2009
October 8, 2009
petetoms:

I finally watched this movie last night.  And by ‘finally’ I mean I remembered I wanted to see it 3 days ago, and got it from Netflix yesterday.  In a world where 70% of my needs can be torrentially met, the 3 days I spent without COCKFIGHTER seemed like a years-long, entertainment-less abyss.
Monte Hellman and Warren Oates also made one of my favorite movies, TWO LANE BLACKTOP.  COCKFIGHTER, on the other hand is not one of my favorite movies.  This is what I assume was Charles Willeford’s  thought process before writing the book and film: ‘You know, men and roosters, they’re pretty similar.  They both make most of their decisions based on sex and pride even if it leads to their death.  They’re both like living phallic symbols.  I mean, roosters are even called ‘cocks’.  Oh shit, metaphor, novel, and screenplay done, motherfucker.’
To which I hope someone replied, ‘Wait, what kind of decisions are roosters making?’
So the movie is that metaphor for an hour and a half.  Including a lot of symbolic crotch level camera work, Harry Dean Stanton looking his youngest on film (he looks only 50 in this), and hundreds of actual chicken murders.  I’m assuming in the eventual remake all the cockfighting will be CGI, and it will be considered THE MATRIX of chicken fight films.
The DVD, besides containing one of the best animated menus (a close up of a rooster’s face nervously blinking with a looped crowing sound), also had a cheaply made documentary about Warren Oates on it called something like WARREN OATES: HE WAS AWESOME THEN HE DIED.  It’s interviews with people like Ned Beatty and a super-tan, but tired looking Peter Fonda saying things like ‘that dude was cool.’  The best testimonial in it though was from a writer I never heard of who said something very near  this ‘Warren Oates was like a man from the 19th century.  I’d try to explain what I mean by that, but I don’t think I can.’  Which at first I just thought was hilarious based on how vague and sort of stupid that statement is, but I think he was just referring to the fact that in most of his movies Oates always plays the old school guy that has no place in the modern world.  Just like Bruce Willis.  The difference being Oates plays him as pathetic and sad and Willis fights the internet or global corporate capitalism or whatever in all his movies and wins.
My point being, as stupid as COCKFIGHTER is, it was still 200 times better than SURROGATES.

petetoms:

I finally watched this movie last night.  And by ‘finally’ I mean I remembered I wanted to see it 3 days ago, and got it from Netflix yesterday.  In a world where 70% of my needs can be torrentially met, the 3 days I spent without COCKFIGHTER seemed like a years-long, entertainment-less abyss.

Monte Hellman and Warren Oates also made one of my favorite movies, TWO LANE BLACKTOP.  COCKFIGHTER, on the other hand is not one of my favorite movies.  This is what I assume was Charles Willeford’s  thought process before writing the book and film: ‘You know, men and roosters, they’re pretty similar.  They both make most of their decisions based on sex and pride even if it leads to their death.  They’re both like living phallic symbols.  I mean, roosters are even called ‘cocks’.  Oh shit, metaphor, novel, and screenplay done, motherfucker.’

To which I hope someone replied, ‘Wait, what kind of decisions are roosters making?’

So the movie is that metaphor for an hour and a half.  Including a lot of symbolic crotch level camera work, Harry Dean Stanton looking his youngest on film (he looks only 50 in this), and hundreds of actual chicken murders.  I’m assuming in the eventual remake all the cockfighting will be CGI, and it will be considered THE MATRIX of chicken fight films.

The DVD, besides containing one of the best animated menus (a close up of a rooster’s face nervously blinking with a looped crowing sound), also had a cheaply made documentary about Warren Oates on it called something like WARREN OATES: HE WAS AWESOME THEN HE DIED.  It’s interviews with people like Ned Beatty and a super-tan, but tired looking Peter Fonda saying things like ‘that dude was cool.’  The best testimonial in it though was from a writer I never heard of who said something very near  this ‘Warren Oates was like a man from the 19th century.  I’d try to explain what I mean by that, but I don’t think I can.’  Which at first I just thought was hilarious based on how vague and sort of stupid that statement is, but I think he was just referring to the fact that in most of his movies Oates always plays the old school guy that has no place in the modern world.  Just like Bruce Willis.  The difference being Oates plays him as pathetic and sad and Willis fights the internet or global corporate capitalism or whatever in all his movies and wins.

My point being, as stupid as COCKFIGHTER is, it was still 200 times better than SURROGATES.

October 3, 2009
October 3, 2009
October 2, 2009
sonoforigins:
warren oates.. man they dont git any tougher than this sumbitch.

sonoforigins:

warren oates.. man they dont git any tougher than this sumbitch.
October 1, 2009
amigodeloajeno:

Warren Oates

amigodeloajeno:

Warren Oates
September 25, 2009
applebox:

FILM OF THE DAY: COCKFIGHTER (aka BORN TO KILL)
DIR. MONTE HELLMAN
STR. WARREN OATES, HARRY DEAN STANTON, ED BEGLEY JR., MILLIE PERKINS, LAURIE BIRD

applebox:

FILM OF THE DAY: COCKFIGHTER (aka BORN TO KILL)

DIR. MONTE HELLMAN

STR. WARREN OATES, HARRY DEAN STANTON, ED BEGLEY JR., MILLIE PERKINS, LAURIE BIRD

September 25, 2009

The Outer Limits - The Mutant (1964)

starring Warren Oates