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winkelman

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  1. Hvor står det at filmvitenskap og medieproduksjon skal slås sammen? Det høres ut som nok et hårreisende innsparingsprosjekt. Vi som går på Dragvoll bør faen meg snart gjøre opprør mot det latterlig rævva tilbudet vi får. Å tilby 75 enkle poeng med filmfag fordelt over tre semester og så kalle det for en bachelorgrad er egentlig nesten kriminelt stusselig.
  2. Er det fordi dere betaler pr. avspilling at det gjøres så jævlig vanskelig? Eller er de redde for at noen skal laste opp filmene på nett
  3. Kjipt med avlysning av Gjøglernes aften. "Mangler passordet til filmen" er forøvrig en unnskyldning jeg ikke har hørt før.
  4. Det burde absolutt gjelde alle studenter! Men semesterkort på cinemateket burde stått lista som obligatorisk pensummateriell for alle på filmvitenskap, og såvidt jeg har forstått har det kun vært snakk om rabatterte kort for filmstudentene foreløpig. Gratis semesterkort på filmklubben for alle studenter burde vært en del av KRISEPAKKA spør du meg.
  5. Hater meg selv for å ha gått glipp av Night of the Hunter og Jakten Skjer det forresten noe med idéen om billigere a-kort for filmstudenter?
  6. Det burde ikke være lov å kun tilby 75 poeng relevante fag i en bachelorgrad
  7. Sjekk ut soundtracket til The Wicker Man og alt av Goblin.
  8. Ikke av Johhny To's beste, men helt ok. Fyren blir vel dreven i gamet når han regisserer to-tre filmer i året, men alle er ikke like gode.
  9. Har du sett noen av dokumentarene til Adam Curtis?
  10. Kan komme med litt mer etter hvert som jeg får klarna hodet. Orker ikke å oversette og kutte ned på alt "Have you ever done it with your Dad?" Intertittel på starten av Visitor Q Trivia om Maniac: William Lustig and Joe Spinell, say they didn't always have the necessary permits to film on location in New York City. Certain scenes (including the infamous shotgun through the windshield scene) had to have been filmed quickly and afterwards the crew had to run away before the cops arrived. Because they would only have one chance to film the scene where Tom Savini's character gets shot, Savini decided that he should be the one to pull the trigger. He said it felt a little weird shooting the dummy he had created of himself in the face. The dummy used for the exploding head scene had been used extensively by Tom Savini for effects in Dawn of the Dead (1978). After its use in this film, it was so saturated in fake blood and gore that it was decided to retire the dummy (which Tom had named "Boris"). According to Savini, the dummy was locked in the trunk of the car used in the shotgun scene and sunk in the river. Trivia om Cannibal Holocaust: Ten days after premiering in Milan, the film was seized by the courts, and the director, Ruggero Deodato, was arrested and charged with obscenity. He was later charged with murder and faced life in prison on the belief that several of the actors were murdered for the camera. Deodato contacted Luca Barbareschi and told him to contact the three other actors who played the missing film team. He presented the actors, alive and well, to the courts, and thus, the murder charges were dropped. The iconic image for the film shows a "cannibal" girl impaled on a stick. Upon being summoned to court in order to assert that no actors were harmed during production, Deodato explained that the girl simply sat on a bicycle seat attached to the pole's base, while holding a small pointed balsa wood piece in her mouth. The fake blood was then added. Deodato commented that the girl had an unusually calm temperament to be able to remain so still during the filming. Kerman stormed off the set during the filming of the death of the coatimundi, and Yorke refused to partake in the shooting of the pig (which he was originally scripted to execute), leaving Luca Barbareschi to have to do it. The sound of the pig dying even caused him to botch a long monologue, and retakes were not an option because they had no access to any more pigs. Perry Pirkanen also cried after filming the "Turtle Scene". Other cast members who objected to the film's content include actress Francesca Ciardi, who did not want to bare her breasts during the sex scene between her and Carl Yorke. When she refused to comply with Deodato's direction, he dragged her off the set and screamed at her in Italian. She had earlier suggested that she and Yorke actually have sex in the jungle before filming, in order to relieve the tension of the upcoming scene. When Yorke declined, she grew upset with him, alienating him for the rest of the shoot. After seeing the film, director Sergio Leone wrote a letter to Ruggero Deodato, which stated, "Dear Ruggero, what a movie! The second part is a masterpiece of cinematographic realism, but everything seems so real that I think you will get in trouble with all the world." Trivia om Monty Python and the Holy Grail: Graham Chapman's alcoholism caused problems during filming, and not just through his repeatedly forgetting his lines. The first day of shooting required Chapman to cross the Bridge of Death. When working on "Monty Python's Flying Circus" (1969), Chapman had been used to drinking heavily to calm his nerves. He quickly discovered to his dismay that the crew had no alcohol on the set, and the nearest town was too far away for a quick trip to purchase any. Consequently, he was visibly stressed, shaking, sweating and moving slowly throughout the scene, yet he was known to be an experienced rock climber. Not knowing about his alcoholism, the crew wondered if Chapman's heavy costume caused the stress; it was actually alcoholism-induced DTs. Trivia om Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid: According to Kris Kristofferson, director Sam Peckinpah so detested the studio cut of this film he actually urinated on the screen. Trivia om The Wild Bunch: Supposedly, more blank rounds were discharged during the production than live rounds were fired during the Mexican Revolution of 1914 around which the film is loosely based. In total 90,000 rounds were fired, all blanks. Trivia om Rio Grande: Two stunt men drowned while filming a river crossing sequence. Trivia om Stagecoach: Asked why, in the climactic chase scene, the Indians didn't simply shoot the horses to stop the stagecoach, director John Ford replied, "Because that would have been the end of the movie." Orson Welles privately watched this film about 40 times while he was making Citizen Kane Trivia om Sergeant Rutledge: Unsatisfied with Woody Strode's rehearsal of bullet-wounded drowsiness, director John Ford took his own steps to make Strode appear authentically weary for Rutledge's gunshot early on in the film. The day before the scene was to be shot, Ford got Strode drunk early in the day and had an assistant follow him around for the rest of the day to make sure he stayed that way. When the time came for Strode to shoot the scene with Constance Towers, his hangover gave him the perfect (for Ford) appearance of a man who had been shot. Trivia om Alien: The front (face) part of the alien costume's head is made from a cast of a real human skull. Trivia om Bad Taste: Director Peter Jackson shot the film on weekends over a four-year period with friends playing the lead roles. Jackson funded most of the film himself until towards the end of the shoot when the New Zealand Film Commission gave him money to finish his project after being impressed with what he'd already produced. There was never a script for the movie; each scene was filmed from ideas the director had come up with during the week. One of the actors hadn't shaved. For continuity, he couldn't shave until the movie was completely shot. Craig Smith was part of the original cast and was married and then divorced within the four-year time frame it took to make the film. Because most of the filming took place on weekends, he found himself written out because his new wife - a devout Christian - objected to him working on Sundays. Smith was written back into the film when he got divorced. The "firearms" in the film are all non-functional replicas made by Peter Jackson. For example, what appears to be a WWII Sterling submachine gun is actually a length of aluminum pipe, a handle made from Fimo, and a piece of wood to stand in for the ammunition magazine. The actors shook the props to simulate recoil, and the muzzle flashes were added in post-production. Trivia om Braindead: During the lawnmower scene, movie blood was pumped at five gallons per second. 300 liters of fake blood was used in the final scene of the film. The rental in Sweden (and probably other countries as well) came with supplemental vomit bags. Trivia om The Evil Dead: Sam Raimi originally wanted to title this film "Book of the Dead," but producer Irvin Shapiro changed the title to "The Evil Dead" for fear that kids would be turned off seeing a movie with a literary reference. Trivia om Touch of Evil: There are two stories as to how Welles ended up directing Touch of Evil. Charlton Heston recalled that Welles was originally hired to act in the film only, and not direct or write. Universal was keen to secure Heston for the lead, but Heston wanted the studio to confirm the film's director before he signed on. After learning that Welles was in the acting cast for the movie, Heston proposed Welles as the director, noting that he would be more interested in starring if Welles was directing. The other story is that Welles had recently worked with producer Albert Zugsmith, known as the "king of the B's", on a film called Pay the Devil and was interested in directing something for him. Zugsmith offered him a pile of scripts with no director attached, and to prove he could make a great film out of a bad script, he asked Zugsmith to give him the worst. This was Badge of Evil, as it was then called. Welles did a rewrite and took it into production. Eager to get back into directing (a Hollywood film), he agreed to take only an acting fee, taking on the role of Quinlan. Although Welles was overweight in later life, Quinlan's girth in the film is mostly padding. Orson Welles was said to have based the drug scenes on his own experiences, with the Grandi kids' use of marijuana symbolizing his own indifference towards the legality of the drug, and the violent use of heroin representing his feeling that anything harder than that was just "suicide", as he once put it.
  11. 1. Riget 2. The Wire 3. Trailer Park Boys 4. Twin Peaks 5. Carnivàle 6. Monty Python's Flying Circus 7. Wonder Showzen 8. South Park 9. Peep Show 10. Spaced Runner ups: Deadwood, The Office US, Trigger Happy TV Edit: Og har nylig begynt på Fishing With John. Det virker som om den må få plass på lista etter hvert.
  12. Litt kjipt med kun tyske intertitler for oss som ikke hadde sett filmen før og er analfabeter i tysk. Pluss for salg av div. drikke og gratis popcorn forresten
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