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Ending Shots in Akira Kurosawa's Ran and Seven Samurai

    Saying that Akira Kurosawa was a master at filmmaking is like saying salt is good on french fries. It's a given at this point. That won't stop me from writing about one of my favorite aspects of his films though, how he ends them. The final shot of a Kurosawa film is often heartbreaking and powerful. They somehow manage to perfectly encapsulate how these films end and all the emotions that comes with that. To demonstrate this, I want to talk about the ending shots of Seven Samurai  and Ran .     Beginning with Seven Samurai , the film focuses on a village beset by bandits. Knowing they will not be able to survive another attack, two men from the village go to plead for the help of some wandering samurai. They eventually find them and the rest of the film takes place over the multiple days of these samurai defending the village. I am cutting out a lot because this whole film is over three hours long but throughout the battle, four of the seven end up falling....

The Twilight Zone Movie Tragedy

    Image Source  (Quick trigger warning, this post will discuss the deaths of several real life children.)      People love to talk about cursed films. The idea that some form of media is mystical and breaks everything it touches or everyone who works on it. The Exorcist is probably the most famous example of the phenomenon, with its production being famously filled with injuries and pain. The truth of these "cursed" films is that most of the time it is a combination of little care for performers or safety that results in this pain. There is no mystical reason behind it, just cut corners leading to tragedy. What happened during the production of The Twilight Zone: The Movie is one of the most heartbreaking examples of this.     John Landis is most known for such feats as The Blues Brothers , An American Werewolf in London , and having a sex offender child but he should be most known for that time he ended up killing children with unsafe wo...

The Best Documentaries of Our Day Are Being Made on YouTube

  Thumbnail by Defunctland Recently in a session of my film class, my professor said something along the lines of "a great documentary makes you interested in something you wouldn't care about anyway,". This was in reference to the film Snowy , a 2020 documentary film about a family's pet turtle. Her point reminded me of a very specific type of documentary. The YouTube video essay. For those unfamiliar, a video essay is an artform that has largely been created and innovated on the video sharing platform, YouTube. Films in this genre often center around one specific topic and delve into said topic with a depth that I really haven't seen anywhere else. They are almost all indie films, made by either singular artists or small teams. These people tend to write, edit, and direct the entirety of these pieces all on their own. And they are fascinating. I have watched a two hour long documentary on the origin of a sound effect from Roblox and I was intensely interested th...