Movies That Would Make Great Double Features
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Movies That Would Make Great Double Features
Earlier I was thinking today of movies that would make great double features, because of thematic similarities, different looks at similar material etc.
Like The Motorcycle Diaries and Che would go pretty well together, and would give you a pretty neat overall look at Che from a young idealist to the controversial figure he became. Or All the President's Men and Frost/Nixon for Watergate and the titular President.
Or even movies with vaguely similar plot points like Barton Fink and Adaptation, which are both about writers and writer's block. Hell you could throw The Shining in there too.
What are other movies you think would make good double features, and why?
Like The Motorcycle Diaries and Che would go pretty well together, and would give you a pretty neat overall look at Che from a young idealist to the controversial figure he became. Or All the President's Men and Frost/Nixon for Watergate and the titular President.
Or even movies with vaguely similar plot points like Barton Fink and Adaptation, which are both about writers and writer's block. Hell you could throw The Shining in there too.
What are other movies you think would make good double features, and why?
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That's actually quite perfect. Lightening up the crowd with My Neighbor Totoro is the perfect analgesic for the pain and suffering Grave of the Fireflies will inflict upon them.
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ho ho ho, I see what you did there.
...I guess you didn't know but My Neighbor Totoro and Grave of the Fireflies were only shown as a double bill when they hit Japanese screens in 1988
Last edited by Xard on Thu Sep 26, 2013 12:10 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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I've watched these before as "double features", I liked the outcome.
2001: A Space Odyssey/Moon
In The Real of The Senses/The Night Porter (they're set in different eras and locations but both films tackle the issues of sex and obsession wonderfully)
Repulsion/Black Swan
Ring/Cure
Blade Runner/Dark City
Rosemary's Baby/The Devil Rides Out
2001: A Space Odyssey/Moon
In The Real of The Senses/The Night Porter (they're set in different eras and locations but both films tackle the issues of sex and obsession wonderfully)
Repulsion/Black Swan
Ring/Cure
Blade Runner/Dark City
Rosemary's Baby/The Devil Rides Out
Hitoshi Matsumoto's Symbol and Sion Sono's Love Exposure were highly enjoyable as a "double bill" (with a 15-minute break and a change of the theater) back when Xard and I went to see them at HIFF a couple of years ago.
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Partially both, I think. The reasoning behind move was surprising to me.
Nausicaa.net wrote:Q: I heard that it was double-featured with "Totoro" in Japan. Is that true?
Yes. At that time no one thought that people would want to see "a movie about two little kids and a Monster in rural Japan", and "Totoro" was considered a big investment risk. Still, Miyazaki and the editors of "Animage" wanted to make this movie, which was Miyazaki's pet project for a long time. So they thought up the idea of risk-sharing. "Grave" was a well-known book, and because of its "educational" value, a certain level of audience could be expected. (Indeed, "Grave" was chosen by many school boards as a movie to show their students - and "Totoro" along with it, since it was in the package.)
Toshio Suzuki, then the chief editor of "Animage", went to Shinchosha, the company which published the book. Since Shinchosha was looking for an opportunity to enter the movie business, they agreed to produce the Grave of the Fireflies. Both Tokuma and Shinchosha knew they were going to lose money, but they still went ahead with the project (they did lose money from the theatrical release). So, if it were not for "Grave", there would have been no "Totoro".
As for the order in which the films were screened, Takahata explains in video interviews:
The film was very well received from the start because of its themes, of course. People thought it was a very meaningful work. It was a little awkward in a way, because it was double-featured with My Neighbor Totoro. The response was different depending on which film was shown first. My Neighbor Totoro would make them happy, then this Grave of the Fireflies... Those who saw Totoro first didn't want to see Fireflies to the end. Those who saw Fireflies first didn't have that problem, and stayed to the end. The double featuring was a problem, I'd say.
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