I was tired of the tedious negotiations. Tired of always circling back to the same shortlist of safe choices that we had already seen ad nauseam. Tired of my watchlist hopelessly outstripping my ability to keep it in check, especially when so many movies on it were streamable on Netflix. Mostly, though, I was just tired of all of the excitement being sapped from sitting down to watch a movie.
When all was said and done, we had 138 movies consisting of a diverse mix of genre, acclaim, subject matter and release dates. Some were there just to show the other person (War Games, Grave Encounters). Some had won Academy Awards (Midnight Cowboy), AFI Awards (Lost In Translation) or the Palme d'Or (The Wind that Shakes the Barley). Some were silent (Metropolis), in a foreign language (Tsotsi) or just plain weird (Lars and the Real Girl). Some were action (Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol), comedy (Duck Soup), horror (The Hamiltons), western (True Grit), documentary (Jiro Dreams of Sushi) or drama (A Late Quartet). All told, it was pretty impressive.
The account which follows is our 100% reel journey into the savage, unexplored reaches of Netflix.
No comments:
Post a Comment