The following list comes from Carl Martin, co-founder of the Film On Film Foundation:
i feel like meryl streep in sophie's choice, having to pick only 10 films. here they are, in chronological order (of viewing):
march 4, castro: rolling thunder. a slow burn that finally erupts, but never overstates its case.

may 1, castro: the night they raided minsky's. just a lovely, lovely print of an early friedkin that noone talks about. why not? it's great! shown on big reels: bad idea--see wild style.
may 16, ybca: the velvet undergroud and nico: a symphony of sound. two single-shot reels of the velvets jamming while the camera operator freaks out panning and zooming, creating cubist chaos from a fixed camera position. the show stopped and started again near the beginning for some reason.
june 10, red vic: medium cool. i think this was a technicolor print. it was beat to hell. its beauty made me cry.
august 17, castro: bobby deerfield. print was pink--nobody's made new prints because nobody likes this movie except me. the image structure looked very nice though, and pacino's fantastic, sleep-driving through life obliquely.

november 8, castro: trapeze. print was pretty yucky, frankly. dupey with ugly grain (grain should be beautiful!), and it looked like it should be 2.55 ratio, not 2.35, though imdb disagrees. nothing the castro could do about it anyways. but lancaster and lollobrigida mesmerized me, and oh, the delirious aerial sequences! clearly a kubrick inspiration.
december 13, pfa: the moment of truth. technicolor print. captures the milieu elliptically but perfectly, verite-style. holy cow! the bullfighting is real!
december 14, ybca: l'eden et après. the whole robbe-grillet series was fantastic and the prints were gorgeous. this one was in color, no, it _was_ color. dreamy, delirious, delightful. some focus issues on one projector.
You're the one who just swoons.
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