A Lost Art: Brian De Palma and Noah Baumbach on Dressed to Kill (1980)

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  • čas přidán 24. 07. 2021
  • This interview is featured on The Criterion Collection Blu-ray for Dressed to Kill (1980).
    #BrianDePalma #DressedtoKill #NoahBaumbach
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 57

  • @themightymonkeybable
    @themightymonkeybable Před 2 lety +47

    De Palma is a master. I love Carlitos Way and Snake Eyes. Body Double is such a treat and a bigger laugh when you know and love his work. Snake Eyes is great too, I love the score and the sets. The editing and camera work are insane.

  • @francissookraj3202
    @francissookraj3202 Před 2 lety +13

    Brian De Palma is such a brillant talented directors of thrillers. The way he set the cameras to get the tension from the story is so clever.
    Blow out, Sisters, Dressed to Kill,
    Carlito's way, Carrie are fantastic even the former ones weren't big hits
    when they came out, they still great film making. Brian De Palma is such a artist.

  • @January.
    @January. Před rokem +3

    And Body Double, a great movie with excellent acting, casting, and SOUNDTRACK.

  • @classicartfoundation639
    @classicartfoundation639 Před 2 lety +9

    A genius, Scarface and Carlito's Way are perfection

  • @OuterGalaxyLounge
    @OuterGalaxyLounge Před 2 lety +16

    Why have I never noticed before how much his voice sounds like William Hurt's?

  • @joegotham27
    @joegotham27 Před rokem +2

    I love this film so much for all the reasons they chat about

  • @user-um8qx1ex7j
    @user-um8qx1ex7j Před měsícem +2

    Angie Dickinson should have won an oscar . She was so Great in this movie.

  • @savage_skirt5386
    @savage_skirt5386 Před rokem +3

    underrated film

  • @anoxia999
    @anoxia999 Před rokem +10

    Dressed to Kill was inspired by his real life secretly recording his dad’s trysts which Spielberg sort of takes as his own experience in The Fabelmans except Spielberg never had that natural directorial voyeurism. The scene where the kid unknowingly records the affair never happened with Spielberg. There’s a covert angle and building excitement of de Palma that Spielberg, still great in his own right, does not have. Being wrong feels so right to follow from de Palma’s angles which much of cinema which tailors to “the gallery” lacks. His attention to detail on the seemingly simplest scenes and moments make all the difference. And so true about sound; so much movies today just want to play everything and whatever audiences would like without considering its service to the vision of the film…it is exactly like “color.”

    • @theotherguy5516
      @theotherguy5516 Před rokem +2

      I thought the scene in The Fabelmans where the Spielberg proxy (wonderful performance from a promising young actor, by the way) uncovers the affair was a Blow Out homage. It's different, of course, in significant ways, but it seemed like a tribute in a more generous way than the steal/homage to Snake Eyes in Minority Report.

    • @anoxia999
      @anoxia999 Před rokem +4

      @@theotherguy5516 yes Spielberg and De Palma are completely diff worlds; Spielberg's aesthetic distancing (which has an effect of intimacy/closeness) vs De Palma's aesthetic intimacy (which has an effect of distancing/alienation) achieved by De Palma's distinct focus of details. Blow Out is an homage to Antonioni's Blowup (we see this concept of accidentally catching something sinister on film recycled often...there's that movie with Sydney Sweeney, another with Shia LeBeouf...I do not remember those movie titles...that other one sort of loosely based on the concept with Robin Willams 24 hour photo...Haneke's Benny's Video, Zulawski's On the Silver Globe...the meta-capture concept has been around as long as film has been around I am sure, it is a perspective that taps into a collective fascination with documentation/recording/layered intersectional realities on screens); specifically the concept of filming your parent's adultery intentionally and not by accident (lollll) is unique to De Palma's development as a filmmaker. In Spielberg's version it is an accident because it is not *that kind of movie* lol and makes it more suspenseful. DP is a freak, making the best of what any kid would consider a terrible parental situation, and I love him for it. Just celebrating the authentically real freaky weirdos lmao. I mean, people make home movies to capture moments within family all the time. Some would choose to hide the taboo/secret. He confronted it at his own angle. His films truly have a special quality to me. I have actually not seen Minority Report.

    • @theotherguy5516
      @theotherguy5516 Před rokem +1

      @@anoxia999 Thanks very much. I've seen the American movies you mention (though I wasn't impressed) but not the international ones, if I can put it like that.
      You're spot-on about De Palma -- he's a freak, and is gifted at putting freaks (and astonishing imagery) on his canvas. In fact, he doesn't care what people think, and it's that artistic commitment that makes him indispensable. And it's probably the factor that has been precluded him from being placed on the same pedestal as his peers, like Spielberg, Coppola, and Scorsese (and Lucas, but he doesn't really belong with them; he's more on JJ Abrams's level). This is especially true where I live, in the UK, where audiences and critics approach cinema as if it's TV. Honestly, mentioning De Palma's name here, even to ostensible film buffs, almost without fail raises eyebrows.
      Check out Minority Report. It's one of Spielberg's best.

  • @williamwalsh3983
    @williamwalsh3983 Před 2 lety +11

    The best part of Dressed to Kill is the camera work for the scene when she wakes after sex with the stranger she met in the museum. It happened in the apartment and the camera moves back as she gets dressed and leaves the apartment.

  • @roseforyou83
    @roseforyou83 Před rokem +1

    Such a classic

  • @shaneschoeppner2868
    @shaneschoeppner2868 Před 2 lety +7

    My favorite films of dePalma are Carrie, Dressed to Kill, Blow Out, and The Fury.

  • @MrOctober44
    @MrOctober44 Před 10 měsíci +4

    Carrie, Dressed to kill, Blow out, Scarface, Carlito's way. Pretty impressive.

  • @savage_skirt5386
    @savage_skirt5386 Před rokem +5

    i've always thought De Palma's films were more of an homage to Hitchcock, not an imitation of style

    • @ojacobsen3727
      @ojacobsen3727 Před rokem

      Someone told Hitchcock that Dressed to Kill was an homage and he supposedly said "it's a fromage".

    • @SmartCookie2022
      @SmartCookie2022 Před 10 měsíci

      @@ojacobsen3727 Hitchcock was long dead by the time Dressed to Kill was released.

    • @ojacobsen3727
      @ojacobsen3727 Před 10 měsíci

      @@SmartCookie2022 You are right! might be one of De Palmas earlier imitations that it was about. Too good a quote to forget!

    • @LosHuxleys
      @LosHuxleys Před 7 měsíci

      De Palma is just the Hitchcock of the 80’s…

  • @jakethekipper
    @jakethekipper Před rokem +2

    I love this movie. It's a guilty pleasure.

    • @hankworden3850
      @hankworden3850 Před 5 měsíci +2

      There's no such thing as guilty pleasure.

    • @MultiFribourg
      @MultiFribourg Před 4 měsíci +4

      ​@hankworden3850 specially since it's on the upper level in terms of filmmaking. It's not like it's avengers or barbie some product like this.

  • @Me-gs3uu
    @Me-gs3uu Před 2 lety +3

    7:23- Sound Mixing

  • @46metube
    @46metube Před rokem +1

    For me, Body Double was probably the better of the two. But both shook me by the trousers.

  • @lostsoul2184
    @lostsoul2184 Před 10 měsíci

    Nobody's gonna talk bout the ending ?! That last scene changes the whole meaning of the movie

    • @ChubbyChecker182
      @ChubbyChecker182 Před 9 měsíci

      Explain

    • @1165mac
      @1165mac Před 9 měsíci +1

      I’m not a fan of the last scene. Feels way over the top and unnecessary considering everything which has happened before. I don’t see it for any other reason than a final stinger. The rest of the film is impressive.

    • @eduardo_corrochio
      @eduardo_corrochio Před 7 měsíci

      Oh? The final sequence, a dream, doesn't change anything ... except maybe it punctuates how affected and traumatized Liz (Nancy Allen) has become after the whole frightening experience involving Bobbi. It's merely one final jolt for the movie audience, even if it was only a nightmare scenario. It's just like the last part of Carrie, in which Sue Snell gets a shock while dreaming (the sequence even ends similarly in both films: someone comforts the screaming, waking dreamer-- as the musical score changes into something dramatically loud and scary).

    • @hankworden3850
      @hankworden3850 Před 5 měsíci

      How does it change it?

  • @d9iego
    @d9iego Před 5 měsíci

    Privado del éter licuó los actos substituyó el valor y lo repartió
    Difusión profusión

  • @martinpascoe7678
    @martinpascoe7678 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Angie Dickinson is very beautiful and sexy in this movie and I think she was about 50

  • @lostsoul2184
    @lostsoul2184 Před rokem

    Obviously noam never understood the first half is actually the second half of the movie

    • @freakingevilgenius
      @freakingevilgenius Před rokem +1

      What do you mean?

    • @lostsoul2184
      @lostsoul2184 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@freakingevilgenius watch the last scene of the movie . That girl is her mom . And the first half is the metamorphosis ized version

    • @ChubbyChecker182
      @ChubbyChecker182 Před 9 měsíci

      Eh ?

    • @eduardo_corrochio
      @eduardo_corrochio Před 7 měsíci

      @@lostsoul2184 Wait, "That girl is her mom", what does that even mean? Are you talking about Liz? The last scene is a nightmare, never really happened.

  • @benwherlock9869
    @benwherlock9869 Před 9 měsíci +1

    The end of the film is a bit of a mess, but apart from that it's a pretty good film.

  • @leonolaialeonolaia6424
    @leonolaialeonolaia6424 Před rokem +4

    I’ll be killed for this, but I always thought De Palma’s psychosexual movies were a bit gimmicky and obvious. But more straightforward genres, where the subject got out of his way, so to speak, were perfection: The Untouchables, Scarface, Blow out, Casualties of War. A maestro when he has constraints. Does that make sense?

  • @handyalley2350
    @handyalley2350 Před 2 lety +4

    di palma phonin j.k. "listen, don't worry about those idiots. i started reading the new book. i LOVED HARRY POTTER."