Audience Reviews for Has Anybody Seen My Gal? and then the iconic bike shot, for instance – but there are also a number that rely on a little cinematic knowledge. is awash with skilful editing, and the more you watch, you appreciate Smith’s vast knowledge and meticulous research. Looking for some great streaming picks? Have You Seen My Movie? Clips from 100+ films are cut together to create a new cinema-going experience. The effect of all this jumping around between film clips and time periods – one particularly amusing sequence sees Chris Evans as Steve Rogers telling a boorish character played by Richard Burton to shut up – should be jarring and something that frequently throws you out of the experience, but Smith knows how far he can push things, and a complex and near seamless sound mix ‘tricks’ you into easily following the action on screen without disruption. This is particularly effective in a sequence in which Smith makes significant use of the scene from Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story, in which Bruce Lee (Jason Scott Lee) watches Breakfast at Tiffany’s with his then girlfriend Linda (Lauren Holly). Paul Anton Smith, collaborator with Christian Marclay on The Clock, explores the intimacy of the auditorium through video excerpts ranging from major blockbusters to indie treasures. Earn 125 points on every ticket you buy. Have You Seen My Movie? More fun moments can be simple gags – a sequence of characters engaging in oral sex climaxing with The Magic of Halloween from the score from E.T. It’s a surprisingly simple idea, well executed and very evocative. It tells a story of a wider culture realising that something they have done in the past is wrong – viewers cover a wide time period – and a collective realisation is necessary to move away from such past mistakes. Learn how your comment data is processed. Dec 21, 2011 Charming comedy of millionaire Charles Coburn checking out family of a lost love and innocently wrecking havoc in their lives.

One film that plays ‘on screen’ is Habeas Corpus, the film within the film in The Player, which sees Bruce Willis rescue Julia Roberts from the gas chamber. Explored in a hazy thematic chronology, we’re fed a torrent of images that blur between the glory days of the silver screen, to the comparatively duller present. ×  Clips from 100+ films are cut together to create a new cinema-going experience. As the show wraps up and the patrons begin to leave their various cinema seats, there is a sense of melancholy – helped along by ending the film with the climax of Casablanca – that overcomes you.  =  One of the surface level pleasures that one experiences when watching the video work of Christian Marclay, is the fun to be had in seeing ‘impossible’ interactions on screen. Get Movies. Regardless of being a vague pastiche of Marclay’s The Clock, the Toronto native Smith manages to successfully hold his own as a creator and artist in his big screen debut, which is already on its way to prestige.

It’s a fascinating look at how cinema has evolved historically from its theatrical roots – an interval with ice cream and an organ singalong make Vue and IMAX seem comparatively boring – to the more casual event it’s subsequently developed into.