Free supportive tips on War Graffiti Movies

July 15, 2010 - 10:05 am 9 Comments
graffiti-generators Free supportive tips on War Graffiti Movies

A great film with some of the best music ever!
Lots of fun from the sixties!
My generation!

I need help trying to find a movie.?
The movie I’m trying to find War Graffiti Movies is War 4, it’s a graffiti movie and i need to find out where in the internet i could see for free. please i need to know.
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War Graffiti Movies


graffiti-generators Free supportive tips on War Graffiti Movies

9 Responses to “Free supportive tips on War Graffiti Movies”

  1. Chong Says:

    I wanted a copy of American Graffiti and the added more American Graffiti set me over the top. The price was right. I enjoyed both. The latter really showed how time changes things whether we want it or not. It was much more melancoly than the original, but that is life.

  2. Keppler Says:

    The original movie is classic. If you spent all Friday night “cruising” back in the 60’s, this will bring back fond memories. Definitely 5 stars. The sequel is terrible – no stars.

  3. Dombroski Says:

    The movies are just fine, but the quality of the DVD is horrible. The soundtrack is such that it requires the volume on the TV to be turned up over twice as much as any other DVD requires. It’s like watching the movies with earplugs in.

  4. Lasko Says:

    It was important to me that the movie’s image format is “anamorphic widescreen”, which is what makes it look normal on a modern HDTV. This is not always the case with DVD movies (especially older editions). And the ones that really are anamorphic widescreen are not always labeled as such. This double-feature edition of “American Graffiti” and “More American Graffiti” is not only anamorphic widescreen, but the quality of the transfer seems very good. Considering the 1970s vintage of the film technology, I think the quality is just fine.

    And it was a blast seeing American Graffiti for the first time since its first run. It’s kind of funny having nostalgia about a movie which is about nostalgia.

  5. Iribe Says:

    I think this is a wonderful DVD. The main film is charming, clever, and has more to say than is obvious straight away. The shorts that are with it are worth the price of the DVD all by themseves. I particularly loved the short CAT LISTENING TO MUSIC. And there is a somewhat longer short doc (17 minutes) about whales which will break your heart. All together i think this is really one of Marker’s best.

  6. Armstrong Says:

    After seeing La Jetee, The Case of the Grinning Cat felt like a disappointment. The film is like a walk through Paris after 9/11, Marker follows protesters against Bush, Chirac, the Iraq war etc etc. Interspersed btwn the protests and related stuff are sightings of graffitti in the form of a grinning yellow cat (see the dvd cover). Marker finds this a mystery and tries to document the phenomenon. Here also follows some meditations on the cat as a symbol, and how it appears in stories like Alice in Wonderland etc.
    The cat part is the interesting part of this film. It reminds of the Glaneuse-movie by Markers french new wave collegaue Agnes Varda (but Vardasfilm is much better). Anyway, the cat is intriguing and Markers quest to find out more about it begins well. But what is less interesting is the protest-part of the film. This feels so non original and flat. And why do I have to hear Markers smug remarks upon the validity of the protests, especially when they just reproduce the streamline leftist view? Boring. This is interesting only as a document of the times around 2001 in Paris with protests against government and Bush. And the problem is that Marker seems to become so fascinated by the protests that he forgets the cat (ok, he sees the cat on a sign in one of the marches against something, and this is obviously super interesting to Marker).
    And can someone explain to me the last 10 minutes of the film? What has this story about an artist-turned-murderer got to do with anything? And what about the cat?
    Bottom line: this film is worth watching, esp if you’re into Marker and french film, but I can’t really say that it is worth paying $25 for.

  7. Jetter Says:

    More American Graffiti was exactly what I figured it would be.
    A movie made that doesn’t break new ground, but instead uses it as a foundation to make money for the cast, crew,
    caterers, etc. Good for them, bad for most of us.
    I will admit I am sequel bigot” with a deep abiding resentment against exploiting an original ideal which was the classic “American Graffiti”
    I bought the second one so I could “have the complete set.”
    But the two don’t make a set. The magic of the original is gone for the most part, great actors (Paul Lemat, Ron Howard) are going through the motions waiting for payday. What this–and most–sequels do is stain the memory of its original to the point of sacreligious. With few exceotions,
    avoid films with “2″ or “More” in the title. “More American Graffiti” is
    simply more money for the producers.

  8. Alderson Says:

    More American Graffiti is kind of sad to me. It shows how everone is living in 3 or 4 time zones. It’s sad that Terry the toad’s girlfriend forgets him and becomes a hippie. The ending is the most sad because you know John Milner is about to die because of a drunk driver. I probably wouldn’t recommend MORE AMERICAN GRAFFITI!!!

  9. Newhart Says:

    You’d think this film would be awful. But it turns out to be a very nice ending to the first story. Most of the characters are back and we see where they logically wound end up by the late 60s. The late 60s are more interesting to me than the years captured in the first.

    The film has a more mellow and sloppy pace than the first. But the stories in this one work that way. We’re watching 4 silly but still tragic mini-movies here.

    The real strength is that we already know what happens to Toad and Milner thanks to the original. So as the film goes on, we’re waiting and waiting to see how it’s going to happen, which is cool. Knowing their sad fate really makes the ending perfect in a bittersweet way.