MovieChat Forums > L'heure d'été (2009) Discussion > Damn You, American Cinema

Damn You, American Cinema


Every time someone picked up one of the antique pieces, I was waiting for them to drop it.

Every time someone lit a fire, I was waiting for the house to burn down.

Every time the siblings had a conversation, I was waiting for over-the-top histrionics.

Every time someone was behind the wheel and distracted, I was waiting for a brutal crash.

When the daughter was picked up from the police station, I was waiting for guns, drugs, or pregnancy to follow.

When the party took place at the end, I was waiting for the house to get destroyed.

In short - it is so refreshing to see a film where none of these easy cards are played, but instead we are shown a genuine, relaxed portrait of family life.

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Your post is so funny. I felt exactly the same damn way on every point. Bravo.

http://www.imdb.com/mymovies/list?l=42385905

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You really could not be any more correct.

Good observations; great movie.

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I hate to say it, but it would have livened it up a little bit
:)

-----
If all
else fails
use fire.
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Yes, exactly. Sometimes people pick up a valuable vase without dropping it. Imagine that. How nice to have an entire movie without a single Chevy Chase Moment.

Can't say that I really got wrapped up in this film, the way some viewers/commentators have, but it was nice to watch something written by... adults, I guess.

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Damn you, Facebook!

I wanted to "like" this post...

p h u c k a b e e s !

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like!

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This is perfect.

Everybody wants to be found.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rtieZvF-LUM

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what a ridiculous thread, I have seen plenty of non-American films where the things you mentioned DID happen.
Every country has it's bad films, why pick on American cinema?
btw I am not American.

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I'm American and I think it's a tongue-in-cheek look at Hollywood.

Everybody wants to be found.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rtieZvF-LUM

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maybe tongue in cheek, hard to tell.
there is though a big difference between Hollywood films which I would usually associate with big blockbusters and independent American films.
This is a message board on Summer Hours, which is definitely a French art house film, directed by Olivier Assayas who is a director very far removed from the type of films the op describes, hence my assertion that this is a ridiculous thread.

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You make a good point but I thought the story was a little too subtle for my entire liking. Great acting however.

"How do you make God laugh? Make a plan."

-Kicking and Screaming (1995)

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Apparently you watch far too many American films.

"The night was sultry."

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