About TLC & your host

Posted 7 December 2006 in Screening log

I’m Lauren, 25, librarian, film nerd. Add it up and you get TLC, for I’m very sure the same quirks led me to both a career in libraries and this, which more than a film blog is really a database of my experience with film, obsessively catalogued. It also aims to be more personal than professional, hence the life cinematic; ie I’m concerned with what a film does for me rather than what a film does for all film — so there’s a lot of slobbering over celebrities I fancy, aimless feminist screeds, and awfully self-indulgent ruminations on the meaning of life. Sometimes I pass this off as objective criticism.

Reviews, if you can call them that, are generally written in haste and most were originally posted on message boards for a certain audience. You will find inside jokes and references to people with strange names. And hardly any will pass for thorough analysis of a film; I collect a few thoughts (experience teaching me I will mostly forget a film within a year if I don’t) and watch another movie.

Review and score don’t always seem to correspond. The score — which I have come to value less, but keep as a way of organizing information — should be interpreted as my overall impression of a film. The review may not get to that at all. I can think of many films which I rate rather highly but appear to have only criticism for, and other films I rate critically but say nothing particularly against. It is that my reviews are not comprehensive, and I say only a few things that come to mind. Faults and pleasures are relative, too, so whatever I mean by that, y’know, bear it in mind.

I tend to get on obsessive kicks — see the projects section — and watch only a certain type of film for long stretches. If you enjoy reading my blog at all, you may only enjoy it periodically, then. As a broad statement, though, I watch a lot of classic Hollywood and all French cinema, try to keep up with highbrow new releases, and enjoy world cinema of all stripes from the 60s and 70s. Theoretically I am interested in everything, but these are areas that come up again and again.

I enjoy comments and recommendations, and if you blogroll me I’ll generally blogroll you: I love reading the thoughts of others who also take film very personally. Say hello!

TLC runs happily on WordPress, a heavily modified version of Sonny Parlin’s Conestoga Street theme, and the hosting prowess of Dreamhost. It looks best in Firefox, but perhaps that goes without saying; some attempts have been made to look presentable in IE, and I don’t know about no other stinkin’ browsers.

 

8 Comments »

I see you are changing this place up. Bold. I like your intro, but it should be shorter.

Comment by Mango — 1 May 2008 @ 1 May 2008

Your face should be shorter.

I mean, thanks!

Comment by Lauren — 2 May 2008 @ 2 May 2008

greetings from another librarian. I was directed to your site from the cinessu facebook page after inquiring about somewhere online that people discuss film for how it matters in a personal sense, as opposed to the rampant fanboy fetishism and academic paralysis of understanding. It seems a rarity for people to appreciate the ‘art’ value of film and elaborate on how one is transformed by it. Look forward to checking your blog out in detail and will definately blogroll it with mine. I am in a momentary hiatus from writing on my blog but I do perhaps write far more on rowthree (a very active film blog community that ’strives’ towards the aesthetic musing, but like most are somewhat servient to the next big thing).

Cheers

Comment by mike rot — 9 May 2008 @ 9 May 2008

I just discovered your blog because someone linked to mine from yours - so first, thanks for adding “Allure” to the list, and secondly, what a great blog you have here. I’m surprised I haven’t come across it sooner. I will surely be checking back and will add it to the list of links on my blog.

Comment by Bob F — 13 May 2008 @ 13 May 2008

i found this website through a torrent link for subtitles for Toute la memoire du monde. the link is dead. do you have subs for the film?

cheers.

Comment by M. — 22 June 2008 @ 22 June 2008

I do! I’ll email them to ya.

Comment by Lauren — 22 June 2008 @ 22 June 2008

apologies for the faux identity. my email address is the one listed now. could you please email the subs to me “again”?

thank you so much.

Comment by zeeshan — 1 July 2008 @ 1 July 2008

No problem at all! I’ll get those out to you. Enjoy the film!

Comment by Lauren — 1 July 2008 @ 1 July 2008

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about
Lauren, 25, out-of-work librarian. At the moment, TLC is but a review blog and catalogue of my film-related perversions. I always plan to do more with it — and to one day step outside 30s Hollywood again. Who knows?


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» The Great Lie 1941, Edmund Goulding
» In This Our Life 1942, John Huston
» The Crash 1932, William Dieterle
» CafĂ© Metropole 1937, Edward H Griffith
» Dodsworth 1936, William Wyler
» The Rich Are Always with Us 1932, Alfred E Green
» Lilly Turner 1933, William A Wellman
» Frisco Jenny 1932, William A Wellman
» Female 1933, Michael Curtiz
» Waterloo Bridge 1931, James Whale

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The Great Lie (2)
  • Lauren: Au contraire, I love the idea of the potentials of artlessness. …And wish I had somewhere to go with...
  • Mango: Wonderful, an update. Cool spoiler device. It sounds like this strikes on the wonderful potentials artlessness...
In This Our Life (1)
  • John McElwee: I’ve just discovered you, spent the last hour reading “The Life Cinematic”, and let...
Dodsworth (2)
  • Lauren: He’s the guy on the ship early in the film who first tries to seduce Mrs Dodsworth. Too bad they...
  • Mango: David Niven is in Dodsworth? I don’t remember him…

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