Los Angeles Plays Itself (Blu-ray)

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Format:  Blu-ray
item number:  3AGE7
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Blu-ray Details

  • Rated: Not Rated
  • Run Time: 2 hours, 49 minutes
  • Video: Color
  • Encoding: Region 1 (USA & Canada)
  • Released: October 21, 2014
  • Originally Released: 2003
  • Label: Cinema Guild

Performers, Cast and Crew:

Directed by
Produced by

Entertainment Reviews:

Certified Fresh96%

TOMATOMETER
Total Count: 45

Upright86%

AUDIENCE SCORE
User Ratings: 1,066
The doc bears repeated viewing, even when one winces at some of Andersen's assertions. Full Review
East Bay Express
May 5, 2010
An ultimate movie clip junkie film, a video store fantasy with a pulse and a brain. Full Review
Combustible Celluloid
Oct 14, 2005
Ultimately, Los Angeles Plays Itself plays out as a document of the conflict between Anderson's love of movies and his distrust of mass media. Full Review
Senses of Cinema
Oct 17, 2018
Rating: 3/4 -- Andersen's inspired ruminations about his city as a filming location and as a repository for other filmmakers' daydreams and nightmares. Full Review
Chicago Tribune
Sep 18, 2014
Rating: A- -- This unusual brainy pic acts to show, in a provocative way, how Hollywood transforms a fiction film into a documentary. Full Review
Ozus' World Movie Reviews
May 21, 2015
[W]atching the beautiful logic of the way these clips from dozens of movies are stitched together, it's easy to see how the project has taken on a life of its own.
Sight and Sound
Feb 1, 2005
Thom Andersen's monumental LOS ANGELES PLAYS ITSELF boldly and provocatively explores the long, evolving relationship between the city and its representation on the screen.
Los Angeles Times
Sep 9, 2004

Product Description:

Thom Andersen is a film teacher, Los Angeles resident, and film fanatic. He believes that his city--the most photographed in the world--gets short shrift on the silver screen. To illustrate this point, Andersen has stitched together a montage of scenes from hundreds of different movies, and created his debut feature film, LOS ANGELES PLAYS ITSELF. Splitting the film into three parts, Andersen begins with "The City as Background." Here, he looks at the way some of Los Angeles' finest architecture is abused in the movies. A particular Frank Lloyd Wright house, for example, has been used in over 30 films, including BLADE RUNNER and BLACK RAIN. But why, the director ponders, is it usually used to house characters of villainous intent' Next, Andersen presents "The City As Character," which looks at how Los Angeles often takes on the role of treacherous co-star. He shows how the city has become a welcome target for aliens, (INDEPENDENCE DAY), an architectural bore (POINT BLANK), riddled with corrupt cops (L.A. CONFIDENTIAL), and a former consumerist mecca (THE OMEGA MAN). The film concludes with "City as Subject," in which Andersen highlights the many social and economic problems the city has faced, and how they have been committed to celluloid. He principally looks at CHINATOWN, as well as lesser-known African-American films such as BUSH MAMA and THE KILLER OF SHEEP. Andersen is a big fan of the latter two movies, believing they are among the very few to accurately portray the city he loves. Absorbing, obsessive, and highly unique, Thom Andersen's film is a labor of love that cinephiles should find fascinating.

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Product Info

  • Sales Rank: 75,660
  • UPC: 881164000859
  • Shipping Weight: 0.25/lbs (approx)
  • International Shipping: 1 item

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