Primer is a fav but almost no one i know has even heard of it. The movie is about time travel... sort of... multiple watches to grasp nearly anything is a must.
Haha your side of the pond is awesome, thenTallim said:Film4 shows a lot of Miyazaki movies here in the UK and that's a free tv channel so I don't think they are that obscure here. Plus when Jonathon Ross used to prevent Film (whatever the year was) he would almost always review Ghibli movies and he has a very good taste in movies.Kahunaburger said:^This.EBHughsThe1st said:Castle of Cagliostro.
^And this.yanipheonu said:Tokyo Godfathers.
Although, sadly even the more famous Miyazaki and Satoshi Kon movies are considered "obscure" outside of geek circles. People don't know what they're missing, man.
Personally, I don't have a favorite (unless you count Yojimbo as obscure) but two movies I saw recently that I really liked were Cave of Forgotten Dreams (3-D Werner Herzog documentary about cave paintings) and Pontypool (genuinely original zombie movie.)
You could add that they are all Terry Pratchett, Discworld series, for the few that may not know from the titles. That alone makes them worth watching.Thaliur said:I guess I'm one of the nerds filling in the blanks...
I actually have three movies I'd like to contribute, although I'm not sure about their obscurity. Most people I told about them didn't seem to know them though:
Hogfather
The Colour Of Magic (might be known as "The Color Of Magic" in the Western Colonies)
Going Postal
Three really well-made book-based movies. Admittedly with some weaknesses, but hey, you try to fit a week of reading into three hours of acting.
Well Ghibli et al are so much better than Disney in my opinion.Kahunaburger said:Haha your side of the pond is awesome, thenTallim said:Film4 shows a lot of Miyazaki movies here in the UK and that's a free tv channel so I don't think they are that obscure here. Plus when Jonathon Ross used to prevent Film (whatever the year was) he would almost always review Ghibli movies and he has a very good taste in movies.Kahunaburger said:^This.EBHughsThe1st said:Castle of Cagliostro.
^And this.yanipheonu said:Tokyo Godfathers.
Although, sadly even the more famous Miyazaki and Satoshi Kon movies are considered "obscure" outside of geek circles. People don't know what they're missing, man.
Personally, I don't have a favorite (unless you count Yojimbo as obscure) but two movies I saw recently that I really liked were Cave of Forgotten Dreams (3-D Werner Herzog documentary about cave paintings) and Pontypool (genuinely original zombie movie.)
Although Miyazaki stuff isn't like super obscure over here, either - they're sort of the go-to family movies for geeky families haha.
I love David Lynch as well and am currently watching Twin peaks, but my favourite obscure movie is prbably Stuart saves his family. I don't think it was hugely popular, but I really like it, and that's all that matters to me.AgentNein said:I'm a huge huge David Lynch fan.
If you've got a tolerance for movies that don't make immediate sense, go pick up a copy of
Eraserhead
Blue Velvet
Mullholland Dr.
Inland Empire
A great movie, I loved it - way more than Pan's Labyrinth. The setting is what made it for me I think, it really added to the eeriness.Viral_Lola said:The Devil's Backbone
Now that's one I didn't like. I love Joseph Gordon-Levitt, but his character annoyed me so much. The whole movie was just painfully indie, and not effortlessly either.CrazyMedic said:Brick it is streaming on netflix an it is like a noire movie with teens in highschool.
Not sure if it's technically 'obscure', but if you've seen Dark Star, you've got to watch Silent Running - without either of these films we wouldn't have had the immeasurably superb Moon.rickthetrick said:Jesus, none of these suggestions are even remotely obscure.
Try "Dark Star" on for size. http://www.imdb.com/video/screenplay/vi2879389977/
John Carpenter made this little Low Budget Sci Fi Gem with the help of some of the Special effects people from Star Wars.
"IDIOT!!"
Lol