Well, I definitely need to see A Canterbury Tale now! I wasn't aware of that one.
It is one of my favorite movies, hence my writing about it repeatedly. It is not horror—it's numinous—but it really feels on some level as though it should be a taproot text for the old weird folk genre, especially the way it handles the simultaneous permeability and persistence of time. Someday I will see it in a theater and its landscape photography, which is already very beautiful on a small screen, will be amazing.
Another you might like if you enjoyed Robin Redbreast is Murrain.
Thanks! I'd seen that one in Kneale's filmography, but knew nothing else about it.
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It is one of my favorite movies, hence my writing about it repeatedly. It is not horror—it's numinous—but it really feels on some level as though it should be a taproot text for the old weird folk genre, especially the way it handles the simultaneous permeability and persistence of time. Someday I will see it in a theater and its landscape photography, which is already very beautiful on a small screen, will be amazing.
Another you might like if you enjoyed Robin Redbreast is Murrain.
Thanks! I'd seen that one in Kneale's filmography, but knew nothing else about it.