Films Frames - Every Frame is a Painting

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#Every Frame Is a Painting

A place to share your favourite film frames and stills.

↱ Please use the following title formatting, when posting: · Film Name, Director/s (YYYY)

read guidelines ↡ before posting

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↳ Our family Communities:

➰#Cinema

Fin - The Last Breath of a Film [email protected]

Silent Film Gifs [email protected]

Lost In Film - [email protected]

Cinema Português - [email protected]

Film Posters Porn [email protected]

Cinephile Circlejerk [email protected]

MovieSnob [email protected]

➰#Music

Album Art Porn - [email protected]

➰#Photography

Sizz - [email protected]

Kenopsia - [email protected]

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➤Simple Guidelines

➧1. Include the original film name, director and year of release for your cinema favourite frame

Always include the original film name, director and year of release. If you do not know some of the required information, state that in either the title or top-level comment e.g. [Roma, Federico Fellini, Unknown Year]. The reason we ask for this information is that you can only search on the content of post titles, not comments.

➧2. Add review? I'ts your choice! In the 'body' of the post you can add your review, a comment or anything else you think about the film. You're free to do that, let's keep the discussion open about the film you just posted. Or just don't write anything and share your favourite frame, is up to you.

➧3. No low-effort/low-quality posts.

Posts made to r/filmsframes are expected to be of high quality and have serious effort put behind them. The frame should be clean, not have any urls/website watermarks in them.

➧4. Be Original

Don’t publish stills/frames of a famous film like everyone else, we want to see your own view of a film, your favourite shot, try to publish your favourite still/frame.

➧5. Be respectful.

Harassment, abuse, name calling, and/or threats of any kind is not tolerated here. Any content, whether an image or a comment, that includes any kind of bigoted language or hate speech will be met with a permanent ban.

➧6. No off-topic Content

Never post anything that is off-topic (i.e. not film stills/frames) or that contains gory material.

➧7. No spam or reposts.

Do not submit more than one of the same post/comment on this community or across multiple communities. In addition, please wait at least 3 months before reposting an image that has already been posted to r/filmsframes, and do not repost from the top of all time.

➧8. No advertisement or self-promotion.

Do not use this subreddit to advertise or self-promote. This includes (but is not limited to) websites, articles, blog posts, and brands.

➧9. No memes images or GIFS Please keep the 'frames' and 'stills' in mind.

➧10. Tag NSFW Posts

· Nudity: Obvious, implied or strategically covered · Content that is “sexually explicit” · Gore, both human and non-human.

➧11. Look around you... Please watch what is posted already, maybe shots/frames/stills from ‘Marvel’ or other “blockbuster” films or others alike, aren’t the most suitable for this community. Yet, this is relative, if you find your "view/still/frame is artistic enough to post, don’t be shy to post it.

➠ Report if you if like... Feel free to report any content that does not respect these rules.

founded 1 year ago
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Unlike Keaton and Chaplin, Lloyd didn't often direct his films

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First of all, Monos is a film set in the jungle, so you know it's already good (see Raiders, Jurassic Park, Sorcerer, Predator, Apocalypto, etc.). Secondly, Landes has an eye for scene composition and potent metaphor. Thirdly, it gets awfully good performances out of a mostly amateur cast.

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submitted 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) by jeffw to c/filmsframes
 
 
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Invisible Boy and the Spleen and a skunk in the moonlight.

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🐱📦

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submitted 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) by [email protected] to c/filmsframes
 
 

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submitted 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) by lookluc to c/filmsframes
 
 

Made my first short film 'What do You Want Now of This Metaphysical Love?'.

Watch the trailer here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O1Y_EBzCViE

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Hardware is a low-budget scifi horror movie that was the directorial debut of Richard Stanley – who is notable for being the initial director in the notorious Island of Dr. Moreau filmatization in the 90's – and starring Dylan McDermott and Stacey Travis.

I wouldn't call it a good movie, exactly, but it's not terrible either and it definitely has its moments. Stanley's style is pleasantly weird, and the aesthetics are sometimes really on point.

Here's the rest of my screenshots (sorry about the stupid rounded corners on all of them, my video player insists on including those in screenshots):

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