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Sparked off by Jitendar's revisiting of Lethal Weapon 4, I started thinking about how much I revisit old movie friends.  Of course anybody who knows me knows I have a catalogue of comfort movies which I regularly revisit from time to time, but I was thinking of the movies that either I loved once and don't go near these days, the stuff I bought, watched once and popped on the shelf never to watch again, and the familiarity-breeds-contempt brigade which I've seen so often I can quote huge chunks of dialogue of and will puke if I have to sit through again.

This year I've been doing more revisiting than making new friends.  I don't know why - maybe age, maybe domestic diplomacy, maybe Hollywood's output just being crap these days - I haven't been buying new movies, and those I have bought have joined the watched once, never rescreened ranks.

The past fortnight, I've been revisiting the Carry On legacy, watching the pictures in strict chronological order from 1957's Carry On Sergeant.  I've just finished Carry On At Your Convenience (a long-standing personal favourite) and I'm hoping to slot Carry On Matron into proceedings in the next couple of days.  The Carry Ons had become part of the familiarity-breeds-contempt category for me, for as much as I love and admire them as icons of a sense of humour long-lost and as documents of working-class targeted entertainment, I'd lost the desire to watch them. That is until I happened to catch the last twenty minutes of Channel 4HD's transmission of  Carry On Constable.  An HD transfer sharp enough to correct your eyesight without the disturbing burning smell.  It set me thinking two things - "Wow, I'd love to see a Blu-ray of this" and "I don't remember this bit, or how funny it is."

So I started watching the Carry Ons again, and frankly I've been blown away by them.  It has also started me thinking about all those other movies in my collection that I haven't watched in years - and there are a lot of them.  Like Jitendar I have the Lethal Weapon pictures, the Die Hards, the Laurel and Hardy Collection, the Universal Horrors and the original Planet of the Apes.  I know there's a fair amount I can't really inflict on other family members with less resilient sensitivities, but I can always watch them in my personal quiet time.

Anybody else cracked open a dusty DVD case of some long-disregarded favourite and been startled by how much you'd forgotten of the movie, how entertaining it was or conversely what a pile of cack it had turned into?

Posted by Mark Oates