LOOKS:
The Kevin Pollak Chat Show - it's a little rough around the edges, and Sam Levine's semi-off-camera interjections don't float my boat, but there's some good and lengthy interviews to see on YouTube. Some I've dug into this month have been Ed O'Neil, Lisa Kudrow, Matthew Perry, and a massively entertaining sit-down with the reliably verbose John Landis who has a veritable shedload of fascinating and entertaining stories from his decades in the movie industry to share. The shows are good because it's just two people having a relaxed and varied chat - although Pollak could ask his questions faster and more succinctly.
Click "READ MORE" below for more looks, sounds, vibes & flavours...
Saturday, 31 August 2013
Flavours of the Month: August 2013...
Labels:
2013,
anticipation,
august,
breaking bad,
diary,
flavours,
gta v,
hell on wheels,
kevin pollak,
lost,
maniac,
month,
praise,
rant,
sleb,
under the dome
Wednesday, 28 August 2013
Autopsy (Armando Crispino, 1975) Review
Find more giallo
reviews here.
Otherwise known as “The Magician” or “Macchie Solari” (“Sunspots”),
this is a review of the uncut version of the film which clocks in at 100
minutes, as opposed to the 85 minute cut.
“People have been knocking themselves off like flies.”
Thrust into the boiling hot, blinding white light of the sun – as solar flares
erupt and moans of sexual ecstasy call out – Armando Crispino's giallo gets off
to a fast-paced and violent start. A rash of suicides plague the beautiful city
of Rome as it bakes in the August sun – a woman slits her wrists, a man wraps a
bag over his head before diving into a river, another blows himself up in his
petrol-drenched car, and a father shoots himself to death after slaughtering
his own children.
“It seems sweet to die in August.” There is a
blood-soaked madness spreading through the populace, and the morgue is
jam-packed with mutilated cadavers – but is every single one of these apparent
suicides what they appear to be? Might this be the ideal time for a killer to
strike and hide their devious deeds under the guise of suicide?
Click “READ MORE” below to continue the review and see
more screenshots...
Labels:
1970s,
1975,
armando crispino,
autopsy,
death,
exploitation,
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genre,
giallo,
horror,
italian,
mimsy farmer,
movie,
murder,
mystery,
ray lovelock,
review,
screenshots,
sunspots,
the magician
Thursday, 15 August 2013
Evil Dead (2013) – an all-out stream of fan thoughts...
As a huge fan of the original 1981 movie – it is one of my
most cherished formative cinematic experiences – I was frustrated to hear that
it was going to receive the remake treatment. However, the news that the
original producers – Sam Raimi, Rob Tapert, and Bruce Campbell – were going to
be involved softened the punch. If the progenitors were offering hands-on guidance, then
perhaps this remake could steer clear of offensive trash like the 2010 remake
of A Nightmare On Elm Street, and aim for worthwhile and respectful
endeavours like the 2010 remake of The Crazies.
Well, I've finally been able to check it out (on Blu-Ray)
and here's the essential meat of my view – I like it, but I don't love it.
Mercifully it avoids the ANOES2010-like level of abusive suckage, but
there are a few too many awkward quirks and overly-slick problems for it to
match my respect (perhaps, even, love) for the likes of The Hills Have Eyes 2006, or Maniac2013 (admittedly, the 'worthy remakes' club is a rather exclusive one).
Rather than a straight review, I'm going to dive into the
film from an obsessed fan's perspective, picking through the movie – my loves, my likes,
and my hates – piece-by-piece – and go for some horror nerd analysis.
Click “READ MORE” below for a blow-by-blow,
slice-by-gouge, hack-by-slash run-down of Evil Dead 2013...
Labels:
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2013,
bruce campbell,
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fede alvarez,
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picture,
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review,
sam raimi,
screenshots,
trilogy,
violence
Wednesday, 14 August 2013
The ABCs of Death (2013) Review...
Anthology horror films are experiencing a regained sense of
rude health of late, particularly with high profile flicks like V/H/S and it's
sequel, but The ABCs of Death manages to strike new ground within the anthology
horror sub-genre – put simply: 26 Directors, 26 Ways to Die.
However, the trouble with anthology films is that not all
parts are equal, with some failing to measure up at all – so what will it be
for this inventive onslaught of horror? Hits, misses, and the iffy in-betweens
all coming up for all 26 shorts.
Click “READ MORE” below to learn your ABCs...
Monday, 12 August 2013
Your Vice Is A Locked Room And Only I Have The Key (Sergio Martino, 1972) Review
Find more giallo reviews here.
In the year following his masterpiece giallo The Strange Vice of Mrs Wardh (1971), Director Sergio Martino returned to the
genre with this sordid tale of the Italian aristocracy gone wrong.
“Of course, you'd much rather be drinking from my skull.”
Kick-starting under the oil-painted gaze of the recently deceased matriarch of
the Rouvigny family, Martino introduces us to the excesses of the Italian
aristocracy, housed within a crumbling and hollow mansion. As free-loving
guests from a nearby commune enjoy the free booze, and a grope of slave/servant
Brenda, the bitter marriage of Oliviero (Luigi Pistilli, The Good The Bad
& The Ugly) and Irina (Anita Strindberg, Who Saw Her Die) is laid bare to all without a care in Oliviero's mind.
Click “READ MORE” below to continue the review and see
more screenshots...
Sunday, 11 August 2013
Quadruple Bill Mini Musings:
The World's End:
What's it about?
Terminal man-child Gary King gets his mates back together to re-attempt "the golden mile" pub crawl which bested them the last time, back when they were teenagers. However, all is not as it seems in their home town of Newton Haven - cue alien replicants and fisticuffs aplenty.
Who would I recognise in it?
Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Paddy Considine, Martin Freeman, Eddie Marsan, Rosamund Pike, and shedloads more.
Great/Good/Alright/Shite?
Shaun of the Dead became an instant classic mixing romantic comedy with zombie-thwacking carnage and a poignant sense of brink-of-30 fear. Hot Fuzz was full-bore action comedy, a hyperactive shoot-em-up that threw every piece of lead at the screen ... but despite the machine-gun guffaws, it was lacking in emotional heft. The World's End - the third and final in the "Cornetto trilogy" - rediscovers the Wright/Pegg sense of English heart, combines it with gloopy-comedy-gore, full-on and non-stop laughs, and a surprisingly dark undertone. Pegg deserves considerable plaudits for making Gary King not only an entertaining character, but a sympathetic one - earning pity, laughs, and respect - in spite of the character's selfish, drug-fuelled, arrested development ways. Likewise, Frost stretches himself as a weary white collar lawyer who becomes a boozed-up, head-smashing Hulk. A sense of freshness underlines the alien invasion plot - something other recent 'alien invasion comedies' didn't bother with (The Watch, for example) - and really, the only minus-point is the threadbare arc for Pike's Sam. The World's End is a well crafted and extremely pleasing close to the Cornetto Trilogy. Great.
Click "READ MORE" below for college, dogs, and mobsters...
What's it about?
Terminal man-child Gary King gets his mates back together to re-attempt "the golden mile" pub crawl which bested them the last time, back when they were teenagers. However, all is not as it seems in their home town of Newton Haven - cue alien replicants and fisticuffs aplenty.
Who would I recognise in it?
Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Paddy Considine, Martin Freeman, Eddie Marsan, Rosamund Pike, and shedloads more.
Great/Good/Alright/Shite?
Shaun of the Dead became an instant classic mixing romantic comedy with zombie-thwacking carnage and a poignant sense of brink-of-30 fear. Hot Fuzz was full-bore action comedy, a hyperactive shoot-em-up that threw every piece of lead at the screen ... but despite the machine-gun guffaws, it was lacking in emotional heft. The World's End - the third and final in the "Cornetto trilogy" - rediscovers the Wright/Pegg sense of English heart, combines it with gloopy-comedy-gore, full-on and non-stop laughs, and a surprisingly dark undertone. Pegg deserves considerable plaudits for making Gary King not only an entertaining character, but a sympathetic one - earning pity, laughs, and respect - in spite of the character's selfish, drug-fuelled, arrested development ways. Likewise, Frost stretches himself as a weary white collar lawyer who becomes a boozed-up, head-smashing Hulk. A sense of freshness underlines the alien invasion plot - something other recent 'alien invasion comedies' didn't bother with (The Watch, for example) - and really, the only minus-point is the threadbare arc for Pike's Sam. The World's End is a well crafted and extremely pleasing close to the Cornetto Trilogy. Great.
Click "READ MORE" below for college, dogs, and mobsters...
Sunday, 4 August 2013
Eyeball (Umberto Lenzi, 1975) Review
Find more giallo reviews here.
Umberto Lenzi is best known for such violence-spewing film
fare as Nightmare
City and Cannibal
Ferox, but as a director who dipped his toe into numerous pools, some of
his other work has faded into the background. Lenzi's optic-bothering giallo Eyeball
is one such obscure effort.
“The flowers of death? I'm far from ready.” A
bus-load of American tourists are in Barcelona
to see the sights but, for some, the glint of a raised dagger will be the last
image to flash across their moist little peepers. The holidaying ensemble are a
motley bunch – the unhappily married Alvarados, a grandfather with his bored
granddaughter Jenny, shifty-looking Reverend Bronson (George Rigaud, The Case of the Bloody Iris), letchy photographer Lisa and her lesbian muse
Naiba, all leaving secretary Paulette (Martine Brochard) looking
positively dull by comparison.
Click “READ MORE” below to continue the review and see more
screenshots…
Labels:
1970s,
1975,
cannibal ferox,
exploitation,
eyeball,
film,
george rigaud,
giallo,
horror,
italian,
killer,
left eye,
movie,
murder,
mystery,
police,
review,
umberto lenzi
Saturday, 3 August 2013
Hextuple Bill Mini Musings: Limos, Aliens, Monsters, Soldiers, Savages, and Murders...
Cosmopolis:
What's it about?
A successful rich bloke hops in his limo to go and get a haircut. He then proceeds to talk utter bollocks with a random collection of arseholes for 105 interminable minutes.
Who would I recognise in it?
Robert Pattinson, Juliette Binoche, Paul Giamatti, Samantha Morton, Kevin Durand, Mathieu Amalric, Jay Baruchel.
Great/Good/Alright/Shite?
Exceptionally stylish, David Cronenberg's "psycho-thriller" is a visual treat, but the script (by DC, based on Don De Lillo's novel) is wilfully obtuse and keeps the audience at a belligerent arm's length for the entire duration. Side characters drift in-and-out for vignette's where people we don't know, or understand, talk in the most poncy, inaccessible manner about stuff we - at best - only half-get in general terms. It's an audience-splitter to say the least. The DVD comes with a making of as-long as the film itself - but I've not braved it yet - perhaps that'll shed a bit of light on all this malarkey, but I just couldn't access this Cronenberg outing. It's a shame as I usually enjoy his work so much (I recently checked out A Dangerous Method, and rather dug it). Alright.
Click "READ MORE" below for aliens, soldiers, savages, and hatchets...
What's it about?
A successful rich bloke hops in his limo to go and get a haircut. He then proceeds to talk utter bollocks with a random collection of arseholes for 105 interminable minutes.
Who would I recognise in it?
Robert Pattinson, Juliette Binoche, Paul Giamatti, Samantha Morton, Kevin Durand, Mathieu Amalric, Jay Baruchel.
Great/Good/Alright/Shite?
Exceptionally stylish, David Cronenberg's "psycho-thriller" is a visual treat, but the script (by DC, based on Don De Lillo's novel) is wilfully obtuse and keeps the audience at a belligerent arm's length for the entire duration. Side characters drift in-and-out for vignette's where people we don't know, or understand, talk in the most poncy, inaccessible manner about stuff we - at best - only half-get in general terms. It's an audience-splitter to say the least. The DVD comes with a making of as-long as the film itself - but I've not braved it yet - perhaps that'll shed a bit of light on all this malarkey, but I just couldn't access this Cronenberg outing. It's a shame as I usually enjoy his work so much (I recently checked out A Dangerous Method, and rather dug it). Alright.
Click "READ MORE" below for aliens, soldiers, savages, and hatchets...
Labels:
bill,
cosmopolis,
david cronenberg,
film,
from beyond,
giallo,
hatchet for the honeymoon,
hextuple,
horror,
mario bava,
mini,
movie,
musings,
oliver stone,
review,
robert pattinson,
savages,
the watch,
thriller,
zulu
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