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Recent Viewings, Part 2

Started by Rev. Powell, February 15, 2020, 10:36:26 PM

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lester1/2jr

#3990
^  I remember Final Girls that was a good one

The Disappearance of Aimee (made for TV 1976) - I only recently learned about Aimee Semple Mcpherson. She was a massively popular and charismatic preacher in California in the 1920's. Her big scandal, which is what the movie is about, was she faked her own death so she could be with her married boyfriend, then had second thoughts and concocted a phony kidnapping story so she could come back. Her mother was her manager and their tempestuous relationship is part of the whole drama.

Faye Dunaway stars as Aimee, with Bette Davis as the Mom. Apparently, Davis couldn't stand Dunaway's diva behavior on the set, but maybe that tension helped them portray their characters more vividly? Unfortunately, the movie is very wikipedia esque and doesn't take many risks creatively. The setting in a court room (she was tried for fraud and so forth) keeps it in line but also limits it's scope. The most memorable parts are her speaking to her flock in the church with her arms always going up and everyone loving it/ her.

1920's nostalgia was pretty big in the 70's for some reason. Dunaway delivers the goods as Aimee and it was interesting to see the 1920's and people dressed like The Little Rascals in color. Nostalgia, Americana, and even James Woods shows up as one the lawyers: Check it out if you want to see a by the numbers, but still colorful portrayal of the awkward and embarrassing fall from grace of a pioneering preacher/ con artist lady!

4/5 watched on youtube. The one I watched was taped off of British TV in 1984 and had some interesting ads that I had of course never seen.

indianasmith

MR. SLEEP (2024) - I caught this on Prime the other night and was sucked into it rather quickly.  Fairly low budget and a bit of a slow burn, but some excellent acting and a villain who was somewhat intriguing.  The movie felt like a sequel, in some ways - the notorious murderer "Mr. Sleep" was finally caught and executed by lethal injection, only to return from the dead (rising from the morgue slab like Michael Meyers in HALLOWEEN 2), and goes on a rampage against the patients of the doctor who interviewed him on death row.  The final girl was actually pretty tough and the killer got a nice comeuppance from her.  Overall, 3.5, maybe 4 out of 5.
"I shall smite you in the nostrils with a rod of iron, and wax your spleen with Efferdent!!"

M.10rda

WHEN THE BOUGH BREAKS (1994):
When Texas police discover a series of severed hands belonging to unidentified prepubescent victims :buggedout: what's an old-fashioned chief detective like Martin Sheen to do but phone the FBI and ask them to send one of those newfangled criminal profilers??? Enter FBI Investigator Audrey McLare (Ally Walker), a twitchy antisocial chain-smoking claustrophobe w/ huge scars on her back. That elaborate description tells you as much as you'll ever learn from this film about Audrey as it marches through a lot of expected serial killer thriller plot beats as well as more surprising digressions into paranormal mystery and mad science flick (HANDS OF ORLAC, of all things!).

In spite of spooky ambience and several giallo-like flourishes, WTBB is a STV release from '94 that looks a bit like a TV movie circa 1989. Some of the references to dates in the movie don't add up to '94 either so it's possible this sat on the shelves for a couple years after getting frog-marched through production immediately after the huge success of SILENCE OF THE LAMBS. "Audrey McLare" dresses and behaves a lot like "Clarice Starling" and spends most of the running time in the basement of a mental asylum trying to get information out of (not Hannibal Lecter alas but instead) a mute adolescent boy played (confusingly but intentionally) by Tara Subkoff. That character is often quite irritating, but that seems to be by design, and once I accepted that I found some things to appreciate about the work of Subkoff, who went on to build a respectable career for herself in a series of 90s indie flicks. Walker was another actress who I'd liked in several supporting roles in the 90s (before she disappeared for a long while) and though she puts her back into WTBB, it's thankless work having to act like an even more brittle, emotionally repressed Jodie Foster. I spent most of this film wishing Walker had better material for her (one and only?) feature film starring vehicle.

All that said, there's one thing about WTBB I really admired, and I note it here particularly for fans of LONGLEGS. I could probably fill a page in a composition notebook listing all the plot points in WHEN THE BOUGH BREAKS that remain mysterious, unclear, or even confusing by the time the credits roll. However, I sincerely commend WTBB's filmmakers for being stalwart in their commitment to explicitly explaining none of those plot points! This is in stark contrast to my primary criticism of LONGLEGS - that it falls over itself in the final stretch to provide a lot of exposition that no one really needed. Hey, we've all seen several (dozen?) SE7EN-ish s/killer thrillers - skip the pomp and circumstance - we're just here for the nailbiting climactic confrontations in an underlit basement, kthx! The folks behind WTBB understood this reality and kept everything lean, instead of straining to rationalize s**t that was never likely to make sense anyway, and for that I salute them!

3/5

When third-billed Ron Perlman doesn't appear after more than an hour in, well, you know what that probably means. He must've enjoyed working w/ Walker during his brief sequence however as she resurfaced in one of the later seasons of SONS OF ANARCHY.

Rev. Powell

BLACK GOD, WHITE DEVIL (1964): An impoverished Brazilian worker kills his boss and then runs off with his wife to join two bandit clans: the first led by a self-proclaimed saint, the second by a madman. This expressionistic epic is littered with crosses, but God is nowhere to be found. Anticipates the Spaghetti Western, but in an art-house style. Slow-moving but eventually draws you in. 3.5/5.
I'll take you places the hand of man has not yet set foot...

lester1/2jr

#3994
The Lost Boys (1987) - I'd been avoiding this for 30+ years because the boys themselves always looked silly to me. I think lions look silly too, so what do I know? As a drama/ action thriller it comes up a little short in places, but the comedy relief makes up for it. The Lost Boys are "creatures of the night" and look like a post Guns n Roses European hair metal band trying on a tougher, all black leather persona. The movie itself seems to have lived on in goth circles more than metal or punk ones (edit: here's an article at a heavy metal site about the movie's goth legacy https://www.kerrang.com/how-the-lost-boys-brought-goth-out-of-the-shadows so there's the aesthetic in a nutshell)

Kiefer Sutherland is the leader and does the whole "Welcome to my lair" routine with a long black coat in an underground hideout. If you like vampire movies where the infected person is fighting the "becoming a vampire"-ness via sheer will power you will LOVE this.

4.5/5

watched in one night but did have to pause a bit here and there. have to respect it's classic status which it does rightfully earn, though.

Neville

Saw "Alien: Romulus" yesterday. Not a detractor, just not an enthusiast. While I think "Romulus" is solidly built and very entertaining, it just doesn't impress me in the wat "Prometheus" and "Covenant" -despite their faults- did. It's a back to basics, remixed space horror movie, pretty much what "Jurassic World" was to "Jurassic Park".
Due to the horrifying nature of this film, no one will be admitted to the theatre.

FatFreddysCat

"UHF" (1989)
A out of work slacker ("Weird" Al Yankovic) lands his dream job as the manager of Channel 62, a low-watt local TV station with barely any viewers. Thanks to his unconventional new program ideas like "Wheel of Fish" and "Conan the Librarian," the station suddenly becomes a ratings sensation, which draws the attention of their cross town rivals at the big-network affiliate.
This very silly, entertaining slapstick comedy has a great cast that also includes Fran "The Nanny" Drescher, a pre-Seinfeld Michael "Kramer" Richards, and Kevin "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" McCarthy. "UHF" was a box office bomb but it's developed a well deserved cult following over the years.
Hey, HEY, kids! Check out my way-cool Music and Movie Review blog on HubPages!
http://hubpages.com/@fatfreddyscat

lester1/2jr

#3997
Interior (2014) - I don't know why it was called Interior, it's a pretty boring title, but count me as a fan.

The first half is just a really nondescript Fount Footage set up, but when it gets rolling these guys show you what's up and why you should watch it: they are really good at finding the scary point of the story, staying there, and getting deeper into it, mainly by having a main character who believes in, and is is fearless in confronting, the supernatural. How's that for a run on sentence?

The special effects stink. It's another movie with a guy with a lot of state of the art camera gear and a youtube channel, but it works. I was scared. Clearly someone involved has experienced real terror in this world.

4.75 /5


FatFreddysCat

"The Cassandra Crossing" (1976)
This cheese-tastic flick combines the two most popular film genres of the '70s: the political thriller and the disaster movie. A terrorist becomes infected with a highly contagious plague during a laboratory robbery gone wrong, and stows away on a trans-European passenger train to avoid arrest. As the train's passengers begin to show symptoms of the same disease, the military Powers that Be must decide whether to stop the train and try to save the innocent victims, or simply destroy the train altogether to save the world from a possible epidemic.
This over-long but entertainingly silly adventure features an all-star international cast that includes Sophia Loren, Burt Lancaster, Ava Gardner, Ray Lovelock, a young Martin Sheen and even O.J. Simpson!
Hey, HEY, kids! Check out my way-cool Music and Movie Review blog on HubPages!
http://hubpages.com/@fatfreddyscat

lester1/2jr

I've been thinking* of doing an OJ filmography on here. He was in Capricorn One and some other one I once saw.


*for like 22 years

M.10rda

#4000
PUNISHMENT PARK (1971):
Since we've been discussing documentaries (including ones which blur the distinct lines between verite and fiction) in another thread, here's a monolithic entry in the fake doc genre from Peter Watkins, possibly the King of the serious fake "doc" genre. (Using the term "mockumentary" to describe a Watkins film seems entirely inappropriate, as his movies are bleak as hell.) I don't often come across discussions of PUNISHMENT PARK, which I find odd as it seems to represent a seminal work for two subgenres: imperial bloodsport sci-fi (TURKEY SHOOT / BATTLE ROYALE / THE HUNGER GAMES) and journey-into-hell found footage horror (BLAIR WITCH / countless others). CANNIBAL HOLOCAUST is frequently cited as the fundamental pillar of that latter subgenre, yet PUNISHMENT PARK hits most of the same notes only 8 years earlier. There's no animal cruelty but hooo boy, the human-on-human cruelty (though mostly discreet) is plentiful, and PUNISHMENT PARK left me as cold and hopeless as any Italian cannibal movie.

An international TV crew films two coinciding events in a Californian desert. The first is a military tribunal where young black and white Americans are being hastily tried for subversion. (A couple of them are actually organizers but mostly they're in trouble for dodging the draft or just exercising their right to free expression.) Most of them attempt to present a reasonable defense at first before getting frustrated at the arbitrary and antipathetic jury - late 60s versions of Jim Jordan and Marjorie Taylor Greene who sneer, act aghast at such unAmerican behavior, heckle the defendants, and often fall back on having them bound and/or gagged. If the defendants are found guilty (which is a foregone conclusion), they can accept a sentence of decades in a penitentiary or three days in the eponymous penal wasteland.

Simultaneously in said wasteland, a dozen fresh convicts are attempting to cross 52 (!) miles of desert in 72 hours w/ no food or water in 100-degree-plus temperatures. They're assured by a sunglasses-wearing deputy that they will be released and all charges will be dropped if they make it to the finish line without breaking any rules. Of course, the mob of armed police and national guardsman who monitor them can make or change the rules at will...

It occurs to me that the only other feature-length Watkins I'd seen was THE WAR GAME, which - though effective - is like a tea party next to PUNISHMENT PARK. He blends the eloquence of Arthur Miller w/ the brutality of George Miller's early outback nightmares. Like 1962's THE INTRUDER (which I recently reviewed), the dialogue in PUNISHMENT PARK sounds like it could've been written (or perhaps semi-improvised, in this case) not 53 years ago but last week. I got seriously worked up watching this and wanted to go punch some cops or congresspeople.

As an essentially peaceful and more or less law-abiding guy, however, I then considered a number of people I know who might benefit from watching this cautionary tale. Upon reflection, though, it occurred to me that none of them would be moved by PUNISHMENT PARK. Also like THE INTRUDER but likely for different auteurial reasons, PUNISHMENT PARK functions less like anti-fascist propaganda and more like a Rorschach test. Viewers are likely to see in this film what they're already inclined to see: maybe an alarm call against nationalism, the police state, and the rapid erosion of civil rights; or maybe just a darn good idea that is long overdue, by gum! Actually I guess it's possible that Joe Arpaio might've caught PUNISHMENT PARK when he was a wee young sheriff and got some ideas...

If you understand that fascism is in fact something to be opposed, however:
4.5/5

Most of the acting is convincing and some of it is exceptional. The instantly recognizable Carmen Argenziano gives a very good performance in a large role and is the only cast member who went on to a long career of supporting roles in big movies and TV shows (including in GODFATHER II!). The best work though is by Kent Foreman and Mary Ellen Kleinhall, both of whom are incredible and neither of whom appear to have done another movie after this one. I hope they both had long and fulfilling lives and stayed out of trouble - or at least escaped punishment for any good trouble they got into!

lester1/2jr

My friend showed Punishment Park at his collegs libertarian meet up group. People asked if they could watch V for Vendetta instead, but I liked PP

M.10rda

#4002
JACKPOT (2024):
In the mildly dystopian (sub-topian?) L.A. of 2030, anyone can claim a lottery prize, as long as they pry it from the literal dead  hands of the winner. Projectile weapons are forbidden but any other violent means are legally permissible. A ticket worth $3.6 billion falls into the unwitting hands of newly minted California resident Awkwafina, and only an apparently well-intentioned John Cena can keep her from the clutches of a bloodthirsty mob.

Last weekend's #1 film on Prime is the kind of thing you might think twice about spending $10+ a ticket to watch on a big screen, yet it's more or less inoffensive viewing as part of your already paid-for monthly package. The R-rating buys you a hundred-some F-bombs but the frantic violence is mostly bloodless and actually that's kind of a refreshing boon, in contrast w/ your average PURGE or JOHN WICK entry. Whoever choreographed the mayhem seems to have borrowed a lot from Jackie Chan's action comedies and that keeps things buoyant and amusing. Awkwafina gets out of hand only about 5% of the time, which is an improvement over whatever the last thing was that I saw her in. Cena is really the MVP, though, not just for the physicality but also for - like The Rock and Dave Bautista - maintaining a perfectly affable profile even as the majority of the humor is at his expense.

One qualified criticism of JACKPOT: it's one of those modern comedies where the dialogue feels predominantly improvised by the cast, and evidence is provided by the long series of alternate takes that play during the closing credits. (Always a classy move, amiright?) I like improv (heck, I teach improv) but JACKPOT really feels like the producers had requested another draft before shooting started and then the Screenwriters' strike happened and they just threw their hands up and decided to roll with what they had and improv over the potholes. There are a handful of really funny lines but also a lot of groaners and non-starters. John Cena is a wrestler, and he is an entertaining actor, but don't expect him to fix your screenplay for you, eh?

3/5

M.10rda

Quote from: lester1/2jr on August 19, 2024, 10:55:36 PMMy friend showed Punishment Park at his collegs libertarian meet up group. People asked if they could watch V for Vendetta instead, but I liked PP

Lol I mean I'd think Libertarians would get riled up by PUNISHMENT PARK but who knows.

Rev. Powell

DOGMAN (2023): A boy, caged with dogs and raised there by his sadistic father, grows up understandably misanthropic, preferring the company of canines. Sometimes sloppily plotted, "DogMan" hops genres, from trauma drama to thriller to romance with even a bit of superhero thrown in, but it's got just enough crazy energy to save it from disaster---any movie with Caleb Landry Jones (who gives his all) as a crippled, asexual drag queen who communicates telepathically with dogs is likely to be a little oddball. 2.5/5.
I'll take you places the hand of man has not yet set foot...