It was a blast participating in the “The Best Films Hitchcock Never Made” blogathon, and a specific reason I like
getting involved with these things is to discover new films, or get my memory
jogged about others—one film the b-thon turned me onto is now a new fave: the
excellent Abandon Ship—and much of July was spent hunting down films that
were either directed or influenced by, if not contemporaries to the Master of
Suspense.
Saturday, July 28, 2012
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
In Brief, “The Scarlet Empress” Rules!
The Scarlet Empress (1934; Josef von Sternberg) is like
the dark side to The Wizard of Oz—but
better: because, at the end, this Dorothy doesn’t do something as stupid as
give up a magical kingdom—far from it…
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
LIE #33: Ken Russell’s Most Personal Film: 1972’s DVD MIA “Savage Messiah”
Savage Messiah (1972; Ken Russell) is probably infamous
director Ken Russell’s most personal film, one into which he invested roughly
$1m of his own money out of passion for the project as well as to maintain maximum
creative control, using the biopic—despite (or enhanced by)
“necessary exaggeration of the facts”—as the delivery
system for his artistic manifesto.
Russell has created an intense and vibrant, but
sometimes necessarily off-putting film, exploring volcanic creative talent,
warts and all.
Friday, July 20, 2012
LIE #32: There’s No Business Like Snow Business: 1957’s “The Abominable Snowman”
The Abominable Snowman (1957; Val Guest; written by
Nigel Kneale) is another of Nigel Kneale’s excellent genre pieces that combines
sci-fi, horror and adventure seamlessly into a film that provides much food for
thought—bringing in themes of parallel evolution, telepathy, and mankind’s
eventual suicide via nuclear annihilation—
While being a fun B-movie that’s perfect for the Summer:
During a heatwave, there’s nothing better to watch than suckers either freezing
to death or getting chased by Yetis.
Thursday, July 19, 2012
LIE #31: Stayin’ Alive in Chile: a review of 2008’s “Tony Manero”
Tony Manero (2008; Pablo Larrain) is not fun. It is probably
the bleakest and most “feel-bad” film I have seen in a long time, with a main character that’s such a rotten, soulless
bastard that the movie is often very uncomfortable to watch: he’s such a
beast, that you’ll feel dirty afterwards.
Set in 1978, had director Larrain shot this in 16mm
and then blown it up to 35mm, you would have that exact same sleazy-grimy
grainy-film texture you get from movies from that period, like The Last House on the Left and I Spit On Your Grave.
Most of all, though, Tony Manero is like a Chilean
version of Lodge Kerrigan’s creepy Clean, Shaven—and I mean that in the best way: Both films are unrelenting and grim character studies of disturbed and
violent loners; nor do they give obvious
reasons as to why the protagonists are such bleak examples of humankind. (While
very different, Tony Manero also
reminded me very much of Nicolas Winding Refn’s Bronson: each movie being absolutely focused on its complete and
unredeemable psychopath.)
While Raul, Tony
Manero’s Tony Manero wannabe, is a mystery in his details, the source of
his aberrant behavior is ever-present: the film says, this is what happens in the aftermath of a right-wing,
anti-intellectual, anti-everything military
junta taking over in a coup d’état.
Monday, July 16, 2012
INDEX: Three More Potential “Outer Limits” Episodes; and the Other Films of the First Half of July 2012
As I have mentioned before (in my post about They Live being the “best episode of Outer Limits never made”), there are decent,
original flicks that are some variation on the sci-fi and horror genres
that sometimes beg, no—scream out for the cutting room treatment, where, had they been trimmed to the average length of a one-hour TV show (48 to 52 minutes, depending on commercials), they would be perfect.
In the first half of July, LERNER INTERNATIONAL
watched twelve movies*, several of which fall into the category of “Potential Outer Limits Episodes;” let’s take a
look:
Sunday, July 15, 2012
LIE #29: Tyrone Power is God: 1957’s “Abandon Ship,” a New Favorite!
Abandon Ship (1957; Richard Sale) is a grim and monumental
tale of survival, specifically of Tough Choices in Bad Seas—and is another new
favorite, and a front-runner in the sweepstakes for “Best Old Film Discovered
This Year.”
Friday, July 13, 2012
LIE #28: DVD MIA “Liquid Sky”—Possibly the First Transrealist Film!
Liquid Sky (1982; Slava Tsukerman) is about aliens, both
human and extraterrestrial—and is pure unadulterated 200-proof Cinema of
Weirdness: a practically autobiographical No Wave/sci-fi murder mystery/comedy
of manners.
This is no Flash Gordon-style space battle sci-fi, oh
no: it’s much, much more: a sui generis
rara avis all the way, baby…
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
LIE #27: Alfred Hitchcock’s "Jaws"
This summary is not available. Please
click here to view the post.
Monday, July 9, 2012
Sunday, July 8, 2012
LIE #25: In Brief: “Hollywood Boulevard,” Where Dante, Arkush and Davison Got Started
Hollywood Boulevard (1976; Joe Dante & Allan
Arkush) is at best a curio—conceived as a bet between New World honcho Roger Corman
and producer Jon Davison (who later produced Airplane, Robocop and Starship
Troopers), that Davison and then-New World trailer editors Dante and Arkush
couldn’t put together a flick in 10 days, using short ends and footage swiped
from a dozen other New World action flicks.
Thursday, July 5, 2012
LIE #24: Free Your Mind and Your Analyst Will Follow: a review of Cronenberg’s “A Dangerous Method”
A Dangerous Method (2011; David Cronenberg) is another
superlative film from this most singular of directors, one that tackles
subjects familiar to the filmmaker’s fans (mad doctors; body-horror; the
mind-body split; the body in rebellion; the pain in our heads that never goes
away; sexuality and repression; misdirected creativity; and so on), but
presented in a thoughtful and precise manner showing Cronenberg’s maturation as
an artist and human being.
Cronenberg’s still blowing up heads; just in a new,
more intellectually rigorous manner.
Monday, July 2, 2012
LIE #23: The Index of June 2012
Perhaps more for me than you, here’s the index of
films screened by LERNER INTERNATIONAL in June.
Movies listed in order that they were seen….
Sunday, July 1, 2012
LIE# 22: Robert Ryan Is God—1953’s “Inferno,” a New Favorite!
Inferno (1953; Roy Ward Baker) is
the type of movie that would have been created by Albert Camus and Fred
Nietzsche on a Friday night tequila bender: an incredible, existential neo-noir
“man against nature fight for survival” that’s grounded by yet another tour de
force performance by legendary actor Robert Ryan.
It’s a taut thriller that continuously
ups the ante, with a unique structure, and nary a wasted moment.
Originally released in 3-D, and
rarely screened since then (I didn’t know the film even existed until a few
years ago), Inferno is a new fave of mine, and another “Great Older Film Discovery” for this year.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)