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André Dussollier and Sabine Azéma |
Les Herbes folles
In a Violent Nature
Chris Nash's In a Violent Nature is an extremely gory horror film that, while it falls short of being a satisfying picture, displays promise. A group of youngsters partying in the woods find a gold locket in a disused shed and pocket it. This resurrects a long dead perp who arises from his grave to stalk and kill those he believes have stolen his beloved memento. That's about it plot wise and the film's longueurs are sure to alienate a lot of viewers. Long stretches of the flick are dolly shots with the camera positioned behind the vengeful fiend as he slowly comes upon his victims. This maximizes the film's mood of dread, we usually see the victims before they realize what calumny is about to befall them, but it also gives the film an uncannily meditative feel. The viewer is forced to follow the protagonist in his relentless quest, passing by and ignoring the gorgeous scenery of Ontario.
The victims are barely sketched as characters. There is a long circle dolly sequence around a campfire that gives us a glimpse of them and the back story of the legendary killer. The sequence may seem unnecessarily showy, but it serves a few purposes. It serves to camouflage the dramatic inadequacies of the cast of this B movie. More importantly, it serves as a contrast to the vertical tracks of the killer. The vertical movement of the camera behind the camera emphasizes his solitary single mindedness. The circular track of the young people around the campfire emphasizes their sense of community. It is Nash's attention to visual detail that intrigues me, though I will admit that Nash's direction of dialogue is mostly woeful. A long monologue that functions as the film's coda pretty much stops the picture in its tracks. Still, there is enough intriguing footage in In a Violent Nature to make me look forward to another feature from Mr. Nash.
Wicked
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Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande |
The Best of Val Kilmer
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1959-2025 |
What Did the Lady Forget?
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Michiko Kuwano |
Stray Dogs
Quick Takes, March 2025
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Mikey Madison |
Gints Zilbalodis' Flow, the Latvian film which recently won Best Animated Feature at the Oscars, follows the adventures of a cat a in flood filled world devoid of humans. The film meanders pleasantly. The lack of a strong narrative lets the viewer be immersed in Zilbalodis' 360 degree world building which is similar to that of a video game.
Scott Derrickson's The Gorge, currently streaming on Apple+, is mindless, yet enjoyable sci-fi pulp. The film stars Anya Taylor-Joy and Miles Taylor as professional assassins tasked with culling mutants which were the result of a chemical weapons mishap. Thanks to the chemistry of the two leads, the film succeeds as a romance even though its premise is thoroughly idiotic. Ms. Taylor-Joy, in particular, has never been as playful and frisky. Sigourney Weaver is in support in a paycheck role.
Errol Morris' Chaos: The Manson Murders is a succinct summation of the notorious cases. Youngsters with little knowledge of these examples of grisly true crime and 60s paranoia will be the most edified. Morris is still a nervy director and he gives the film the tabloid style the subject demands: the viewer is treated to shots of glass eyes and maggots. The primary talking head (Tom O'Neill), a co-writer of the book which is the basis of the film, attempts to link Manson with the CIA's MKUltra program. The direct link between the two, even Mr. O'Neill admits, has not emerged.
Ken Loach's The Old Oak, like all the British veteran's films, teeters on a tightrope between warm humanism and sententious socialist solidarity. A northern English community welcomes Syrian refugees, some warmly, like the owner of a titular pub, and some not so warmly. Loach types his nationalistic villains so broadly that they resemble cartoons. The acting varies wildly. I did like the Durham Cathedral sequence and the concluding glimpse of that town's Miners Gala. The latter would prove to be a fitting cap to his career if this should prove to be his swan song. I will give Loach credit for staying true to his Marxist principles even to the point of getting tossed out of the UK Labour party.
Dominque Abel and Fiona Martin's The Falling Star is a lame Belgian comedy, seemingly a mixture of Tati, Kaurismäki, and Quaaludes. The cinematography and production design are assuredly smart, yet the picture is thoroughly unenjoyable. The spirited cast is up for anything, especially dance numbers, but the plot wouldn't pass muster for a Monogram Pictures musical. A film that strains for humor.
Edward Berger's Conclave is a thriller that doesn't thrill. Full of middlebrow musings on impotent issues, it is the most boring commercial film to feature the Sistine Chapel since Carol Reed's The Agony and the Ecstasy. The elderly actors make this static spectacle watchable, particularly Stanley Tucci, but Berger's direction is as anodyne as it was in his version of All Quiet on the Western Front. The film's moral stands, against religious fundamentalism and gender rigidity, are feeble rather than febrile. Ultimately, an underwhelming filmic experience.
Best Performances of 2024
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Ilinca Manolache |
Pursued
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Robert Mitchum, Teresa Wright, and Judith Anderson |
Seraphine
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Yolande Moreau as Séraphine de Senlis |
King Lear
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Jean-Luc Godard in King Lear |
Last Summer, Queen of Hearts
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Samuel Kircher and Léa Drucker |
Two Claudette Colbert Features: Three-Cornered Moon and Maid of Salem
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Claudette Colbert in Three Cornered Moon |
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Donald Meek and Colbert in Maid of Salem |
Heretic
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Hugh Grant |
Scott Beck and Bryan Woods' Heretic is a slightly above average horror flick. The film's initial premise is intriguing, but the film soon degenerates into more standard fare. Two Mormon missionaries (Sophie Thatcher and Chloe East) are invited into the house of an older man who initially seems charming, but soon proves to be throughly sinister. This character, in an inspired bit of casting, is played by Hugh Grant who has always been a fount of surface charm. Grant's character has an axe to grind against organized religion and Mr. Woods and Mr. Beck's script provides him with witty rants that are one part pop culture and one part The Golden Bough. Mr. Grant is up to the challenge and eschews vanity to finally look his age, in stark contrast to the very young damsels in distress.
Ms. East and Ms. Thatcher are also both quite effective. I rate Ms. Thatcher, so good in Yellowjackets, to be a real comer. Her fierceness reminds me of the young Nicola Pagett. Unfortunately, by the time the two young women discover the nastiness in Mr. Grant's basement, the film peters out into a routine thriller. It is too late to count them out, but it seems that Mr. Beck and Mr. Woods' talents lay more in script writing than direction. With a few exceptions, the images in Heretic tend to evaporate in one's mind's eye rather stick. The climax of Heretic, thus, seems more pro forma than terrifying.
Yella
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Nina Hass in transit |
Symphonie pour un massacre
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Jean Rochefort |
The Devil and the Daylong Brothers
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Three Brothers: Jordan Bolden, Brendan Bradley and Nican Robinson |
The mythology of The Devil and the Daylong Brothers is Satanic gobbledygook. Three brothers from different mothers are paying off their Dad's debt to his satanic majesty by dispatching those whose time it is to pay for their Faustian bargains. Last on their list is Dad who sold his soul to be the ultimate blues singer. Now that said father is played by a veteran actor/singer most famous for crooning the excruciating "I'm Easy" to various femmes in Nashville is problematic to say the least, but I'm not going to pick the nit of the white bluesman here and Keith Carradine acquits himself extremely well. Most of the acting is quite good for a B movie, though Jordon Bolden seems to be doing a bizarre Rami Malek impression. The best vocals are provided by Rainey Qualley, Margaret's sis and the sole femme (fatale) here, better known in music circles as Rainsford. The Devil and the Daylong Brother has opened to little fanfare by streaming on Apple TV, but it is vigorous cinema for those who don't mind an impaled eyeball or two.
La bestia debe morir
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Narciso Ibáñez Menta and Laura Hidalgo |
Quick Takes, February 2025
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Something is askew in Dos Monjes |
The Zellner Brothers' Sasquatch Sunset feels like an extended, R rated version of the "Messin with Sasquatch" beef jerky advertisements, yet manages to transcend its lowly aspirations with humor and warmth. The flick is a decided advancement over their previous one, the stillborn Damsel. Riley Keough and Jesse Eisenberg and their fellow Bigfoots are to be commended for the all out zeal they bring to their performances. In the tradition of Keaton's Three Ages.
Francis Galluppi's The Last Stop in Yuma County snuck into a few theaters in late 2023 to little notice, but it is a solid B film. Disparate strangers are stranded at a remote diner with two bank robbers in this desert noir which is beholden to Hemingway, The Petrified Forest, Hitchcock, Tarantino, and numerous B pictures from the 1950s. Galluppi's saving grace is a sense of humor and film craft. The fine acting ensemble keeps things from getting too cartoonish, especially Jim Cummings, Jocelin Donahue, and Gene Jones.
Yasujirō Ozu's That Night's Wife, released in 1930, is a silent crime melodrama that features a sickly child, a loving wife and a tortured husband driven to robbery in order provide for his family. The scenario is hokey, undynamic, and bathetic, the pacing extremely slow for a 65 minute picture. A kindly policeman corners the miscreant in his apartment where we are stuck for half of the picture's running time. Intimations of future genius are apparent, but this is lesser Ozu.
Frank Perry's Ladybug Ladybug is nuclear war drama that opened after the Kennedy assassination in 1963. A rural elementary school in Pennsylvania sends its charges home under the threat of annihilation. The film gauges the various reactions as the teachers and students face the prospect of impending doom. Nancy Marchand and Estelle Parsons have their moments, but Perry's juvenile cast is shaky. The film captures the dread and paranoia of the Cold War era, but I found it to be a painfully earnest and thin anti-nuke screed.
The Best of Gene Hackman
Oh, Canada
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Richard Gere |
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