Posts Tagged ‘Drama’


The Box

November 12th, 2009 | article by | No Comments »
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postercompany: Warner Bros. Pictures
year: 2009
runtime: 116′
country: United States
director: Richard Kelly
cast: Cameron Diaz, James Marsden,
Frank Langella, James Rebhorn,
Holmes Osborne, Sam Oz Stone
out in wide release

Warning: Spoilers may lie ahead

I don’t believe I have ever seen a movie that confused me so much. I will not even attempt a complete plot summary as its disparate elements are so far flung and baffling that it would be a difficult task to condense them all into a review. The Box disappointed me because I was optimistic about seeing this movie after reading reviews and because the premise seemed to have a lot of potential. A couple is offered a choice: push a button and win one million dollars however pressing the button will cause the death of an unknown person. Based upon the story Button, Button by Richard Matheson, the premise conjured questions of morality: upon what do we base our morality, and are we capable of ever truly being moral entities?

The beginning of the movie seemed to deliver on that promise. A couple, Norma (Cameron Diaz) and Arthur (James Marsden), receives a box early one morning which contains a button mounted on a wooden base and covered in a glass dome. Later that day a man calling himself Mr. Steward arrives at their house and explains the conditions of the million dollar prize. They may not speak to anyone about the offer that has been made to them or they forfeit the million dollars, and Steward is not able to answer any questions about those who employ him. They also have only 24 hours to make their decision. This offer is immediately tempting because of the financial difficulties faced by the couple. After almost a full day of discussion, Norma pushes the button 15 minutes before Mr. Steward arrives to reclaim and reprogram the box.

From this point on the film diverges wildly from the Matheson story. What had begun as an interesting examination of the moral choices that human beings make, becomes a paranoid rambling that centers around a partnership between the United States government and Mr. Steward with Norma and Arthur at its center trying to desperately save themselves. It appears that for some reason Norma and Arthur should be somehow punished for choosing to push the button. The parallels between this couple and Adam and Eve are quite apparent throughout the film, and are highlighted by the existence of two other couples that are briefly present in the film. In all three cases the wife pushes the button while her husband sits next to her silently. One could be forgiven for assuming there is a misogynist bent to the film.

As for Mr. Steward, it appears that he was actually killed during a lightning storm while testing equipment for NASA. This has happened sometime before the events shown in the film take place. Sometime after being sent to the morgue, he is miraculously resuscitated and it is implied his body is being inhabited by another being. This new being, which has adopted Steward’s name and form, is conducting an experiment on behalf of a group which he refers to as “those whom control the lightning.” If a magical number of people choose to press the button and receive the million dollars these mysterious lightning people will decide to speed up the extinction of the human race. The assumption is that only moral species are allowed to survive, though no one seems to be offering this choice to lions, or dolphins, or spiders or any other animal that kills others of its species for personal gain (food, mates, space, etc). It is also never quite made clear what moral code this decision will be based on which in turn makes the movie somewhat hard to interpret.

With the powers granted to him by the lightning people, Steward mobilizes a large group of people he refers to as his employees. They distinguish themselves from the rest of the cast by doing things in unison, having nose bleeds, and walking around with their mouths open as if to catch insects. Their purpose in the film is never really made clear. Are they spying on the couple? Are they doing Steward’s laundry? We are never really told. A few of them do useful things like drive Steward’s car, deliver notes, or kidnap children but they are a fraction of the number that are actually “employed.” They seem to exist solely to create an atmosphere of paranoia a la INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS.

The ending of the film is the most bewildering part. Norma and Arthur’s son Walter is kidnapped, and through some ambiguous, though reversible, process he is rendered both deaf and blind. He is then deposited in the couple’s bathroom while his parent’s face their final choice. Because Norma pushed the button, they can either keep the million dollars and live with a blind and deaf son, or Arthur can shoot Norma in the heart at point blank range and their son can regain his sight and hearing. Either way Walter, who has had absolutely no active role in any of the decisions that his parents have made, suffers. Either he loses both of his parents or he exists in a world of silent darkness forever. Arthur and Norma decide that their son’s welfare is the most important thing, and Norma insists that Arthur shoot her. At the moment that Arthur pulls the trigger, another couple is deciding to push the reprogrammed button given to them by Mr. Steward. I can only assume that her decision to sacrifice herself is a way to atone for her more selfish decision to accept the million dollars.

At this point, then, it becomes unclear who actually is responsible for Norma’s death. Is it her husband or is it the new couple who pressed the button? This has huge implications for the rest of the film. One presumes that because Norma pressed the button and she is guilty of someone’s death that for justice to be served she has to die. However, as we learn during the film, the woman that was killed when Norma pushed her button was shot at point blank range by her husband. Who, then, is responsible for the woman’s death – Norma, or the husband who ultimately pulled the trigger? After seeing the ending, the rest of the movie seemed to fall apart. None of the obscure Sartre references help much either.

Lastly, for powerful supernatural beings, these lightning folks don’t seem to know much about experimental protocol. They could have learned plenty about human morality by simply observing us, and it would have saved them a lot of effort and money in making little wooden boxes to send out to unsuspecting people and in kidnapping and brainwashing dozens of people. In addition the lightning beings will only choose couples who are married and have one child. So as a result of the actions of this specific group of people, the rest of us will be either doomed or saved.

Aside from the gaping plot holes the movie makes the mistake of being much too broad. It attempts to integrate too many plot devices and twists and eventually loses the elegance and simplicity of the original premise. This has the additional consequence of making the message of the film rather obscure. Is the ultimate lesson that it’s bad to kill people even if you don’t know them? There are children’s books that make the point more succinctly. Instead of interrogating the motives for making a selfish versus selfless choice, it explodes into conspiratorial silliness. If the premise interests you do yourself a favor and simply read the Matheson story. As is the case with I Am Legend, the textual version of the story offers so much more than the version adapted for the screen.



Carriers

September 11th, 2009 | article by | 7 Comments »
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company: Paramount Vantage
year: 2009
runtime: 84′
country: United States
directors: Alex and David Pastor
cast: Lou Taylor Pucci, Chris Pine,
Piper Parabo, Emily VanCamp
writers: Alex and David Pastor
cinematographer: Benoit Debie
Visit the awful official movie site
Out in limited release in the USA

The world is devastated by an unstoppable plague that leaves everyone who contracts it dead in its wake.  Four young people travel the backroads of the southwest, headed for the safety of an isolated beach motel on the Gulf Coast while following a five-step plan to avoid infection.

Early advertising for CARRIERS, currently in a disparagingly limited release, passed it off as a topical shocker about a lethal outbreak of the avian flu while the latest trailer makes it appear to be just another zombie-pocalypse. “The only thing more dangerous than the disease . . . are the carriers,” it says before a seemingly dead man’s eyes burst open.  It’s a pity that Paramount Vantage couldn’t think of a more effective [and honest] manner of advertising the film, as CARRIERS has nothing to do with either the avian flu or roving hordes of the undead.

The truth of the matter, and the reason I find its manner of release so appalling, is this:  CARRIERS is quite simply one of the best films about the death of man ever produced – a stripped down and intelligent character driven apocalypse picture that creates a palpable sense of existential dread without resorting to gross-out violence or cheap thrills.

carriers_ver2The Pastor brothers, a duo of Spanish film-makers who pull double duty here as both writers and directors, play their story as a thematic homage to classic end-of-the-world vehicles of the past and wisely avoid the contrivances of the action-packed and empty headed post-MAD MAX thrill fests that now dominate the genre.  The focus of CARRIERS is purely on its main characters, all of whom the Pastor brothers take the time to lend considerable depth and none of whom fall into the teenaged monster-bait stereotype.

CARRIERS eschews backstory about the plague itself, leaving its menace enigmatic and negating the need for any kind of bloated scientific discourse on the subject.  What is shown of its aftermath is enough to convince of its destructive potential – emptied city streets, abandoned CDC encampments, and waste disposal trucks piled high with body bags.  As dangerous as the plague itself are those who are clinging to survival, as evidenced by the sight of a murdered man crucified on a farmhouse windmill with a sign reading “Chincs brought it” draped across his chest.

In-fighting among clusters of humanity has provided the primary dramatic momentum for apocalypse films since Arch Obelers FIVE from 1951, with man’s inability to deal with himself often proving far more deadly than the overriding threat of radiation sickness, flesh-eating zombies, etc.  CARRIERS takes the opportunity to turn that convention on its head in one scene, in which disagreement among a band of plastic-wrapped gun-toting survivalists allows for the escape of our main cast.  Such quarrelling will surely mean the end of that group, but our heroes will live to drive another day.

carriers_3The tension among our protagonists results from their own humanity.  Allowing a father [Christopher Meloni in a big supporting role] and his infected daughter to travel with them in the plastic and duct-tape sealed back of an SUV invites the virus into the presumed safety of their group.  It predictably spreads, giving the uninfected no choice but to make necessary [but no less horrific for their necessity] decisions – to leave sick friends to die on the side of the road, and worse.  When the final survivors reach the beach they are despondent, their humanity crushed by what came before, and hardly in a position to rebuild the foundations of civilization.  They wander the ruins, remembering what was while coming to terms with what is – waiting for the ever-dimmer flame of mankind to snuff itself out.

The Pastor brothers, in an interview with Twitchfilm, provided some insight into their inspirations here – John Wyndham’s superior disaster novel THE DAY OF THE TRIFFIDS and Geoff Murphy’s inconsistent but undeniably haunting THE QUIET EARTH.  Their film happily reminds of the best moments from scores of its apocalyptic predecessors [THE LAST MAN ON EARTH, THE WORLD THE FLESH AND THE DEVIL, DAWN OF THE DEAD and more] while managing to far surpass many of them in its overall effectiveness.  To take a premise that’s been part of cinema DNA for the better part of the past 80 years and mold such a fresh, effective dramatic thriller from it is no small task, but the Pastor brothers have done so with style to spare.  Keep an eye on these guys – if there’s any fairness in the world then they’re going places.

Whether or not mainstream audiences will be willing to embrace a quiet and deliciously restrained end of the world effort with under-acheiving big-budget trash like 2012 on its way is something we may never know, as Paramount has all but doomed the film’s theatrical life through its underfunded and blatantly fallacious advertising campaign.  I expect that most of you reading this will have to wait until CARRIERS makes its way to home video to see it at all.  My advice is to check your local theater listings and make a point to catch it that way, if possible [it's playing matinees at Block E Kerasotes here in Minneapolis through next Thursday].  The Pastor brothers have crafted something special here, and it deserves to be seen.



Wool 100%

August 20th, 2009 | article by | 2 Comments »
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The Klock Worx Co. [2006] 100′
country: Japan
director: Mia Tominaga
cast: Kyoko Kishida, Kazuko Yoshiyuki,
Ayu Kitaura, Carolina Kaneda, Eiko Koike
dvd: Cult Epoch [2008] $24.98
Dual layer DVD9 / NTSC / Region 1
subtitles: English [feature only]
Order this film from Amazon.com

Ume [Kyoko Kishida] and Kame [Kazuko Yoshiyuki] are sisters who, since their childhood, have been obsessed with collecting and caring for the things other people throw away.  Now asocial elderly women, their daily routine revolves entirely around their finds – which have quite literally engulfed their large home.  One morning while wandering about town they discover a hamper full of red wool yarn and decide to take it home to add to their collection.  But far from being a benign bit of abandoned junk, the yarn attracts a young girl [Ayu Kitaura] to their home . . . a young girl who spends all of her waking hours in a sisyphian routine of knitting the perfect sweater and bursts into ear-shattering hysterics every time she realizes she must knit it again.

The introduction of this stranger into their set way of life is understandably troublesome for Ume and Kame, particularly when the young girl [nicknamed "Aminaoshi", or "Knit-again", by the women] takes to disorganizing and outright destroying their junk collection.  But the old women soon realize that the more things they remove from the house, the more they unravel about their own past and the often traumatic events that have led up to their present circumstances.

Mia Tominaga’s WOOL 100%, which she both wrote and directed, is another in a long line of fantastic genre-defying Japanese feature films that have appeared over the past two decades.  Steeped in its own allegorical fantasy mythology and lacking in traditional narrative sensibilities, WOOL is both welcoming and abstract – intrinsically watchable but so demanding of thought that many audiences will undoubtedly be left scratching their heads.

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In style and subtext, WOOL reminds of Nobuhiko Obayashi’s eccentric coming-of-age horror fairy tale HOUSE from 1977 – particularly when various items in Ume and Kame’s huge home begin attacking their ever-knitting guest.  Both films focus on the trials and traumas of growing up, though WOOL’s perspective is ostensibly the opposite of Obayashi’s film.  The two sisters here are traumatized at a young age when their mother dies during pregnancy, with the second World War throwing a figurative wrench into their burgeoning sexuality by destroying the only young man they’ve come to know.  Thusly the two begin a reclusive lifestyle, walling themselves in behind a mountain of remnants of other people’s lives.

Enter Aminaoshi, the first human being the sisters have willingly [even if not at first] associated themselves with in decades.  It is she who allows them to see the things of the house for what they are, less protectors [as the opening narration describes them] than the wardens of a prison of their own making.  As the wall comes tumbling down and Ume and Kame’s routine unravels, they begin to remember the past and, more importantly, start to realize what they have to do.  The conclusion has them [young once more] abandoning the house in the wake of a cheerful Aminaoshi-led firestorm, following a thread of red yarn wherever it may lead them.

The treatment of Aminaoshi is interesting as well.  When she first appears the sisters mark her down as an object like the rest they’ve found and even give her a cute name, adding a drawing of their conception of her to one of their piles of collection scrapbooks.  Their perception defines her existence in the house in the beginning, and the inanimate objects take on an unlikely life in her presence and fight for domination over her.  She is nearly eaten by a blanket and a TV set and is pummeled senseless by a large teeter-tottering doll.  This culminates in an animated showdown between Aminaoshi and some of the home’s more recognizable denizens, a battle that ends with Aminaoshi beginning her destructive rampage through the sisters’ possessions and affirming the importance of the living over the inert.

Tominaga directs with considerable flair and a truly unique visual style, and its easy to lose yourself in the impressive visuals.  She keeps the overall tone of the picture light and whimsical, aside from a few key moments, with excellent results overall.  Her screenplay, which manages to connect just about every story element to a few spools of vivid red yarn, is charming if a bit forced at times.  I was hard pressed to find any nagging issues with the production side of things at all, but I’m a sucker for any film that starts with two old women scaring the bejesus out of a youth choir.  I find it a real pity that Tominaga hasn’t directed more in the three years since WOOL saw release and can only hope that we see more of her in the future.

Special mention needs be made of the fantastic cast Tominaga assembled for her debut feature.  Big-time actresses Kiyoko Kishida [perhaps best known for playing the eponymous WOMAN IN THE DUNES in the 1964 Hiroshi Teshigahara film] and Kazuko Yoshiyuki [Seki in Nagisa Oshima's EMPIRE OF PASSION from 1978] are phenomenal picks to play the delightfully bizarre older sisters.  Both actresses had highly successful careers that had spanned at least five decades at the time WOOL was produced, and Yoshiyuki is still working in film today.  This was Kishida’s final performance before her passing in December 2006, and it’s a fine swan song.  Equally good in her role as Aminaoshi is relative newcomer Ayu Kitaura, who should have a long career ahead of her if her work in WOOL is any indication.

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Cult Epoch should be commended for giving WOOL 100% a North American DVD release at all, though the disc has its fair share of detracting factors.  The transfer [mis-advertised as full frame] is a reasonably detailed interlaced 16:9 enhanced job with colors and contrast both well rendered.  There is minor ghosting evident at times as well as a few video artifacts, but this appears to be more the fault of the DV source format [transferred to 35mm for theatrical distribution] than the disc’s dual layer encoding.  The pleasant Dolby Digital stereo audio track is augmented with intelligible and highly readable English subtitles.

The disc only really falls flat in the supplemental department.  We get a set of trailers that are of lesser quality than the feature and a brief behind-the-scenes docu running 17:29.  The latter is particularly troublesome as Cult Epoch has neglected to provide any subtitling options for it, making it a useless add-on for the vast majority of the North American DVD market.  A brief stills gallery rounds out the related supplements, and a few unrelated trailers for other available Cult Epoch DVDs finish off the disc proper.  This release of WOOL 100% retails at $24.98, which seems high to me [particularly given the lack of viable supplements] but is still a better bargain than the pricey and subtitle-devoid Japanese disc from 2007.

WOOL 100% is a real charmer as far as I’m concerned and one of the best films I’ve seen in a while.  This deliciously off-kilter and undeniably original fantasy isn’t going to be for everyone, but I think those willing to give it more than a passing thought will find it a rewarding experience indeed.  Highly recommended!



Let the Right One In

June 27th, 2009 | article by | No Comments »
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EFTI [2008] 115′
country: Sweden
director: THOMAS ALFREDSON
cast: KARE HEDEBRANT, LINA LEANDERSON,
cast: PER RAGNAR, HENRICK DAL
Magnolia Home Entertainment [2009] $34.98
region free | single layer BD25 | supplements in SD
Order this disc from AMAZON.COM

The vampire sub-genre has been in a downward spiral ever since the heyday of British horror house Hammer – Anne Rice [and subsequent filmed adaptations of her material] kept the Gothic aesthetic popularized by those original Hammer pieces but birthed the emotive and mopish blood suckers most of us have since learned to hate. Francis Ford Coppola’s imperfect but none the less intriguing DRACULA was the last film of the type to interest viewers for reasons other than its picture-perfect cast, and the days of Werner Herzog’s visionary take on Murnau’s NOSFERATU seemed long since passed by the time teen hit TWILIGHT struck box office gold while driving another rusty nail into a sub-genre already six feet under.

That’s what I thought, at least, until a good friend pointed me towards a trailer for the film covered here today. Being about as in-touch with the modern horror scene as a sea otter I’d not heard of LET THE RIGHT ONE IN prior to that, and the trailer had my interest thoroughly piqued by the time its minute and forty two seconds were up. I was a bit irritated to discover that I’d long missed any opportunity for theatrical screenings locally – but irritation quickly turned to anticipation once I realized LTROI was due for release on home video just a few short weeks later. I put the release at the top of my Netflix cue and waited – that I’ve since felt the need to pick it up for my own home video collection should give some idea of my initial reaction.

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Night Train to Mundo Fine

June 26th, 2009 | article by | No Comments »
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a.k.a. RED ZONE CUBA
Hollywood Star Pictures [ 1961 ] 85′
country: United States
director: COLEMAN FRANCIS
cast: COLEMAN FRANCIS, ANTHONY CARDOZA,
cast: HAROLD SAUNDERS, JOHN CARRADINE

“Griffin . . . ran all the way to hell with a penny and a broken cigarette . . .”

Coleman Francis never directed a happy film – I suspect that this has a lot to do with the fact that the director, who spent his most formative years in the midst of the Great Depression and is purported to have been an alcoholic, was never quite happy himself. All three of his bizarre films focus on the very worst aspects of human nature – greed, corruption, and the desire to harm others. NIGHT TRAIN TO MUNDO FINE [better known as RED ZONE CUBA] is no exception. Produced in 1961 and released in 1966, the film is a catalog of man’s inhumanity towards man.

The thin yet convoluted plot [a trademark of all three of the films Francis directed] follows Landis [producer Cardoza] and Cook, two down and out ex cons just trying to make right by themselves and the law in the desert southwest. Enter Griffin [Francis himself], a career criminal on the run from the law. Motivated by greed alone, Francis convinces the other two to sign up with the army, currently offering $1000 for troops to mount an invasion of Cuba [given that the film is set in 1961, this is obviously a stab at the failed Bay of Pigs invasion in April of that year]. The plan is to take the money and run, but things go bad and the poorly trained troops are sent off to Cuba just the same.

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Charisma

June 26th, 2009 | article by | No Comments »
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Nikkatsu Co. / King Record Co. [1999] 104′
country: Japan
director: KIYOSHI KUROSAWA
cast: KOJI YAKUSHO, KIROYUKI IKEUCHI,
cast: REN OSUGI, YORIKO DOUGUCHI

While negotiating a hostage situation between an environmental activist and a government official, Yabuike (Koji Yakusho) has a brief moment of uncertainty that results in both men dying. Given , he leaves a brief message with his family and has one of his colleagues drop him off at long abandoned bus stop outside of Tokyo.

Written a full 10 years prior to making it to the screen, CHARISMA is without a doubt one of Kurosawa’s most bizarre films. Whereas the blend of story, location, and meditation on various social concerns are well balanced in films like CURE [1997], KAIRO [2001], and DOPPELGANGER [2003], the latter of the two take hold early on in CHARISMA and rarely, if ever, let the first get in their way. The result is an intelligent and utterly compelling film that manages to remain nearly completely incomprehensible for the duration of its running time. Kurosawa himself admits that he has come to no clear conclusions as to what the film means – leaving CHARISMA well open to varying interpretations.

The screenplay for CHARISMA, first completed in 1989, earned Kiyoshi Kurosawa a spot at the Sundance Workshop – an experience that he described as a ‘ precious and special time’ for him. It also taught him the differences between film making in American and film making in Japan, particularly in regards to characterization. Particularly in the case of CHARISMA, the main character quite often has no set goal or reason for what he is doing. He simply exists while various polarized factions (we’ll get to them in the synopsis shortly) run amok around him. This was in direct contradiction to the standard operating procedure in American film making, where the action a character takes is typically to progress the story or his character towards a specific place.

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Bright Future

June 26th, 2009 | article by | No Comments »
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a.k.a. Akarui Mirai
companies: Kock Worx Co.
and Uplink Co.
year: 2005
runtimes: 115′ / 92′
country: Japan
director: Kiyoshi Kurosawa
cast: Joe Odagiri, Tadanobu Asano,
Tatsuya Fuji, Takashi Sasano
order this film from Amazon.com

“I’ve always had lots of dreams when I sleep. The dreams have always been about the future. The future in my dreams was always bright with hope and peace. So I’ve always loved to sleep. That is, until just recently…”

With this brief narration by Nimura (Joe Odagiri), Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s enigmatic film AKARUI MIRAI (literally BRIGHT FUTURE) begins. After reaching his zenith for the horror genre with 2001′s KAIRO, Kurosawa’s latest films (keep in mind that I have yet to see LOFT [2005] or SAKEBI [2006] as they are not yet readily available) have wandered still further from any genre expectations. Alienating his films from 2003 still further is the fact that they were both shot in either high definition or standard definition digital video (DOPPELGANGER, the second of the two, was filmed strictly in HD while AKARUI MIRAI was filmed utilizing a combination of them), giving each of them a unique visual edge not present in the films produced prior to them.

While CHARISMA [1999] may be the most confusing film yet produced by him, AKARUI MIRAI is definitely in the running for second place. Considered by many to be beautiful but meaningless, by others to be beautiful and allegorical, and by still others as nothing but pretentious trash, this film may be even more divisive and inaccessible than the previous and arguably more nonsensical one. Much of this divisiveness is in reaction to the narrative of the film which flows in a very organic manner but not towards any specific place. The ending, as well, is certainly in the running for being one of Kurosawa’s most cryptic. In the end, even with all of these potential issues, Kurosawa has crafted another thought provoking and beautiful film that is bound to have viewers debating for decades to come.

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The Hairdresser’s Husband

April 27th, 2009 | article by | No Comments »
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a.k.a. La Mari de la Coiffeuse
company: Lambart Productions
year: 1990
runtime: 82′
country: France
director: Patrice Leconte
cast: Jean Rochefort, Anna Galiena,
Roland Bertin, Maurice Chevit
dvd company: Severin Films
release date: April 28, 2009
retail price: $29.95
disc details: Region 1 / NTSC / dual layer
Order this disc from Amazon.com
reviewed from a screener provided
by Severin Films LLC

Young Antoine has a fixation on the local hairdresser, a buxom red head whose shop he visits at every available opportunity – he even tells his father he intends to marry a hairdresser when he gets older. His childhood fantasy grows into a lifelong obsession when the hairdresser of his youth kills herself with an overdose of barbiturates, leaving no explanation behind. Antoine grows up following his father’s advice – that life is simple, and that all dreams can be fulfilled with the appropriate dose of desire.

He is middle aged when he first encounters Mathilde, a younger woman who operates a small salon. Antoine wastes no time in letting her know of his desires – proposing to her immediately after his first hair cut. Mathilde is unsure of how to take his proposal at first, but upon his return visit to the shop accepts. Her insecurities are perfectly matched to Antoine’s fetishistic obsession, and the two begin a simple, happy life together. But Mathilde’s insecurity returns time and again, leaving one wondering if the formative tragic event of his childhood might repeat itself . . .

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The Godless Girl

December 19th, 2008 | article by | 2 Comments »
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company: Pathe Exchange
year: 1928
runtime: 113′ / 128′
country: United States
director: Cecil B. DeMille
cast: Lina Basquette, Marie Prevost,
Tom Keene, Noah Beery, Eddie Quillan
order this film from Amazon.com

THE GODLESS GIRL has the distinction of being Cecil B. DeMille’s final silent picture as well as his first talkie – originally produced and released in 1928 to less than enthusiastic box office returns, a new sound epilogue was shot [these additional scenes were shot by Fritz Feld with no supervision from DeMille - these sound elements have been preserved by the UCLA Film and Television Archive*] and tacked on for an equally unsuccessful re-release effort in 1929. Photoplay Productions [Kevin Brownlow and Patrick Stanbury] in conjunction with Film 4, the Cecil B. DeMille Foundation, and George Eastman House recently restored the original silent version of the film from the director’s own nitrate print with a new orchestral score provided by the remarkable Carl Davis – it was this version that I had the fortune of seeing when it aired on Turner Classic Movies recently [the restoration is available as part of a DVD box set in the US, though without the fine Davis score].

It is not generally known that there are Atheist Societies using the schools of the country as their battle-ground – attacking, through the Youth of the Nation, the beliefs that are sacred to most of the people. And no fanatics are so bitter as youthful fanatics.

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J’Accuse

February 18th, 2008 | article by | No Comments »
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a.k.a. THAT THEY MAY LIVE / I ACCUSE
Forrester-Parant Productions [1938] 125′
country: France
director: ABEL GANCE
cast: VICTOR FRANCEN, LINE NORO,
cast: MARIE LOU, JEAN-MAX

An overturned statue of the crucified Christ lies in a contaminated fountain – a dead dove, downed by a stray bullet, sits at the fountains edge. A mortar unceremoniously rips through the head of the statue and tosses the dove into the filthy water of the fountain, where it sinks slowly to the bottom. “Shit! Aren’t you tired of playing around with my carcass!” screams a wounded soldier, tossed about by shell fire, in the opening line. We are then introduced to other soldiers – tired men in haggard uniforms forced to clean themselves as best they can in the polluted water of the fountain.

So begins I ACCUSE (the literal translation of the French title J’ACCUSE – the film was released in a truncated form in the USA in 1939 under the title THAT THEY MAY LIVE), less a remake than an expansion of the latter two thirds of director Gance’s 1919 film J’ACCUSE! The thesis of the piece is evident from the very beginning: This is what war looks like, Gance tells us. This is what you’ve all forgotten. Further evidencing this latter point is the handwritten introduction by Gance himself – it reads, roughly, “This film is dedicated to the war dead of tomorrow, who will no doubt watch it without recognizing in it the face of their own times.”

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