Posts Tagged ‘United Kingdom’


Cat Girl

May 27th, 2011 | article by | No Comments »
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Year: 1957    Runtime: 70′  Director: Alfred Shaughnessy
Writers: Lou Rusoff  Cinematography: Peter Hennessy
Cast: Barbara Shelley, Robert Ayres, Kay Callard, Ernest Milton, Jack May, Lily Kann, Paddy Webster

After nine years away, Leonora Johnson (Barbara Shelley) returns to her ancestral home on insistence of her uncle Edmund Brandt (Ernest Milton). Leonora has bad memories of the place and her uncle’s habit of making her life a decidedly cheerless one. Why, he even managed to torpedo her love to student of medicine Brian Marlowe (Robert “Bland” Ayres). Somehow, the end of her first big love had set Leonora on a path to a horrible taste in men (not that Brian’s exactly like winning the lottery, as we will see), and now she’s freshly married to Richard (Jack May), a semi-professional gold digger who is such a prick he even takes his not-so-secret lover Cathy (Paddy Webster) with them on the visit to Uncle.

As luck will have it, Leonora meets Brian again right before she arrives at her uncle’s. Brian is now a full-grown psychiatrist (though, as it will later turn out, a crap one) and happily married to Dorothy (Kay Callard), which comes as a bit of a shock to Leonora who is quite obviously not at all over her love for the guy.

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Psychomania

October 20th, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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Year: 1973    Company: Benmar Productions,  Scotia-Barber   Runtime: 90′
Director: Don Sharp   Writers: Julian Zimet, Arnaud d’Usseau    Cinematography: Ted Moore
music: John Cameron    Cast: Nicky Henson, Mary Larkin, George Sanders, Jacki Webb, Ann Michelle
Disc company: Severin Films   Video: 16:9 progressive 1.78:1 / 1.66:1    Audio: DD 2.0 English
Subtitles: None   Disc: Dual Layer DVD9   Release Date: 10/26/2010   Product link: Amazon.com
Reviewed from a screener provided by Severin Films, LLC

This occult action mish-mash arrived on US screens as The Death Wheelers, courtesy of a British film industry reeling from the absence of outside investment.  As with so many of the z-budget independents coming out of Britain at the time (Peter Newbrook’s production of Crucible of Terror and Cornel Wilde’s No Blade of Grass come to mind), the names involved are often well known.

Director Don Sharp (Curse of the Fly, The Brides of Fu Manchu) was a well-established genre regular on his way to a successful career in television and writers Julian Zimet (Crack in the World) and Arnaud d’Usseau (Horror Express) were no strangers either.  The cast is likewise filled with familiar names – television and theater actor Nicky Henson (Syriana) plays the leader of a suicidal band of social miscreants while George Sanders (Village of the Damned, The Picture of Dorian Gray) spends his final role playing with magic toads and reading from the not-so-good book.  Even stunt coordinator Gerry Crampton and stunt man Rocky Taylor, both mainstays of the James Bond franchise, are recognizable.

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Resurrecting the Street Walker

September 24th, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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company: 2nd Floor Productions
year: 2009
runtime: 80′
director: Ozgur Uyanik
cast: James Powell, Tom Shaw,
Joanne Ferguson, Christina Helena,
Pinar Ögün
writer: Ozgur Uyanik
cinematography: Paul Englefield
music: Edwin Sykes
Not on home video in the USA

James Parker (James Powell) is an aspiring filmmaker working as an unpaid serf aka “runner” for a shady little movie production company to get his foot in the door of professional film work by letting himself be exploited. This job and the fact that his dreams of becoming a filmmaker don’t seem to lead anywhere  put quite a strain on him and the relationship with his family, who are the ones paying for his livelihood after all.

James’ friend, the film student Marcus (Tom Shaw), films him in his attempts at making it, and what Marcus is shooting is the basis of the documentary Resurrecting The Street Walker purports to be. Intercut with Marcus’ footage are interviews with Marcus himself and the other people in James’ life hinting on something dreadful James seems to have done.

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Centurion

September 3rd, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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company: Celedor Films
year: 2010
runtime: 98′
director: Neil Marshall
cast: Michael Fassbender, Olga Kurylenko,
Dominic West, Liam Cunningham,
David Morissey, Imogen Poots
writer: Neil Marshall
cinematography: Sam McCurdy
music: Ilan Eshkeri
Pre-order this film from Amazon.com:
Blu-ray | DVD

It’s the year 117. The Roman conquest of Britain is going rather badly. Rome has been forced to a standstill by the Pictish tribes under their king Gorlacon (Ulrich Thomsen), because her military isn’t able to adapt to the guerrilla fighting techniques of her enemy. In a desperate last attempt at winning the war and saving his position, governor Agricola (Paul Freeman) decides to send the 9th legion under general Virilus (Dominic West) north to find and kill the Pictish king.

The only additional help Agricola gives Virilus is the female, tongue-less tracker Etain (Olga Kurylenko). This turns out to be a costly mistake. Etain leads the legion into a trap, and so its first contact with the enemy remains its last. Most of the men are slaughtered, Virilus captured and only a handful of Romans (like Liam Cunningham and Micky from Doctor Who – yes, we are in the usual “all Romans spoke with various UK accents” territory here) escape with their lives. Quintus Dias (Michael Fassbender), who had just escaped Pictish captivity, decides to lead the survivors into the Pictish camp to free their general.

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Salvage

June 29th, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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film rating:
disc rating:
companies: Hoax Films,
The UK Film Council, BBC Films, Northwest
Vision and Media, Digital Departures,
The Liverpool Culture Company
year: 2009
runtime: 75′
director: Lawrence Gough
cast: Neve McIntosh, Shaun Dooley,
Linzey Cocker, Dean Andrews,
Shahid Ahmed, Trevor Hancock
writers: Lawrence Gough,
Colin O’Donnell and Alan Pattinson
cinematography: Simon Tindall
music: Stephen Hilton
Reviewed from a screener provided
by Revolver Entertainment
Order this film from Amazon.com

Salvage is due for release on DVD from Revolver Entertainment on July 6th, and is currently available for pre-order through Amazon.com and other online retailers.

Over the past decade the British Isles have become ground zero for modern low budget horror.  Motivated by the success of Danny Boyle’s comparatively lavish 28 Days Later (produced for around $10 million) aspiring filmmakers looking to cut their teeth on the genre have been pouring from the woodwork as of late.  2009’s Salvage follows in the frugal footsteps of The Dead Outside and Colin, and makes for a promising if imperfect feature film debut for writer and director Lawrence Gough.

Salvage begins quietly enough, with teenager Jodie (Linzey Cocker, Is Anybody There?) traveling to a quiet suburban cul-de-sac to spend Christmas with her divorced mother Beth (Neve McIntosh, Bodies).  None too pleased with the prospect of spending the holiday with her mother to begin with, things become more complicated when Jodie happens upon the woman in the midst of a casual sexual encounter with Kieran (Shaun Dooley, the Red Riding trilogy).  Understandably perturbed by the sight of her mother bonking about with an unknown gent (and on Christmas Eve, no less!), Jodie storms out of her mother’s house and across the street to spend the rest of the holiday with one of her childhood friends.
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The Hereafter

January 22nd, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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company: “Des Dolan presents”
year: 1983
runtime: 84′
country: United Kingdom
director: Michael J. Murphy
cast: Steven Longhurst, Catherine Rowlands,
David Slater, Wendy Young
writer: Michael J. Murphy
cinematographer: David Daynes
music: Philip Love, Terry Mills
not on home video

Neville Harmer (Steven Longhurst) has lived most of his life dominated by his rich, wheelchair-bound father, in whose old country mansion he still lives as a grown up. Lately, Neville has found someone else to tell him what to do, though. I suppose his girlfriend Vicky’s (Catherine Rowlands) way to manipulate him is rather more pleasant. Still, having the bedroom of a grumpy old guy right next door to your own can put a strain on any relationship.

One day, Neville’s father dies in a freak wheelchair accident, leaving Neville with quite an inheritance. Unfortunately, his dad’s will contains a clause that forbids his son to sell the dreary old mansion and demands of him to keep living there. The family business has been conducted out of the house anyway.

Living alone in the house with Vicky, with their only regular human contact being the manly-man groundskeeper Patrick (David Slater) and Neville’s secretary Dorothy (Wendy Young), seems to put Neville under quite some psychic strain. He is convinced that the house is haunted, and what do you know? Soon after he has told Vicky about his ideas he begins to see a strange, papermache-masked figure creeping around. The seance Vicky arranges “just for fun” doesn’t exactly soothe his mind either.

The strange happenings are of course all part of a mildly fiendish plot Vicky and Patrick have concocted to make Neville look disturbed enough to commit suicide. All seems to be going well with their plan, until a masked Patrick throws Neville out of a window without managing to kill his boss.


Their victim still doesn’t realize what’s really going on, though, so there’s always a chance for a second try. It should be easier to murder Neville now anyway, seeing that his fall left him as paralyzed and wheelchair-bound as his father before him.

With this thought (and sex) on their mind, the would-be murderers are getting careless, and it does not take long until Neville finally understands what is really going on around him. This realization – and the possibly not unfounded idea that his ancestral home itself is trying to protect him – suddenly lets the up to now passive man grow a spine. Neville develops his own plan for a little revenge.

Finding any information about The Hereafter‘s director Michael J. Murphy (here working under the pseudonym of Michael Mersack) or his films online isn’t exactly easy. The IMDB for example only lists two of his 25 movies, this one not among them. Fortunately there is at least this interview to be found, which makes Murphy sound like a British version of some of the budget-less yet driven filmmakers who are responsible for some of the most interesting genre films you’ll be able to see. People like him and Norman J. Warren make me wish for a UK-oriented version of Stephen Thrower’s wonderful book Nightmare USA. In Murphy’s case, I’d even be satisfied with the simple availability of more of his movies.

The Hereafter itself isn’t exactly a masterpiece, not even of the highly skewed and strange variation I usually get excited about. It is not weird enough of a film to be fascinating, and a little too dull to fully function as the thriller with slight supernatural undertones it is supposed to be. That does not mean The Hereafter is bad, rather, the whole film seems to be out to prove to later generations of backyard and low budget filmmakers that having no money need not be an excuse for having no ambition of making an actual movie instead of a shoddy succession of scenes you call a movie, but fails at the final hurdle of working as well as it would like to.


At the least this one has a real script, with not original yet at least consistent characters, and tries its hardest to make an unexciting premise into an exciting film by sheer force of will of its director.

Murphy didn’t have money, but he had a creepy looking house, a lake, and woods, and he obviously tried his hardest to put them to as much and as good use to build a mood as possible.

You can really see the director straining in every shot to do something at least a little interesting, be it through the use of unconventional angles, more thoughtful than one can expect editing or some very cool use of handheld shots. Sometimes – to be honest a little too often – the film is only straining for that point where “interesting” becomes something more, but in its best moments like the scene of Neville using all his not exactly inexhaustible strength (very much reminding me of the movie itself in this point) to crawl up a flight of stairs, it actually finds it and becomes the sort of stubbornly individualistic film I’m looking for in my no-budget movies.

That stairs scenes is also one of the fine moments of Steven Longhurst in a film not exactly dominated by strong acting. I wouldn’t call the film’s acting bad, it just tends to be (perhaps in conscious avoidance of soap operatic scenery-chewing) a bit too disaffected for its own good. It’s a bit of a shame when you look at the handful of scenes where Longhurst and Rowlands are allowed to show a bit more emotion. The unemotional effect is amplified by the fact that much if not all of the dialogue seems to have been dubbed in after the film was shot and everyone’s line readings sound very much like readings.

However, what differentiates The Hereafter enough from many other ultra low budgets films that only sometimes achieve their artistic goals to make me pine for seeing more of Murphy’s films is the raw talent underlying it all. It seems obvious to me that Murphy had the ability and the creativity to make a film that’s special. If he has ever managed to actually make one is something I’d just love to find out.


For more bizarre movie goodness, be sure
to visit Denis’ excellent review blog The Horror!?



Colin

November 13th, 2009 | article by | No Comments »
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postercompany: Nowhere Fast Productions
year: 2008
runtime: 97′
country: United Kingdom
director: Marc Price
cast: Alastair Kirton, Daisy Aitkens,
Kate Alderman, Tat Whalley,
Leanne Pammen

It is the zombie apocalypse again (and again). Clutching a bloody hammer in one hand, a young Briton named Colin (Alastair Kirton) stumbles into a house in the suburbs. We never quite learn if it is his home or the home of a friend, but this is not going to matter in the long run.

Colin is hurt and seems to be at the end of his strength, therefore letting his guard down enough to get ambushed and bitten by the building’s sole, undead inhabitant. He manages to kill the zombie, but soon succumbs to his wounds.

Hours or days later, Colin wakes up as one of the shambling masses himself. From here on out, we follow him closely for a dead man’s perspective of the end of the world. We watch as he eats his first victim, as he looks at a traffic sign and reacts to music like he is trying to remember something, but doesn’t even understand the concept of memory anymore.

He meets and bites his sister Linda (Daisy Aitkens), takes part in a bloody mass attack on a student dorm and falls directly into the cellar of someone whose dreams of dead and blind women seem to have come true via the apocalypse.

Later, Linda and her boyfriend (Tat Whalley) catch Colin in the desperate hope to reawaken his personality. Perhaps showing him his mother (Kerry Owen) will work?

After this hasn’t worked out quite as catastrophically as one could suspect, Colin shambles into the crosshair of more organized survivors in form of a killing squad.

Just when I had given up hope for anything not absolutely dreadful coming out of the backyard zombie film sub-genre, this British production shambles around the corner with a certain amount of hype and nearly floors me.

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Colin was supposedly shot on a budget of £45, but with a consumer-grade (yet probably not too cheap) digital camera available and a bunch of surprisingly talented actors working for free, I’m not sure I’d see the film’s budget as quite this low. Be that as it may, what makes the film as interesting as it is isn’t that it was shot for very little money, but that it was shot very little money and turned out to be an excellent film.

For once, I don’t need to hesitate to give most of the props a movie deserves to its director, seeing that Mark Price not only directed, but also edited, scripted, and shot the film. I wouldn’t be surprised if he also helped cook the coffee. This is of course not uncommon in backyard productions, but where most films of this price-class could use a few more hands doing the work, Price has talent enough to make shooting a film with the smallest of crews look simple.

However, what makes Colin worthwhile is not that it was made on the cheap, but that it is so well done that, while watching, I very soon found myself not being impressed by how good it was despite its budget, but how good it was, period. There is really no connection between this film and the hateful lack of ambition that makes too much backyard horror filmmaking so hard to stand. I usually avoid calling these films “indie” horror, out of respect for the quality “indie” suggest in other media like games and music. Colin, I have no problem calling indie horror.

By now you, dear reader, might ask yourself what exactly makes Colin so special to this long-winded guy who is rambling at you like a mad street person (that would be me).

First and foremost, it is the film’s mood. It is shot in a grainy style that has much more in common with the texture and colour of 70s horror cinema, giving everything that happens an immediacy I still like to call documentary, however misused this word has become by now. Price seems to have had a very exact picture of when and where to shoot hand-held and when to use a tri-pod in his mind, giving the film a rhythm permanently changing between nervous action and deliberate shambling, a rhythm very much its own.

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There is a real sense of weight to the proceedings. We basically have a nobody’s view of the apocalypse by always staying close to Colin himself. At times, we even share his inability to fully comprehend what is happening around him, the everyday surroundings the action takes place in becoming strange and frightening through their desolation.

This is part of where the sadness of the film lies – it were not so much the (nicely done) gore set pieces which got to me while watching the film, but the loss of humanity the zombies and the survivors share and real feeling of hopelessness. This is of course nothing new in the annals of zombie cinema, yet as long as it is done as poignant as here, originality isn’t really of much import.

Between the carnage and the sadness, the film also has room for some fine pieces of dry black humor, not enough of it to derail the film, yet enough to add to its grounding in reality.

I was also struck by how different this British zombie apocalypse is from the usual American one – cars and guns are nearly completely absent, making the efforts of the survivors more desperate, and through that desperation, more terrifying.

And the film really is terrifying at times, grasping the horror of zombies as a shambling mass of hunger made flesh with a mind only set on consuming, unconscious of the way it makes its victims part of its own, even unconscious of the reality of its victims as anything beside food. There is something claustrophobic and unconsciously cruel about the big zombie attacks in Colin I found very disturbing.

All of these qualities could still have gone to waste without the right lead actor, because Colin is the person/thing who keeps the fragmented narrative together. A bad performance here would have sunk the film completely. Fortunately, Kirton is quite brilliant in his role. He effortlessly suggests faint traces of humanity without ever falling into the trap of playing his zombie as something so normal as a stupid, flesh-eating man. The rest of the actors doesn’t do much worse; the fact that we only witness fragments of their characters’ stories makes it easier to relate to them than if we had to watch them emote in long and nuanced dialogue scenes actors working for free probably wouldn’t be able to deliver as believable as needed. As the film is constructed, everyone is only glimpsed in moments of utter desperation or sadness, dying or damned.

Call me a loon, but I think there’s a real sense of poetry in Colin, an emotional weight found only in the best zombie films. And you know what, I think Colin is one of the best zombie films I know.

For more bizarre movie goodness, be sure
to visit Denis’ excellent review blog The Horror!?