Three Reviews: Camp Sci-Fi and B-movie premises
Three review of campy horror: ‘Son of Kong’ (1933), ‘Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde’ (1941), ‘Crack in the World’ (1965) … More Three Reviews: Camp Sci-Fi and B-movie premises
Three review of campy horror: ‘Son of Kong’ (1933), ‘Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde’ (1941), ‘Crack in the World’ (1965) … More Three Reviews: Camp Sci-Fi and B-movie premises
Three Noir genre reviews featuring the great Bette Davis, Joan Crawford, and a noir-horror film … More Three Noir Film reviews: Crawford, Davis and a noir-horror
The 2016 Weird Cinema Awards Retrospective … More Weird Cinema 2016 Awards (Retrospective)
The 2022 Weird Cinema awards … More Sixth Annual Weird Cinema Awards: 2022 Best Films
The goriest film ever made… … More Peter Jackson’s “Dead Alive” (1992) earns reputation as the goriest film ever made
A typical Kiyoshi Kurosawa premise that allows him to explore creepy, unexplainable moods and atmospheres. … More Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s “Doppelganger” lesser but interesting work
Sergei Eisenstein’s unfathomable, awe-inspiring war epic that’s an allegory to the Germans and the Catholic church in pre-revolution Russia. The vision is of the power of the modern Russian citizen, standing up against bourgeois apathy and laziness. An uprising of the people of Novgorod and Russia, led by a handsomely blonde hair flowing General, Alexander Nevsky, that speaks for the people, is reasonable in his logic and exists solely as a symbol for revolution. … More “Alexander Nevsky” (1938) the real Sergei Eisenstein epic
Carlos Saura’s Honeycomb is an unbearable exploration of regression into childhood. … More “Honeycomb” (1969) is an annoyingly misguided attempt at storytelling
Two soldiers caught in no man’s land – one Bosnian, one Serb, barely keeping the thin veil of civility held together, while the threat of grave violence sits overhead. The pressure comes and goes, as the two soldiers seek a general truce with the understanding that violence could erupt at any time. Danis Tanović understands the psychology of the soldiers, the media covering the absurd event, and the UN soldiers having to take the impossible position of peacekeeper. It paints the situation as the evil and the obscurity of war impacting all interested parties. … More No Man’s Land (2001) the messy, unthinking psychology of war
Jacques Tati’s debut film and it’s an absolute banger. Tati, as the unaware mailman, navigates his real home town, sliding and ducking objects, getting thrown in and out of restaurants, and above all, delivering the mail through it all. It’s incredibly funny slapstick with some of Tati’s best gags involved and one of his best characters. … More Weird Cinema: Jacques Tati’s Debut Film Jour de fête (1949)