Tuesday 29 May 2012

Trailer Park of Terror


Trailer Park of Terror (Steven Goldmann - 2008)  

A young woman avenges the death of her lover by shooting all the redneck residents at a derelict trailer park before she kills herself. But the South will rise again, this time in form of zombies. A bunch of derelict teenagers are stranded in the desert and find their way to the trailer park and the killings can commence. Supposedly the film is based on a comic series. 

From that point on it’s a gore comedy/horror that in style positions itself somewhere between early Peter Jackson and Rob Zombie. The low budget shows, but there has been done some skillful efforts to make this look good. The acting is tongue-in-cheek suitable to a movie hell-bent on presenting very unpretentious fun.

Viewed on and anamorphic, PAL DVD from Kaleidoscope Entertainment.

Sunday 27 May 2012

Love in the Afternoon


L'amourl'après-midi (Eric Rohmer - 1972)  

It is an entry in Rohmer's Six Moral Tales and tells the story about a married man, Frederic, who contemplates a fling with a lady friend of the past. Clever dialogue, shot on a budget with few locations and good and believable acting. Sometimes less is more.

The film succeeds in making Frederic’s struggle engaging on an emphatic level and at the same time allows a disinterested view on the moral dilemma. I have never been able to explain to myself what makes Rohmer a great artist, but I think the answer may have something to do with the seemingly laidback, often whimsical, manner he treats the story and textual intentions behind it.

The classical dramaturgical movie does not merely present a string of events, but every element in the film is invested with meaning that leads up to the conclusion. This was challenged by the realist movement with movies that just unfold and let the viewer draw their own conclusions. On that axis Rohmer is somewhere in the middle.

Like Woody Allen the theme is not a subtle subtext you have to look for, but jumps right at your face from early on. The central character states loud and clear a fact about life and the rest of the film tests that claim. The characters representing positions (fidelity, conformity etc.) are exposed to “life” and at the end there is an evaluation if the initial claim.

To a greater extent than Allen chance and diversions can make the plot stray away from the issues at hand and muddle the conclusion. The entertainment value is not only seen the characters playing ball against a wall of textual construction, but the underlying subtext is in itself at play. In Rohmer’s films “life” can win over text”.

Viewed on a 2003 DVD release from Arrow Films featuring a 4:3 AR image.

Saturday 26 May 2012

Breakfast at Tiffany's


Breakfast at Tiffany's (Blake Edwards - 1961)

Mega charming! I choose to see this on account of following reasons 1) Blake Edward’s skills as a filmmaker 2) I had seen stills of Audrey Hepburn 3) Score by Henry Mancini 4) New York 5) I seemed to recall that Truman Capote had something to do with it and finally 6) The film seems to be one of those iconic movies.

Full score on all six reasons and an added bonus; the cutest little red-haired cat. A tip to Hollywood; put some animals in every film. That will make your output more enjoyable to watch. 

Viewed on a Scandinavian DVD release from Paramount Home Entertainment Norway

Don't Go in the House


Don't Go inthe House (Joseph Ellison - 1980)

Don't Go in the House is another take on a Psycho-like story. Mothers around the world surely have much to answer for.  

I was expecting the routine horror/slasher and pleasantly surprised. This film has an artistic vision and the craftsmanship to maintain a unique mood throughout the entire movie. The acting is somewhat “expressionistic” but plays well in the context. The main character really seems tormented and deranged and the film is creepy as hell despite the limited amount of gore.

Viewed on a DVD release from Arrow Films featuring a 1.85:1 AR x 16:9 image.

S.W.A.T.: Firefight


S.W.A.T.:Firefight (Benny Boom - 2011)

This was the last film to watch on Saturday evening. I really didn’t have big expectations for this one. I just wanted something noisy and simple to keep me awake another two hours. The film was a positive surprise though, featuring solid action scenes, decent acting and cinematography. 

The plot was conventional, but efficient and with a twist. It measures well with much of the nonsense that makes it to the big screen. I’d choose this one over Iron Man 2 any day.

Viewed on a Scandinavian DVD release.

Bloody Birthday


BloodyBirthday (Ed Hunt - 1981)

Three children are born at the height of a total eclipse and naturally they turn out to become preteen homicidal maniacs. A couple of minutes into the feature I remember that I had seen it before, but it’s a charming little thing and I am more than happy to revisit the terrorized suburbia. 

When it comes to horror and slashers I have a particular affection for the early 80thies when the aesthetics of the 70 still lingers on, but the cheesiness of the 80ties is beginning to make an impact.

Viewed on a 16:9 enhanced DVD from VCI Entertainment. The cover claims the aspect ratio to be 1.78:1. There is a British Anchor Bay release with pretty much identical picture quality, but with the benefits of the superior PAL standard.

Rampage


Rampage (Uwe Boll - 2009)

The film is about a guy on a killing spree. A frustrated youngster walks around in a city with machine guns and kills so many he can.  The body count is comparable to the massacre in Norway last year, but this guy is no Anders Behring Breivik. The killer has no ideology and neither has the film. There is a general feeling that society is “fucked up”, but that doesn’t go deep.

The film has an art-house/realism style of “just showing events without narrating”. This reference to quality cinema can give the impression that the film is more significant than it is. For me the whole thing seemed a bit superficial. 

Viewed on a Scandinavian DVD release  

Switchblade Romance


Haute tension (Alexandre Aja - 2003)  

Suspense and brutality. Good looking film with decent acting and a twist ending.  

You have seen it all before, but it still is a terror/slasher film with moderate to high entertainment value.

Viewed on a Scandinavian DVD release from SF Norge AS

Friday 25 May 2012

Drive in Double Feature - Search and Destroy / The Glove


Search and Destroy (William Fruet - 1979)
The Glove (Ross Hagen - 1979) 

Search and Destroy is tough shit. It’s supposedly one of the first "post Vietnam vet" movies. It’s reckless and hard-hitting in a manner that only 70ties movies can get away with.

The Glove featuring John Saxon as a modern-day bounty hunter in Los Angeles promised much, but turned out to be a softer film than Search and Destroy. There is an effort to make a more complex movie with a likable villain and addressing racial issues. The whole thing comes across as somewhat underdeveloped, but it still has decent entertainment value.

Both films are presented in their original 1.85 : 1. aspect ratio

Monday 21 May 2012

Axe

Lisa, Lisa (Frederick R. Friedel - 1977)

It’s a “rape and revenge”-type of film made a few years after The Last House on the Left (1972) but before Day of the Woman/ I Spit on Your Grave (1978) and House on the Edge of the Park. The unlikely heroine, a little girl, resembles Camille Keaton expressionless and merciless avenger in Day of the Woman.

I viewed a British release from 4Digital Media. It has some digital noise and was inferior to the Something Weird Video Special Edition. The SWV release also has a lot of extras. What possessed me to obtain two versions of this particular feature? I couldn’t say myself, but this little roughie has its virtues. The scenery has something lifeless and desolate that is quite intriguing.

Sunday 20 May 2012

Faceless


Lesprédateurs de la nuit (Jesus Franco - 1987)

Thumbs up for this one! This is pure pulp fiction at its most charming.

Restoring a woman’s face to its former beauty demands kidnapping pretty girls and skinning them alive. Franco has been dabbling with that theme before in "The Awful Dr. Orloff”. In Faceless the “gothic” old school approach to horrors is replaced with contemporary French thriller-look. It’s interesting to see a Franco-film with qualified cinematography and production value, but his preference for grittier, documentary-like aesthetics is also evident in some scenes.

The classical “mad” doctor is replaced with a more contemporary amoral doctor. Helmut Berger gives a credible impersonation of a psychopath with aristocratic attitudes. Interesting enough it not the only the doctor that’s a cold fish as there is a generally cynical tone throughout the entire enterprise.

The cast is a treat in itself: Brigitte Lahaie, Caroline Munro, Howard Vernon (a short appearance as a character by the name Dr. Orloff), Helmut Berger, Telly Salavas and the Nazi-actor par excellence Anton Diffring.

Christopher Mitchum is cast in the role as the protagonist. If he has inherited any skills of his father, Robert, it does not show here. On the other hand it’s a role that’s hard to bring to life as it’s an investigator-type of character operating on the outside of the main narrative. His investigation is shown in short segments inserted into the movie at regular intervals and only catches up with the drama at the very end.

Lahaie does not show much skin, but she is exceptionally well placed in the role as a homicidal hospital manager. Munro is sexy, but it’s the extras that have to undress and provide the exploitation value. Anyway, the most prominent exploitation element here is gore. I had to look away a couple of times when facial skin was removed. The few but gruesome gore scenes are another thing that reflects upon Franco’s unwillingness to compile a commercial package aimed at a broader audience. Here he has a budget and a star cast and every possibility to potentially make a break at the box-office, but then he inserts over the top unpleasant scenery that scares off the general audience and gives the film an unprofitable age restriction.

As in most of Franco’s efforts to make straight genre movies there is a wooden and un-organic feel to it. To a large extent this is due do the rather uninspired dubbing of voices, but the main reason is Franco’s lack of “fingerspitsgeful” for what’s appropriate in a conventional sense. His output is always at odds with conventional cinema, but in this film it provides an effect of estrangement that suits the movie very well.

The sordid fictional universe, the cast, the cheesy score and the delightful “it’s only a movie”-feel to it makes this as one of the finest achievements in Franco’s later career.

Viewed on DVD / Shriek Show  / 16:9

Saturday 19 May 2012

Weekend update


Hello Mary Lou: Prom Night II (Bruce Pittman - 1987)

A charming slasher, but let down by some bade choices story wise and aesthetically that where typical for the late 80thies. Viewed on MGM DVD / 1.85:1 / 16:9


Slaughter High (George Dugdale, Mark Ezra, Peter Mackenzie Litten -  1986)

Excellent entertainment value! This archetypical “let’s torture and disfigure the local nerd and he returns as an avenging monster” is a cheesy and fun piece of exploitation. And you have the lovely Caroline Munro cast as a bad girl. What isn’t there to like?

Viewed on a British DVD-release from Arrow Video. Nice transfer and quality all way around. 


Photos scandale (Jean-Claude Roy - 1979)

Brigitte Lahaie is taking scandalous photos of high society girls in a blackmail scheme. A very uneven film that initially comes across as a sexy crime movie where no chance of undressing is missed. As events unfold the depiction of sexual exploitation becomes more sordid and unpleasant and the end the protagonist finds true love. Initially I wanted to see this one because of ever lovely Lahaie, but it grew upon me.


Paul Raymond's Erotica (Brian Smedley-Aston  - 1982)

Watching Brigitte Lahaie in Scandalous Photos initiated a search in the archives and I came up with a British soft-core novelty. It features nude-dancing routines at London cabarets and Brigitte Lahaie plays the role as a reporter connecting the segments to something that looks like a feature. I fast- forwarded through parts.  I viewed this on a file downloaded from the net and it looked like a VHSrip. 

Sunday 13 May 2012

Weekend Update


This weekend I embarked on Justified Season 3. Besides that I watched a couple of episodes on 30 Rock and 4 feature movies.

Least noteworthy was Zyzzyx Road (John Penney - 2006). This is one of those films that are not “alive”, but comes across as a theoretical construction. The effort to make a smart thriller falls short and the result is ludicrous. Katherine Heigl is supposed to be an underage hooker (fat chance!) and Tom Sizemore is an uninspired villain.

By chance I saw another movie featuring Katherine Heigl, One for the Money (Julie Anne Robinson - 2012). Winding down with a descent comedy and that was that for my part.
The Crazies (Breck Eisner - 2010) is a remake of George Romero’s feature from 1973. I’m ashamed to say that I haven’t seen the original so I can’t compare. Nothing new in this take on “living dead’s taking over the world” but I was entertained by a well narrated story with Timothy Olyphant in the lead.

The high point of the weekend was a Larry Cohen film I had saved for a gloomy day; It'sAlive III: Island of the Alive (1987). I’m a big fan of Larry Cohen’s jokoserious films. Horror or thriller, there is always a sarcastic tone that subverts the genre expectations.  His much used actor Michael Moriarty (The stuff (1985), Q: The Winged Serpent (1982), A Return to Salem's Lot (1987) and all the Alive films) is particularly well placed in this setting as he always expresses a semi aggressive disdain that in itself makes the film worth watching. What Michael Moriarty was for Cohen is comparable to what Martin Donovan was for Hal Hartley.

Friday 11 May 2012

Graduation Day


GraduationDay (Herb Freed - 1981)

I saw this one on cable-TV back in the 80thies and remembered it as a pleasant fare. Later I acquired the Troma DVD and a British VHS release of the film. When I re-viewed I chose the VHS – Partly by sentimental reasons, partly because the Troma release is a rather flat and boring fullscreen. In such cases I feel that tape is superior giving the image some noise and “organic life”. 

I still felt the film was charming and entertaining. It has some lack of life and engagement. Murders happen and there isn’t much to be done with that. The “sleepwalker” feeling is to be found in many low budget movies at the time. Oddly I appreciate that. It creates a dreamlike atmosphere that carries the rather implausible story.