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A few reviews . . (film or TV) — Page 107

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How To Get Ahead In Advertising - 1989 - 6/10

Ha ha, how about grow one, Boil?
Advertising exec, ruthless, callow, suffers the equivalent of writer’s block.
He cannot devise a slogan for … wait for it … pimple cream.
Frustration spills onto his wife, colleagues, then infects his own body.
A stress boil forms on his shoulder. Which grows eyes and a mouth, and starts talking back.

Pungent comedy, hideous black humor that seems to worsen moment by moment.
An overlooked comic gem with Richard Grant giving a bravura performance.

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Iskander: Shadow of the River - 2018 - 6/10
AKA - Maroni

A grisly murder in French Guiana is assigned to a new arrival and a grizzled veteran.
Slain were a husband wife pair of missionaries. Do-gooders.
They had journeyed deep into the jungle, going to remote villages, refusing to get permission from chiefs or elders.
The dead couple had a child. Missing.
In fact, the area suffers a long history of missing or kidnapped children.
From the beginning, you realize this heads straight into voodoo territory.
If you can accept supernatural and superstitious elements you may enjoy this four-parter.

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The Pervert’s Guide To Cinema - 2006 - 7/10

Slovenian philosopher, psychoanalyst Slavoj Žižek gives three lectures which orbit Film Appreciation 101.
Freudian analysis, obsessions, death, desire, phallus / vagina (fear - envy - worship), all probed.
Scenes from a diverse array of films are shown, followed by comments.
Žižek frequently inserts himself into scenes, exaggerating or undercutting concepts of reality or suspension of disbelief.
Mainstream studio fare as well as European arthouse used as examples:
Hitchcock - Lynch - Chaplin - Wachowski - Kubrick - Coppola
Tarkovsky - Haneke - Von Trier - Kieślowski - Eisenstein - Bergman
Observations and conclusions are, by turn, insightful, provocative, wrong-headed.
Those with a healthy resume of arthouse titles in their “seen that” list may be better able to agree with some of his theories, or hurl a sock at the screen.
For novices or aficionados, Žižek is entertaining and enthusiastic throughout.

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The Gleiwitz Case - 1961 - 7/10
AKA - Der Fall Gleiwitz

Stylized docu-drama with more than a passing nod to 1928‘s, Berlin: Symphonie der Großstadt.
A German commando type group, impersonating Poles, cross the frontier border, assault a radio station, and urge Poland to rise up and attack Germany.
The provocation was false, but the blitzkrieg launched the next day. Britain and France declared war two days later.
Theatrical looking production. Closeups, high contrast black n white, angular film compositions.
Several sequences are slow, yet the visuals are always imaginative.
“Travel” scenes faithfully recreate the montage and pan effects from aforementioned Symphony Of A Great City.

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Mongo’s Back In Town - 1971 - 6/10

Gritty crime story of a hitman returning home for the holidays.
Not exactly a family reunion, however.
Mongo’s brother owns a cheap club and is acting as middleman for counterfeit plates.
Except the plates have gone missing and brother is being setup as the patsy.
Bare bones overview of this Noirish film, shot to look like rainswept, wintry New York.
Sally Field plays a waif Mongo picks up along the way, Martin Sheen a young cop.
Telly Savalas’s Lieutenant Tolstad seems a dress rehearsal for Kojak, two years away.
Joe Don Baker well cast as tight-lipped, brooding Mongo.

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Loving Highsmith - 2022 - 6/10

Documentary on novelist Patricia Highsmith.
Childhood, impossible relationship with her mother (who rejected her), romantic dalliances.
Talking heads include relatives (nieces?) and partners, along with experts.
Scenes from four film adaptations: Strangers On A Train (1951), The American Friend (1977) from “Ripley’s Game”, The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999), and Carol (2015).
The doc is enlightening, and maddeningly opaque.
Dialogue is in English, French and German. The version I saw had no subtitles.
One gleans the gist of conversations, but unless you are multi-lingual I suggest you hold off until this comes with subtitles.
For now, stick with her listing on Wikipedia.

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Auto Focus - 2002 - 6/10

Who knew? Colonel Hogan was a porn addict?
Uncomfortable retelling of Bob Crane, minor actor, whose TV hit, “Hogan’s Heroes “ rocketed him into TV stardom.
Aside from Superdad, he was unable to transit to movies, although he remained a familiar face on television.
Greg Kinnear very good as the troubled Crane, in this seedy look at the 70’s.
Another Paul Schrader film of damaged males leading stunted, perhaps empty, lives.
If you remain a fan of Crane’s sitcom, it might be wiser pass this by, as it leaves a sour residue.

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The Grand Inquisitor - 2008 - 6/10

Young woman, Lulu (in a Brooksie bob), arrives at Mrs. Reedy’s home, unannounced.
She holds books, notes and theories, which the police ridicule.
The elderly woman is frail, yet typical of her generation, is hospitable. Even to intruders.
Essentially a chamber play, this was one of Marsha Hunt’s final screen performances.
Mystery short. Praise Eddie Muller for giving a sunset role to an old star.
Subtitles = https://subscene.com/subtitles/the-grand-inquisitor/english/2891353

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Glorious 39 - 2009 - 7/10

Christopher Lee bookends a pre-WWII thriller of treachery and betrayal.
Young man visits two elderly uncles and asks what happened to a great aunt.
She disappeared, you see, on the eve of World War II, and Lee who was a young witness, tells her story.
Time falls midway between Chamberlain’s “peace in our time,” and Churchill’s “we shall never surrender.”

The three oldest children, young adults, discover an oily patch of shrouded history on their estate.
Contrary to popular myth, not everyone was keen to fight Hitler’s Wehrmacht.
There was an powerful underbelly of appeasers, entrenched nobles, industrialists, royalty, eager to cut a deal.
Good show for history buffs, even if this jumps in mad directions.
For conspiracy types: Joe Kennedy is mentioned, the Duke of Windsor is not.

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Desperate Romantics - 2009 - 6/10

Six part series narrates the rise of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood.
Only four are in this: Dante Gabriel Rossetti, John Millais, William Holman Hunt, and Fred Stephens - err - Walters.
Rejected by the Royal Academy, they win favor from influential John Ruskin, and learn how to market.
Focus is on their inter-personal relationships and affairs with models.
Parents - There is copious nudity and rather enthusiastic bouncing.
This is a modernish account. Characters are a blend of fiction and truth.
(I’m hardly an expert, but I have a dozen or so books on the PRB.)
High production values, some funny moments. with a great deal of brio.
Not dry. More fun than Effie Gray, though best viewed with a skeptical eye.

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Romeo Is Bleeding - 1993 - 6/10

Jack is a bent copper, on the take from the mob, a woman abuser.
A doomed loser, hemmed in by his own sorry choices and corrupt character.
Latest favor he owes? Whack job.
Only the target is attractive, and cunning. Oh, and a hitman, feminine version.
Yes, Jack is out of his league.
Merciless Neo-Noir, riddled with diseased twists.
Dialogue is arch, and Gary Oldham’s delivery strikes one as mannered, yet believable.
For a dark tale, this is awfully funny at times, and Jack is a cringe worthy soul.

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Orlando - 1992 - 7/10

“Do not fade, do not wither, do not grow old.”
So commands Queen Elizabeth upon giving Orlando a castle.
Time rolls on, and the young lord does not age, dabbling away the years.
He does, however, transform into a female, and experiences life from that perspective.
And years continue to sweep past.
An audacious film of gender identification and sexual fluidity, far ahead of its time.
Haunting score, interesting casting. A film that may linger with you for weeks, or through your life.

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Coming Home - 2014 - 7/10
AKA - Gui Lai // 归 来

Man returns home after being imprisoned as a “rightist” for over a decade during China’s Cultural Revolution.
He attempts to rebuild his family though there are complications.
His wife suffers amnesia and does not recognize him, his daughter shuns him.
Over time, he uncovers some of the mishaps that befell while he was in prison.
Not all, however, which may frustrate Western viewers.
No dates are given, the Cultural Revolution goes unmentioned.
Gong Li remarkable as the broken wife.

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52 Pick-Up - 1986 - 6/10

Harry, successful businessman, gets blackmailed for cheating on his wife (Ann Margaret, really?).
Somewhat an ego-head, Harry blows them off, refuses to pay.
The hoods up the ante, screening Harry an up close and personal snuff flick.
Neo-Noir roots are strong in this, likely because this is based on an Elmore James novel.
That said, sport, this is trashy exploitation at times.
The narrative leaps logic, there are plot holes, and characters are too knowledgeable, or pure stupidity.
Although Roy Scheider stars, and there are plenty of “names” (including a slew of porn stars), John Glover as the lead villain, steals every scene he is in.
Got that, sport?
Fun film, though extremely sleazy.

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Shinobi no Mono 8 - 1966 - 6/10
AKA - Shinsho: shinobi no mono // 新書・忍びの者 // The Three Enemies

Final installment in the “Band Of Assassins” franchise is a great capper.
A gunpowder maker is murdered by three thugs, one with a face scar.
Hiding behind the walls, young Kojiro sees and vows revenge.
Twenty years on, Kojiro, while skilled, is not yet a proper ninja.
Ninjas, all but extinct, are few, though a master takes the young apprentice.
Their band gets embroiled in the wars between Ieyasu and Shingen.
Sieges, full scale battles, along with brutal one on one combats.
The “magic” in this is slight and should not dissuade you.
Raizô Ichikawa, top of his game.

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Cobain: Montage of Heck - 2015 - 5/10

Quirky bio-pic of happy-go-lucky — oops, wait a minute!
“Authorized documentary” of the troubled musician.
Primarily told from talking heads, with little challenging or fact-checking.
At two plus hours, this goes on way too long and is heavily padded with animated doodles.
Kurt’s ma and Kurt’s wife are each glossy, and each defend and excuse themselves.
Kurt’s wife repeatedly assures that she never cheated on Kurt.
Who is not here?
Grohl, Vig, any honcho from Geffen or UNI, fellow grunge band members, the word “grunge” period, Seattle.

“History is written by the victors.”

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The Violent Four - 1968 - 6/10
AKA - Banditi a Milano

After an opening of mayhem, this goes into police procedural.
Tracking cars, fielding calls, rounding up suspects.
Police have one already, the wheelman, and they start squeezing.
This excels at showing the confusion following a heist and bullet spree.
Yet once the driver starts filling details, the story ratchets higher.
Predates Euro Crime genre and remains influential.

Boss Pietro confers with gunslinger Sante, preparing for three capers in a row.
If Michael Corleone ever had a cousin in Milan, it was Sante.

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Clyde’s - 2022 - 7/10

Clyde’s is a sandwich shop.
Kitchen staff are ex-cons, crafting, what sounds like imaginative platters.
Clyde herself is a harsh taskmaster, a belligerent bully. In fact, I started wondering if she was the devil.
And is Clyde’s actually Purgatory?
While the staff are hard luck types, bent by Fate and poor choices, one stands out.
Montrell exudes calm throughout, reassuring crushed teammates, ever in quest of a perfect sandwich.
Montrell is the guardian angel of the kitchen.
Theatre junkies, place your order.

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Empire Of The Tsars: Romanov Russia - 2015 - 7/10

Lucy Wolsey hosts three part documentary covering 300 years of the Romanov Dynasty.
Episodes focus on Peter The Great, Catherine The Great, and Nicholas The Not-So-Great.

Wolsey is always enthusiastic and prepared, and seldom offers personal opinions or snarky comments.
As history, much of this will be old hat to buffs.
The chief draw is that she seems to have been allowed unrestricted access to many areas inside palaces or behind the scenes.

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Dust Angel - 2021 - 5/10

Earth and Mars, engaged in a terrible war, are ever in search of resources.
Weapons in hand, a lone Earth pilot lands on Dorniens Tora.
This SciFi short resembles something between plastic models and a video game.
Makeup could be from Halloween or a KISS convention. EFX acceptable.
Plus, it’s preachy.

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Deep Blue Sea - 1999 - 6/10

Scientists, searching for an Alzheimer’s cure, boost the intelligence of sharks.
Luckily, the sharks, who increasingly exhibit anger management issues, are penned in strong cages.
Well made horror outing, though by the numbers.
Meaning, I knew which humans would die – chomp, chomp – and which would live.
However, I got the dining order wrong. Boy, did I get that wrong!
As far as shark films go, this is one of the best. Compared with other sharkie flicks, this is an 8.
Youtube offers several entertaining fan commentaries.

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War And Peace - 2016 - 5/10

Lavishly filmed and lavishly praised mini-series of Tolstoy’s classic.
Once you get past the sumptuous visuals, the story itself is more peace than war.
Meaning the tale is dominated by angst dialogue, ennui, and characters full of doubts.
The stereotyped view of Russians.
Acted and directed with great seriousness throughout, to the point of being stilted.
This is Tolstoy, damnit!
All star cast still results in, to paraphrase George Harrison, a drag, a well known drag.

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Swimming Pool - 2003 - 7/10

A writer accepts her publisher’s offer to use his home to rest and recharge.
Well and good, until the publisher’s assertive daughter appears.
Put off, somewhat, the writer chooses to stay, and watch. No, observe.
The daughter seems a free-spirited exhibitionist. Or is the show play acting?
Keep in mind, this is a writer taking in details, making notes.
A Noir tinged thriller, filmed under hot sun, with long stretches of bare flesh.
Multi-layered with a lot going on, though you have to be attentive.
One of François Ozon’s best films.

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O Lucky Man! - 1973 - 7/10

The continuing (mis)education of Mick Travis, following 1968’s If.
Mick, rising employee in the coffee conglomerate, dates the boss’s daughter and rises in status.
His roots remain working class, however, and he retains some 60’s optimism.
Whatever. Overlords and the empowered will find a way to exploit naiveté.
Bracing cynical film has aged, yet is more relevant each passing year.
The ranks of gullible Micks swell exponentially, eternal fall guys.
Messy film, more of moments than narrative. Overlong by an hour.
“If you’ve found the reason to live on and not to die you are a lucky man.”

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Youth - 2015 - 8/10

Striking visuals enrich a series of vignettes, compact yet powerful, not so much about old age, but more about the ability to recharge. Not to succumb, to stay invigorated in Life.
Michael Caine and Harvey Keitel play very old friends, renowned composer and acclaimed director, relaxing at what can only be defined as an exclusive health spa.
One is in self-imposed retirement, the other struggles to stay relevant.
Multiple characters drift in and around them.
Over the film, one gets an image of who many of the characters were, where they are now, and where they may be going.
Not really an “old fogy” film, as I think many fear. Wonderful feast for film buffs.

Scoring more for visuals: cinematography, set design, color schemes.
Storylines range from sublime to pedestrian.