Just watched Evil Dead (2013).
It was a worthy remake....
The Last Exorcism II was weak...the first one was better.
Wednesday, July 17, 2013
Sunday, July 7, 2013
The Devils (1971)
-I pray that I may assist you in the birth of a new France where church and state are one.
-Amen.
-...and may the Protestant be driven from the land.
I can sit through twenty or so movies knowing full well that most of them are prolly gonna suck,...as long as I can find that one diamond. The Devils is that diamond. And what a diamond it is.
The Devils stars Oliver Reed and Vanessa Redgrave. Based on historical accounts and heavily stylized, this movie will blow you away. Reed plays rock star priest Father Urbain Grandier, (The David Lee Roth of The Cloth, if you will...Will you?) in 17th century France. As the governor of an independent province in France, Grandier does right by his peeps, but to much of the townsfolks chagrin, he loves the sexy time. Redgrave plays the Mother Superior Jeanne at the local convent and she loves rock n roll. And by rock n roll, I mean Grandier. Grandier gets married and Jeanne lashes out by claiming that Grandier is in league with satan and is practicing witchcraft.
The Church and State seize the opportunity to defame and oust Grandier from his position in order to consolidate their control over France.
Over the top and out of control, this movie would make a great double bill with A Clockwork Orange. The Devils should be screened first, if that tells you anything.
I have a couple of copies of this movie that I "found" on the interwebs. One is crappy and uncut and the other is pretty good quality and censored. Watched them both. Good luck finding this one since it's pretty much unavailable other than the edited VHS.
I would resort to witchcraft to see an uncut blu ray release announced.
Saturday, March 9, 2013
The Laughing Policeman (1973)
-Hey man, what the fuck y'all chasing me for?
-What the fuck you running for?
-Cuz y'all chasing me!
I don't actually know what is involved in the process of investigating a crime. Usually, what we get from most hollywood films ends up being a little too exciting and action packed to be believed. Sure it's entertaining and makes for great movie watching, but the pros probably roll their eyes when they watch Se7en, Heat or The Departed. It's kinda like when real boxers watch Rocky.
Having said that, what we get with The Laughing Policeman is probably the most authentic and accurate depiction of police procedurals, short of a documentary, that you will find. Well, at least what I believe to be an accurate depiction.
Walter Matthau stars in the third of his trilogy of 70's crime films which included Charley Varrick and The Taking of Pelham 123. Unless you are a huge police procedural head, this will probably be the least entertaining of the bunch for you. It's got it's draggy wait-and-see parts. It's got it's dead ends and red herrings. The slaughter at the beginning is probably the most exciting actiony part.
But wait, there's more. We get Bruce Dern at his slimy assholey best (this was probably a preperatory role for his work in The Driver). The Iron Eagle, himself, Louis Gossett Jr is in attendance. We get some good old fashioned 70's racism. The obligatory 70's car chase, which is good to watch for the sake of reference but not so hot on the excitement scale. Anthony Zerbe!, AND,...a yound tender scantily clad Cathy Lee Crosby for a little ocular pleasure. That's Incredible!
Slaughter on a bus. One of the victims is Matthau's partner, who was on vacation at the time. What was he doing on a bus? Was he following someone? Was someone following him? How are the passengers connected. Will Matthau break character and crack a joke? All this and more will be answered when you watch the ironically titled, The Laughing Policeman
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
11 Harrowhouse (1974)
-That man has been following us.
-How could he be? He's in front of us.
-I hope you've got a witty line if he shoots us.
11 Harrowhouse is a british heist comedy. Or, it's a british heist drama with a few chuckles, depending on which version you watch. The movie stars Charles Grodin and it has been screened with and without his restrospective commentary which runs the length of the film. With the commentary (which is the version I saw), you get plenty of Grodin's trademark deadpan observations and narrative, throughout. Removing the commentary leaves the viewer with a much more serious heist movie experience.
Grodin plays Chesser, a small time diamond buyer/seller who stumbles on an offer that's too good to be true. He is offered the opportunity to oversee the purchase and cutting of an obscenely large diamond. During the delivery of said diamond, Chesser gets robbed. To make things right, Chesser (now a million dollars in the hole) has to pull off a major diamond heist for his client.
Grodin channeling Henry Silva
The cast in this movie should have guaranteed some measure of success, but we all know that's not always the case. Candice Bergen, James Mason and Sir John Gielgud all lend the movie a little extra touch of class. The overall tone of the movie reminds me of Foul Play (1978) with Chevy and Goldie, just to give you an idea of what you're in for.
Overall, 11 Harrowhouse was an enjoyable watch, but i don't think it's gonna cause anyone to rewrite their top 50 movies of all time. I'd give it a 6 out of 10.
Thursday, January 31, 2013
The Nickel Ride (1974)
This goddamn city is dying all over. It's drying up like a corpse, sections are choking to death.
Man, what a great flick! The Nickel Ride stars Jason Miller as Cooper (The Key Man), a mid level mob boss who is on the verge of securing a block of empty warehouses which the LA mob will use to house stolen goods. He just can't seem to get all of his ducks in a row.
This movie reminds me a lot of The Friends of Eddie Coyle. You've got your main character doing everything in his power to get over this last mid life mob hump and he's just not getting the right cards for a winning hand. Father Karras does such a great job of conveying the concern, worry, distrust and paranoia that comes with having to deliver for the mob and fearing the cost of failure. As the movie moves forward, you really get the sense of dread and mounting tension as Cooper starts to run out of time. What gives the film an extra boost is that you're never really sure if Cooper's concerns are real or imagined.
Bo Hopkins good ole boy character really shines against Millers stoic and intense character and their exchanges are highlights of the film. Also stars Linda Haynes, Victor French (almost unrecognizable sans facial hair) and John Hillerman. Really well done and deliberately paced, it was great to finally get to watch this one. (Merry Christmas to me!)
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Paranoia, the destroyaaaaaaah! |
Monday, January 21, 2013
Farewell, My Lovely (1975)
"Now wait a minute. I've been slapped, scratched, punched, knocked
unconscious, drugged, and shot at, looking for your Velma, so quit
trying to make a milkshake out of my insides, will you?"
Every grown man wants to grow up to be Robert Mitchum. Mitchum plays Philip Marlowe, Private Detective, on the case. Farewell is a great film noir with all the noir trappings. Cool lines, tough guys, dames, shootouts, corrupt cops, dead bodies, exposition and booze.
After 7 years in jail, a tough guy (Jack O'Halloran - General Zod's muscle from Superman) hires Marlowe to find his lady. Wrong turns lead to dead ends and, the next thing you know, Marlowe has got his hands full with multiple investigations that all seem to be connected, somehow.
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"She was giving my the kind of look that I could feel in my hip pocket" |
Thursday, January 10, 2013
American Me 1992
"You're starting to show weakness,...and we both know you can't do that."
I've probably seen this movie close to 40 times. One of my all time faves. Watched this one again cuz I like to revisit the "classics", on occasion. Decided to watch it with an eye on writing something up for this blog. I guess after you've seen a movie so many times, the brutality gets lost on you.
I would venture to say that every hispanic male between the ages of 35 and 45 could quote every line from one of two movies. American Me...or Blood In Blood Out. It all just depends on which one you saw first. I've done my own unofficial polling on this so,...
American Me is a fictionalized account of the rise of La Eme (the letter M), The Mexican Mafia, within the California Penal system. The story is the rise and fall of Montoya Santana, from teenage street gang member to leader of what became the most powerful gang in Foslom Prison. A lot of drama and a lot of the aformentioned brutality. Let's see,...
Gang rape, immolation, A knife to the chest, A knife to the jugular, A knife in the back door, a gunshot blast to some dudes manhood, death by cocaine and sibling murder. You add it all up and that kinda puts the ear cutting in Reservoir Dogs to shame.
A documentary on this movie, found on the dvd, made it clear that La Eme was none too pleased with the making of this movie. Supposedly, Edward James Olmos name was "on a list" and a few of the real life collaborators on the film ended up dead after it's completion.
Well,...that's enough to keep me from blogging anymore about this movie.
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