Friday, December 31, 2021

Best New-to-Me - December 2021

 At the beginning of December I wasn't quite sure how this month would go. I knew I would have some time off, but I also had some traveling planned. We've been able to get back to the theater a bit, but now Omicron is surging through the city. In the end I wound up watching a lot of movies - mostly at home - and kept on watching really terrific stuff right up to the end of the month. 

Navajeros (1980) - An absolute scorcher of a juvenile delinquency film restored beautifully as part of 


Severin's Quinqui Collection. Navajeros stands on its own as a thrilling, nihilistic journey into the lives of street kids in post-Franco Spain but both it and the collection serve as an amazing introduction to a genre of films I was mostly unfamiliar with. 

Mill of the Stone Women (1960) - This one was put on my radar by the fine folks over at the Unsung Horrors podcast and I knew that Arrow was going to release a fancy version of it sometime this year. So I was stoked to see it pop up on Arrow's streaming service and gave it a shot - it knocked me flat! An absolutely stunning blend of Hammer-esque mad science, gothic horror, and Italian delirium. This is a film focused around a carousel consisting of wax figures of infamous murderesses - how can you not love that? Even cooler was that Arrow included Kat Ellinger's visual essay on Stone Women which adds another layer of richness to the experience. I might have to grab that disc.

Paranoia/Orgasmo (1968) - I watched all four of the Umberto Lenzi/Carol Baker gialli in December but the first one remains my favorite. I think even Lenzi would characterize some of these more in the thriller or noir tradition than what we usually understand as giallo but I'll leave that debate to others. What I will say about Paranoia is that its story of a wealthy widow being seduced and terrorized by a couple of young bohemians comes off with the same intensity as some of my favorite 80s-90s erotic thrillers. Lenzi's signature visual style is very evident and his use of a recurring pop song is chillingly effective. I was also a fan of So Sweet...So Perverse which despite its title is actually less sleazy than the other three. They all feature fairly high production values, quality actors, and made me desperately want to travel again - maybe next year.

High Crime (1973) - This has been on my Poliziotteschi wish list for ages but I've been avoiding less than stellar copies of it streaming online. I was very happy to come across a clean, letterboxed copy on YT and it absolutely delivered. Franco Nero lights up the screen no matter what he's doing and he plays the maverick cop as well as anyone. Enzo G. Castellari has to be one of my favorite action directors in history and this has some terrific chases and shootouts - all set to music by the prolific de Angelis brothers. Interestingly this was edited by Vincenzo Tomassi who also edited many of Fulci's better films - he's got an interesting style and it really works here.

Walking the Edge (1985) - I picked up a copy of Fun City Edition's disc of this underseen Robert Forster revenge thriller. It's tough not to refer to this as the L.A. Vigilante but that doesn't make it any less enjoyable. Forster is terrific in this and it's a wonderfully scuzzy portrait of the City of Angels. For Twin Cities area folks who might be reading this, the Trylon Cinema will be screening Walking the Edge in January - do not miss it!

Limbo (1999) - Another absolutely killer treatment of a shot-on-video nightmare from AGFA. Tina Krause is more well known for her exploits in front of the camera but Limbo is ample evidence that she had the chops and the determination to bring a unique vision to life. A surrealist vampire tale that evokes Lynch-ian weirdness as well as functioning as late 90s time capsule. Limbo was highly recommended in the latest Bleeding Skull book which has led me down some wonderfully weird rabbit holes this year.

Silent Night, Bloody Night (1972) - I don't think of myself as going too nuts for holiday horror movies - okay I did go to screenings of Black Christmas and Blood Beat this year - but I have been meaning to catch up to this one for a bit. I've heard it described as a slow or uneven but I found it to be exactly the kind of regional horror gem that speaks to me. Stylistically there's a little bit of everything - narration, sepia-toned flashbacks, POV shots, freeze frames, rapid fire editing - and then there's the cast! I'd naturally watch Mary Woronov drink tea for 90 minutes but name me another low budget horror film featuring the likes of John Carradine AND Candy Darling. Wild.

A Warning to the Curious (1972) - I had seen the BBC M.R. James adaptations crop up on folk horror lists for years and figured we might as well give the Ghost Story for Christmas series a shot - both old and new. We didn't watch everything but this is my favorite of what we did see. Cold, windswept seaside, isolated protagonists, ancient legends, dark secrets. The mood of the piece really worked for me and the necessarily reserved approach made the fleeting glimpses of horror larger in my mind's eye. It's very different but I have to say I also really enjoyed this year's installment - The Mezzotint.

Evil Under the Sun (1982) - Ridiculously overstuffed Christie adaptation that I had a blast with. Diana Rigg and Maggie Smith sing a duet - do I really need to say more?

Woodlands Dark and Days Bewitched: A History of Folk Horror (2021) - Speaking of overstuffed - I received my copy of the awe inspiring folk horror box set from Severin Films. The first disc contains Kier-La Janisse's exhaustively comprehensive documentary detailing all different aspects of the genre - even at 3+ hours I couldn't get enough. I was familiar with a lot of what was covered - but like most of us mere mortals I was furiously adding films to my watch list as it went. This documentary completely unmoors the idea that folk horror is restricted to a handful of British films and makes a very convincing case that there is an international history of making films according to this mode of storytelling. Much, much better than the school of "remember this?" horror documentary films that have dominated the space over the last few years.

Eyes of Fire (1983) - Diving right into the set is this restoration of Avery Crounse's debut(!) feature. Eyes is a spectacularly WEIRD daymare boiling over with striking imagery, practical effects, optical effects, dark fantasy, Christian cults, colonialist paranoia, and frontier survival. I very nearly watched a fuzzy vhs rip that has been around for years and I'm so glad I held off for this version. I'm excited to check out the alternate cut as well.

The Demon (1963) - I hopped forward in the set as Il Demonio was one of the films I was most excited to see. I'm still gushing over it days later. It somehow manages to blend formally stark black & white compositions, a nearly documentary approach to the folk and Catholic traditions of rural Southern Italy, and moments of stylized, expressive horror that could be compared to Bava's work. It's all firmly rooted in a stunning, physical performance from Dahlia Lavi - who plays a tragic villager condemned for possession and witchcraft. This prefigures Don't Torture a Duckling and The Exorcist in interesting ways and could end up being my pick of the set. The featurettes on the film and Lavi are solid as well.

Friday, December 3, 2021

Best New-to-Me - November 2021

It's that time again to recount my favorite new-to-me films I watched over the last month. After going relatively hard on horror movies in October - I really wanted to just follow my own whims in November. I still ended up watching quite a few horror flicks but it was nice to branch out a bit. All respect goes to those who go straight from Shocktober to Noirvember but I yearned for cinematic freedom. I did manage to watch some noir-adjacent stuff that shows up below. 

Singapore Sling (1990) - Incredibly lush, beautifully stylized, intensely mannered, utterly repellent. 
This was a title I had some familiarity with though it took a recent mention from a friend and the Live at the Death Factory podcast to nudge me towards it. I found it absolutely magnetic but it is not an easy watch by any stretch of the imagination. It is surprisingly pretty for the amount of bodily fluids on display. 

Rome, Armed to the Teeth aka The Tough Ones (1976) - Ferocious "city on fire" style poliziotteschi featuring the incomparable Tomas Milian as an evil hunchback and Maurizio Merli playing his usual maverick cop who just can't take it anymore! Wall to wall action, terrific music, and the Grindhouse Releasing blu-ray is a fantastic set. I should really pick up their The Beyond disc.

Siege (1983) - Incredibly taut Canadian grindhouse thriller. While the cops are on strike - a crew of right-wing vigilantes takes to the streets resulting in a string of murders at a gay bar. The lone survivor hides out in an apartment building and this literally becomes a siege film not unlike Assault on Precinct 13. The new restoration looks amazing - would love to see this in a theater.

Symptoms (1974) - Another moody British masterpiece from José Ramón Larraz. Wonderful autumnal vibes and a fascinating performance from Angela Pleasance (Donald's daughter). It's a slow burn portrait of increasing neurosis but I found it genuinely disturbing in parts.

Images (1972) - I realize that I should have seen this a long time ago - but it's never too late to see a great movie. More neurosis, more autumn/winter countryside (this time Irish), more tweed!

The Black Tavern (1972) - A wintertime kung-fu movie that pits a series of totally wild villains at each others' throats in an attempt to rob a wealthy official. Hidden identities, emergent alliances, inevitable betrayals, cannibalism, hopping corpses, whips within whips, a guy who looks like Elmer Fudd in What's Opera Doc, and seriously gory fight sequences. 

The Forbidden Photos of a Lady Above Suspicion (1970) - This frequently gets called a giallo and maybe it is but it's less of a murder mystery and more of a thriller in the vein of Les Diaboliques in my opinion. Either way, it's not terribly explicit but it is a visually and sonically opulent Italian feast to curb your eurothriller cravings. I definitely need to watch Ercoli's other stuff.

Tenement (1985) - Another building under siege movie - this time in the Bronx. I watched a few of Roberta Findlay's 80s movies this past month and Tenement is probably the best of the bunch - though I really did enjoy The Oracle. I'm really hoping to pick up the blu-ray for this one so I can listen to Findlay's commentary filled with her open derision for the cast, her own work, and for those of us who still pursue it. 

The Cool Lakes of Death (1982) - I sought out this film - and compelled my film club to watch it - largely based on the title and the cover image. I'm not proud of that but this is a beautifully rendered Dutch period piece with some genuinely surprising moments. Well worth your time.

The French Dispatch (2021) - So far my favorite part about The French Dispatch is that upon hearing about it a couple of years ago I read a bunch of mid 20th Century New Yorker articles and loved them. The film itself didn't connect with me entirely but it's visually impeccable with an outrageous cast and one that I will possibly appreciate more with subsequent watches. Anderson essentially sticks a bibliography in the credits and that's the kind of nerdery that will always speak to me.

New York Ninja (2021) - The maniacs at Vinegar Syndrome found an unfinished ninja movie from the 80s, stitched it together, and recorded all new dialogue and music. It's ridiculous, it's confounding, it's a lot of fun to watch with some pals. I HEART NINJA

Serie Noire (1979) - French Jim Thompson adaptation with an incredible lead performance and expert use of cinematic language. This is darkly comic in parts but not a laugh riot. It is one of many 70s films I've watched and thought that the Coens must have certainly been somewhat influenced by it.

Clan of the White Lotus (1980) - Relentlessly entertaining Gordon Liu/Lo Lieh joint that looks absolutely gorgeous. The fight scenes are so much fun and Lo Lieh hangs out in giant golden dragon bathtub. I'd like to see every movie theatrically but this one would be very, very cool on the big screen.

Five Dolls for an August Moon (1970) - Mario Bava directs a bunch of gorgeous jerks on a Mediterranean island being terrible to each other and dying Agatha Christie style. This isn't necessarily "must-see" Bava, but it's Bava so probably see it.

It's Nothing Mama, Just a Game (1974) - David Hemmings sleazing it up on a Venezuelan hacienda as a rich kid sociopath who subjects local women to a variety of demented ordeals. It's a terrific setting, Hemmings is unnervingly convincing, the rest of the cast is excellent, and the ending kicks ass.

The Mystery of Chess Boxing (1979) - All (Ghost Face) killer, no filler. Mystery of Chess Boxing opens with a terrific credit sequence of kung fu action on a xiangqi board and never takes its foot off the gas for more than a few moments. Who are these people? Why are they fighting? When did that guy get killed? There's no time to answer your impertinent questions - there is only chess and fighting and some comedy fighting and training and more fighting. It can get a little exhausting but I can't complain when I'm having this much fun.

Auntie Lee's Meat Pies (1992) - Karen Black, Ava Fabian, Pat Morita, and Michael Berryman star in a ridiculously fun trashfest that's part Motel Hell and part Dr. Caligari. That's really all I need to say, go watch it already.



The Working Class Goes to Hell - Thief (1981)

Criterion announced Thief  on 4K and Robert Prosky would have turned 94 today so I thought I would revisit and republish this older review ...