Rate The Last Movie You Saw

Tools    





The Substance (2024)

Bit of a weird one, body horror or comment on modern fame? Either way, I enjoyed the 1st half where the isolation is apparent in our "heroine" so she decides to take drastic measures. The the transformation bit is done really well also...very Cronenberg but the last 1/3rd of the film just got daft and negated any tension built up in the first 2. Someone posted on the likeness to the film "Society" and I agree, much more than parallels with a film like Videodrome. Both performances are great though but it just descends into farce in the final 3nd.





Vesper Chronicles - (2022)

Kinda boring, actually. Great visuals, but the story isn't anything to write home about. 3/10
__________________
There has been an awekening.... have you felt it?





Everyone should see this movie at least once in their lifetime. A classic of British cinema.



Sweet indie movie. Very relatable.
__________________
I’m here only on Mondays, Wednesdays & Fridays. That’s why I’m here now.





My Happy Ending

I don't know much abut the play this movie is based on, but I have to believe that it was easily better than the film version.

For some reason, there are some ideas that might play well on the stage but don't necessarily translate to the big screen.

Having said that, Andie McDowell gives it her best as a famous actor whose late-career doldrums are upstaged by stage 4 cancer - which prompts her to check in to a British clinic full of spirited fellow cancer patients and an upright doctor.

The movie died a quick death when it was released theatrically, and it's not hard to see why.




American Carnage

I'll watch almost anything for another Jenna Ortega performance, but American Carnage was borderline painful.

The weak attempt at horror involves a bunch of youngsters who are detained under flimsy pretenses just to be put to work at an elderly facility where things, as the saying goes, aren't what they seem.

And all of this is somehow tied into a popular chain of fast food that's famous for its burgers.

If you don't see the way it all connects coming up 5th avenue, then maybe the filmmakers have found their target audience.



A couple more Western video acquisitions...




The Big Country (William Wyler / 1958)
The Quick and the Dead (Sam Raimi / 1995)
The Proposition (John Hillcoat / 2005)
3:10 to Yuma (James Mangold / 2007)

The Big Country is a classic 1958 Western, one of those big Hollywood productions with a bit of a subversive streak. Gregory Peck plays a former sea captain named James McKay, who is about to marry Patricia Terrell (Carroll Baker), the daughter of powerful rancher Henry "The Major" Terrill (Charles Bickford), and gets caught up in a power struggle between Terrill and rival rancher Rufus Hannassey (Burl Ives). Charlton Heston plays Terrill's foreman Steve Leech, who becomes Jim's main rival for Patricia's affections. Jean Simmons plays Patricia's schoolteacher friend Julie Maragon, who holds the rights to yet another nearby ranch - now abandoned - called "The Big Muddy." Chuck Connors plays Buck, the no-good son of Rufus who (wrong-headedly) imagines that Julie fancies him. The movie deliberately undermines a lot of the expectations and conventions of the Western genre, mainly through Peck's lead character, who is an Easterner and an outsider to the West and who refuses to get pulled into the violent rivalry between the ranchers, or to be provoked by others into proving his own manhood through violence. All the principal actors are terrific, but in particular Ives as Rufus, who commands the screen every time he appears, starting from his introduction where he crashes a Terrill party with rifle in hand, delivering his ultimatum to Terrill.

The Quick and the Dead is splatstick horror maestro Sam Raimi's one and (so far) only Western, a very entertaining and kinetic homage to the Italian Westerns of the 1960's, in particular the work of Sergio Leone (although one can also detect the influences of Sergio Corbucci, Carlo Lizzani and Giulio Petroni.) Sharon Stone portrays a gunslinger who enters the town of Redemption, governed by a cold-blooded former outlaw named John Herod (Gene Hackman). She arrives just in time to enter the local fast-draw single-elimination shooting tournament, and it's Herod she has in her sights. Leonardo DiCaprio plays Herod's cocky son Fee, who imagines himself a faster draw than his father. Russell Crowe plays Cort, a former gunfighter who once rode with Herod but has renounced violence and become a preacher, arousing the ire of Herod. Overall, it's not one of the all-time great Westerns - even of the '90s - but it's a lot of fun. Hackman in particular is very impressive, further refining his tyrannical Western badman persona from Clint Eastwood's Unforgiven (1992) - where he played "Little Bill" Daggett - which dates back all the way to the criminally underrated The Hunting Party (1971), where he played the vengeful rancher Brandt Ruger.

Third on the list is a Western of a decidedly different sort. The Proposition is set in the Australian outback during the 1880's and centers around the character of outlaw Charlie Burns (Guy Pearce), who is captured by the police along with his younger brother Mikey (Richard Wilson). The brutal yet thoughtful police captain Morris Stanley (Ray Winstone) makes a deal with Charlie, promising to free both him and Mikey if he succeeds in tracking down and killing his older brother Arthur (Danny Huston - son of John), who is wanted for rape and murder and is suspected of massacring the Hopkins family and torching their home. Emily Watson plays Captain Stanley's wife Martha, who was a friend of the Hopkins family. David Wenham plays Stanley's arrogant and very properly English supervisor Eden Fletcher. Tom Budge plays young Samuel Stoat, a member of Arthur's gang with a propensity toward violence as well as a singing voice to shame a nightingale. And John Hurt - just like Burl Ives in The Big Country - manages to steal just about every scene he's in as crusty bounty hunter Jellon Lamb. While The Proposition is certainly a brutal film at times, it's also extremely moving and often quite visually beautiful. It captures the feel of its particular time and place, also dealing with the troubled relations between the whites and the local Aboriginal people. One scene that stands out in particular is the scene where young Mikey is brutally flogged on orders from Fletcher, while on the soundtrack we hear the voice of young Samuel singing a beautiful a cappella rendition of folk song "Peggy Gordon."

And the last item is James Mangold's 2007 remake of Delmer Daves' 3:10 to Yuma from 1957. When I first saw TV ads for Mangold's film, I had no idea it was a remake of an older film. After all, the original, while certainly respected, wasn't necessarily a household name like High Noon (1952), Shane (1953) or The Searchers (1956). But I never get around to actually seeing either film until recently, when I got the Criterion Collection Blu-ray edition of the '57 original, and now I've just purchased the 4K UHD edition of Mangold's version. First of all, I think Mangold really opened up the story in a way that's very effective. More emphasis is placed on the actual journey to the town of Contention, which wasn't really dealt with in either the original Elmore Leonard short story or in Daves' film. This time around, Christian Bale plays rancher and Civil War veteran Dan Evans, who takes on the job of escorting captured outlaw leader Ben Wade (Russell Crowe) to a rendezvous with the train of the title, which will take Wade to Yuma Prison. Evans takes on the job primarily out of desperation, needing $200 to pay off his debts and save his home, but becomes ever more committed to getting Wade to his destination. Bale is perhaps even more effective in the role than Van Heflin was in the original, and Crowe is every bit as good (and as chilling) as Glenn Ford. Ben Wade is actually kind of the Hannibal Lecter of Western badmen. While Wade can certainly be ruthless and vicious and cold-bloodedly pragmatic, he's also well-read and has an artistic streak. And he has absolutely no trouble whatsoever in reading other people like an X-ray, assessing their strengths and weaknesses, knowing which buttons to push and knowing how to exploit their vulnerabilities. While I have a slight bias toward the '57 original, I think that Mangold's 2007 remake is also a strong film and strongly feel that it deserves to be regarded alongside of it and mentioned in the same breath. (BTW, the theme song in the 1957 original is sung by Frankie Laine. If you're of my particular generation, you probably know him best as the guy who sang the theme song of Mel Brooks' 1974 comedy Blazing Saddles with a completely straight face. Because of that, I've usually had a hard time taking him seriously whenever I hear his voice singing some Western theme song. But so invincibly gorgeous is the theme song to the original 3:10 to Yuma that it's the one time I don't laugh at Frankie Laine.)
__________________
"Well, it's what people know about themselves inside that makes 'em afraid" - Clint Eastwood as The Stranger, High Plains Drifter (1973)

"I'll let you be in my dream if I can be in yours" - Bob Dylan, Talkin' World War III Blues (1963)



SERVICE DE LUXE
(1938, Lee)



"Helen Murphy is not supposed to know anything but 'moon', 'spoon', and 'June'."

Service de Luxe follows Helen Murphy (Constance Bennett), the owner of a successful agency that performs daily routine chores and errands for wealthy people. When Robert Wade (Vincent Price), a young inventor trying to develop a tractor model, gets involved in a case of mistaken identity with Murphy, the two end up in love. However, she finds herself unable to tell him who she is without risking her business.

This is Vincent Price's feature film debut. Since I'm preparing for a podcast episode on him, I decided to check it out. The film doesn't really offer much beyond the stereotypical tropes of romcoms and mistaken identity films. Once the story gets to the main issue, it's pretty easy to guess where things will end up. However, for the most part, it is all executed in an amusing way.

Grade:



Full review on my Movie Loot
__________________
Check out my podcast: The Movie Loot!



Demons 2





Meh. Not as good as the first one.