Showing posts with label malgorzata szumowska. Show all posts
Showing posts with label malgorzata szumowska. Show all posts

Saturday, May 28, 2022

Three Films Make A Post: Meet The Gayest Lady Who Ever Went To Town!

Theodora Goes Wild (1936): This screwball comedy by Richard Boleslawski with the great Irene Dunne (and Melvyn Douglas, though he’s not really Dunne’s equal here) is still a joy to watch. Of course, the joyless puritanism and churlish conservatism it argues against does tend to get in style again and again – and too many progressives can get as badly infected by it as the reactionaries do – so it felt unexpectedly topical from time to time. The film also puts a nice bit of emphasis that enjoying one’s life as much as one can and being a good person towards others are not in opposition. Still news to some today.

This being a great bit of screwball, it does not use its message to bury the fun; instead the film’s an absolutely joyous mixture of the slightly frivolous, the just plain silly, and the sort of absurd set-pieces the genre is well known for.

Choose or Die (2022): I found this very low budget Netflix horror effort by Toby Meakins rather frustrating. There are several really cool set-pieces here – particularly the diner scene is excellently disturbing – but there’s also a clear ambition to do more than just set-pieces. And it’s here where the film falters for me: while it is pretty clear what it is trying to achieve thematically, namely talk about matters of race and class, of the lack of hope you get when you’re black and poor and how it buries one, it does so in a manner that’s so blunt and flat, and has so little to do with how most of the horror scenes play out, the whole film falls flat on its face, even before the godawful ending.

Infinite Storm (2022): At times, this survival movie with Naomi Watts in a fine acting mood, directed by Malgorzata Szumowska, about a grieving woman saving a suicidal young man (Billy Howl) by literally dragging him down a mountain in terrible conditions, is surehandedly, quietly human, using the usual and typical tropes of this kind of wilderness survival affair to explore the fine lines between grief and hope, will to live and will to die. It is sparse (the right kind) and rather beautifully shot, as well. This good impression is regularly marred by moments where the film suddenly seems to lose trust in its own – and Watts’s – ability to express what it is trying to say, and suddenly swerves towards the cheese of badly used licensed music and badly written monologues that are meant to explain what the film is already expressing, but only turn it banal.

Saturday, July 25, 2020

Three Films Make A Post: Want to watch another?

Karen Doesn’t Dream (2018): At its core, this indie production by Zach Huckaby is pretty typical of that movie space, concerning itself with its protagonist Karen’s (Jessica Lynn Skinner) struggles with grief, mental illness, poverty and insomnia, which, apart from Thanksgiving dinners and “coming-of-age” in the 80s, are the main safe spaces of this kind of film.

Huckaby adds quite a few non-realist touches to the film, though, not necessarily just there to emphasise Karen’s deteriorating mental state, giving the film an obliquely dream-like quality that fits something whose main character watches video tapes of people sleeping to find sleep of her own.

Sadistic Intentions (2019): Staying with an indie movie, but moving on to indie horror, Eric Pennycoff’s film sees a woman named Chloe (Taylor Zaudtke) drawn into a game of sadism, murder, bad metal and a pretty fucked-up idea of romance. The film’s pleasantly slow beginning is – as is most of the film, really – carried by Zaudtke and Jeremy Gardner’s chemistry, as well as helped along by a tone that seems at once sardonic and empathetic towards the characters, providing the film an excellent basis for later developments when things become rather unpleasant for everyone involved.

It’s a lovely little film that finds the right point between being nasty and funny, and does a couple of actually unexpected and interesting things with/to its characters.

The Other Lamb (2019): Let’s end on a very impressive movie I have surprisingly little to say about, Malgorzata Szumowska’s film about a female cult and their male leader coming up on the late stage of utter destruction even the more stable cults eventually can’t help but reach. It’s incredibly acted (not just by lead Raffey Cassidy), visually strikingly and meaningfully composed, starting from a starkly naturalistic place but always reaching for the mythical, and about as powerful a film about young women conquering male-induced terrors as one could imagine. Despite being pretty heavy on the symbolism, it’s also a film not really made to be simply interpreted and cut open to examine its guts – it’s so well-constructed and nearly hypnotically dense and tense, you’ll come to the same conclusions by experiencing it, which rather speaks to the director’s artistry.


Prospective viewers shouldn’t go in expecting the horror film some of the marketing material promises; this is incredible arthouse fare that uses some elements horror movies might use, but is really not interested in the specific kicks we tend to look for in horror, even slow horror.