Showing posts with label Eli Roth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eli Roth. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 07, 2025

Pic of the Day


I am shocked and horrified to realize I never did a post on this movie when it was first announced -- I vividly remember hearing about it happening so I know I knew about it (you never know) but somehow that never translated into me sitting down here and writing something and for that I ask your forgiveness. Because not only (as seen above in the first image, via) is Isabelle Huppert starring as the real-life imfamous historical figure the Countess Elizabeth Bathory, whose legend has it that she's bathe herself in virgin's blood to keep her youth thereby inspiring a thousand lesbian vampire movies in the process (plus that scene with Heather Matarazzo in Hostel Part II, we shan't forget that). But Huppert s playing Bathory for the avant-garde German filmmaking legend (and compatriot of Fassbinder) Ulrike Ottinger, the woman who directed, among many, Freak Orlando and (my favorite) Ticket of No Return


Ottinger's movies are kind of difficult to see -- there was a traveling show of them several years back and they pop up on Criterion every so often, but the only way to buy physical media versions are via her own website. Which on the one hand I applaud -- make your money and keep ownership of your own work, queen! But they're not cheap and I think it'd do her so good to loosen the grip just a little bit. (At least put together a box-set!) Maybe this new movie starring a legit movie star in a tailor-made role will put this iconoclast's name in big bright lights where it belongs. I mean if Bloody Disgusting is reporting on one of Ottinger's movies then she's very much moving in that direction. Speaking of they've got the plot details and what not so click over if you need those -- it is an original spin but we'd expect no less. No word on a release yet for The Blood Countess, but we'll keep watching! And maybe we'll just re-watch Daughters of Darkness to keep ourselves flush-cheeked and ready... 


Wednesday, November 22, 2023

Haulin' Ass to the Holiday


Shortened day today as we head into the holiday -- MNPP will be closed up for new sexy business until Monday the 27th. It's kind of a slow week for new releases, weirdly -- usually Thanksgiving gets a heap for people to run from their relatives with? But all we've got is Ridley Scott's Napoleon (which I wrote a little about here) and Disney's animated Wish (which I haven't seen) and Dream Scenario with Nic Cage which I have seen and have not written about -- it's fine? It should have been far better, I had high hopes for it because its main idea is a great one. It just decides to lose itself in ideas I didn't find very interesting instead of the ones you do, given its concept. It's not terrible or anything though, and I say that as someone deeply skeptical of Cage. Perhaps youi'll dig it more. All of that said there are a couple of movies from last weekend that are still out that I do highly and deeply recommend -- my pervert lover Saltburn is expanding into a bunch more theaters so more of you will finally be able to see what the fuss about, which makes me happy given it's one of my favorites of the year. Here's my review if you missed it. Same with Todd Haynes' May December -- here's my review of that wonderful weird movie. 

And Eli Roth's Thanksgiving is still in theaters! As stated in the tweet seen above I never properly reviewed that but there are my thoughts -- I'm actually dying to see it a second time and so I might go over the holiday myself. And given what a goddamned hermit I've become that's really saying something. Oh and the new Hunger Games is still out and it's better than it has any right being -- here's my review of that. Other than that I have heaps upon heaps of awards screeners that've been piled up in my inbox so I'm hoping to catch up on things I haven't yet seen this year.. either that or I'll just watch Saltburn, All of Us Strangers, and Poor Things on a loop for five straight days, because all three of those arrived in my inbox yesterday and they're really all I want to watch anyway. But if y'all see something interesting, tell me about it in the comments as always!

Oh and now for one more thing of total self-interest (what's new) -- if you do any Black Friday shopping at Amazon why not do it through this link here, which tosses a few pennies our way? Consider it a tip for me keeping you in Paul Mescal Ass all year long! Or you can buy some of the rad shit I have for sale on eBay right now -- and I add things weekly to my store because I lack self-control and buy lots of things and then decide I don't want or need them and list them on eBay. It'll probably expand exponentially over the next few weeks too as awards merch comes in from the studios that I have no desire to own (I just got a box full of stuff from the movie Air and uhh yeah that's very clearly not my jam). So do continue to keep checking there. Or if you care to (i.e. if you love me) just donate to MNPP via PayPal, which you can do at that link or via the one in the right-hand column. It's the holidays! Love me some dammit!

Seriously though have a great holiday, everyone.
We'll see you next week!

Monday, October 30, 2023

13 Bunnies of Halloween #12






At the end of Eli Roth's Cabin Fever (2002) our sort-of hero Paul (Rider Strong) has made it to the hospital after a string of, you know, negative set-backs. Up to and including the fact that he's infected with the deadly plague that's killed all of his friends in horrifically gruesome ways right in front of him over the course of the past couple of days. And as he's wheeled down the hallway he looks into one of the rooms and he sees a giant bunny man holding a stack of pancakes and a syringe.

As one does. As batshit at the moment is, it is a silly reference to something that had come earlier in the film -- that little blond boy on the gurney is the same little boy who bit Paul on the hand at the start of the film, and who later had a freak-out where he started screaming" Pancakes!!!" while showing off some wild tae kwan do moves...

No, none of this ever made "sense" but there is a throughline to the nonsense, at least! (Also -- the bunny's syringe is one hundred percent loaded with maple syrup right? I think that's a given.) As far as I know Eli Roth has never said what the hell was going on here -- this piece here says that Roth saw the kid actor practising his moves on the day of filming and decided to give him a showcase, but that doesn't explain bunnies or pancakes. The best explanation seems to be it's a reference to the equally surreal bear-suit moment in Stanley Kubrick's The Shining...

... where logic's meant to have fully leapt out the window and we've entered the land of madness. And that works fine for me. Also Roth is friends with Richard Kelly (recall his cameo in Southland Tales) so manybe there's some Frank from Donnie Darko in there  as well. Whatever the case nobody's talking, as the film's end credits make perfectly clear:




Thursday, October 12, 2023

Good Morning, World


Hoping we get more photos of Eli Roth in the new issue of Men's Health (the article is paywalled for me) but if we just get these two I am fine with that. They're enough! I hadn't seen Eli rocking' a stache until now, and let's just say I like it. I like it very much. Anybody else excited about the full-length version of Thanksgiving he's got coming out? I am! My pal Sean wrote a piece reappraising Hostel the other day for Decider (read it here) echoing many of the things I've said for years -- that movie was seriously misunderstood and under-appreciated when it came out. I always saw it as a critique not endorsement of Bro Horror and the xenophobia of the Bush Era. Anyway happy Thursday! Hit the jump for more...

Thursday, September 07, 2023

There Will Be No Leftovers


It only took 14 years but Eli Roth has finally gone and made Thanksgiving, the slasher movie that he made a fake trailer for 2007's Grindhouse experience. You remember, when Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez sandwiched their films Death Proof (masterpiece) and Planet Terror together into a double-feature extravaganza, complete with fake trailers and goofy advertisements? Since I had the hots for Eli at the time I was rather excited that his trailer had him in his underwear. You can watch that old trailer here, but the actual movie he made -- which stars Patrick Dempsey...

... (looking hot) and Gina Gershon and a bunch of young people I have no reference for (although I did post a photo of Disney cutie Milo Mannheim's armpits on Twitter earlier this week) -- has an actual trailer today! Thanksgiving is out on November 17th, just in time for, you guessed it, two weeks after Halloween. Anyway this looks like a lot of fun for those of us who love slasher movies and is maybe the movie that Roth was born to make, so I'm excited dammit. Watch:

Tuesday, April 18, 2023

Everything You Ever Need To Know About Life...

... you can learn from:

Hostel (2005)
Oli: I'm so happy I shaved my balls.

Happy 51 to Eli Roth today! I don't know why but I have really been wanting to re-watch the Hostel movies lately? Especially the second one. I'm one of those people who truly believe that Roth was satirizing his main characters in these movies -- that these movies are anti-Ugly-Americans -- but who knows how I'll feel watching them here almost, uhh, 20 years later. (Good fucking grief how has it been that long?) I'll also admit that I'm excited that his short film Thanksgiving is finally being turned into a feature. Speaking of -- is there anything more Aughts than Eli Roth in American Apparel briefs?


Friday, January 06, 2023

All the Meaty and the Bloodshed


It's only been three weeks since the first awesome poster for Brandon Cronenberg's Infinity Pool dropped -- see it here -- and today they went and gifted us with another freak-out in poster form. It's like a kaleidoscope of face-meat, vibing on those creepy-ass masks glimpsed in the trailer, and I one hundred percent dig it. It's giving me big Hostel Part II meat poster vibes of course, which are always welcomed. If the next poster is all about Alexander Skarsgard naked on a dog leash then we've got our 2023 Best Picture, done and done. Infinity Pool is premiering at Sundance in a couple of weeks -- I already got my ticket! -- and then hits theaters on January 27th!

Saturday, October 29, 2022

13 Toilets of Halloween #11



You know those flashback episodes of The Golden Girls where they'd sit around eating cheesecake and tell stories and then we'd see flashback scenes from earlier episodes? Doesn't it feel like there were five of those lazy episodes every season of that show? What the hell were those writers doing that required so much time off? I'll tell you what they were doing. They were doing cocaine. They were sitcom writers in the 1980s anyway, so one assumes. Anyway that's what this post in our "13 Toilets of Halloween" series sort of is today -- it's Saturday and I have other things to do dammit. So I'm going to link you up with a couple of old posts that I've done here at MNPP that fit our theme. And this isn't really a cheat because these were two of the scenes that first popped into my mind when I decided on this theme. I mean I could have technically written new posts about them but... cheesecake. Just think cheesecake.

First up click here for my "Ways Not To Die" post on the 1987 classic Street Trash. This was literally the first toilet scene in a horror movie I thought of for this list, but then I realized I'd already posted it, and here we are. This movie is such a blast, I love it so very much. 

Next up there's the scene where a woman gets killed on the toilet in Psycho III, which I previously posted about right here -- one imagines that Anthony Perkins (who directed Psycho III) was looking to one-up Hitchcock's toilet shot, which we talked about earlier in this countdown. Psycho III reads like a laundry list of one-upping Hitch in a lot of ways, specifically with the sleaziness, and I totally dig it for that.

And finally, funny enough I have done a post about movies and toilets before! Nobody call my therapist -- I really don't need anybody going all Freud on me about this. Anyway click here for a gallery I gathered up in 2010 of some memorable toilet scenes in movies. One of the shots that you see therein will actually be showing up here in this countdown tomorrow! Can you guess which one? 

Wednesday, August 31, 2022

Nice To Meat You


Timmy himself just shared that there the meaty first poster for Luca Guadagnino's film Bones and All this morning on Twitter -- the so-called (by me) cannibal romance premieres in a couple of days in Venice, and then heads over to the New York Film Fest in early October which is where I plan on putting in straight into my eyeballs. Here is the movie's trailer. Anyway... that poster, huh? It's like the artier painterly version of that infamous meat poster for the second Hostel film (which coincidentally I have hanging up in my bedroom right beside my head, haha):


Monday, April 18, 2022

Everything You Ever Need To Know About Life...

... you can learn from:

Knock Knock (2015)

Bel: It's like destiny that we were meant to meet.
Do you believe in destiny, Evan?
Evan: I'm an architect, so obviously I believe in things
happening by your own design.
Bel: Well... I do. I don't think people just pick randomly.
I think that, if we are here together, it's because there's
something we have to learn from each other.

A happy 50th birthday to Eli Roth today! Listen, I don't miss the Aughts era of "Bro Horror" anymore than any sane person would, but I still maintain that Eli Roth's early films -- meaning the original Cabin Fever and the Hostel movies -- were smarter about the xenophobia and sexism that they've been bluntly labeled with as of late. I still think those movies were sending up our shitty American instincts more than they were being a straightforward indulgence of them. That said I'll admit I haven't watched them in a decade, so maybe a re-watch would disabuse me of my romantic notions towards them? But he still made Knock Knock in 2015 and that movie's feminist as hell, and presaged the #MeToo movement pretty smartly. Plus Cate Blanchett loves working with him -- she's re-teaming with Eli for his Borderlands video-game adaptation next, alongside Jamie Lee Curtis and Haley Bennett and Gena Gershon and Cheyenne Jackson and Edgar Ramirez! (Not to mention it was co-written by the dude who made the phenom Chernobyl series!) Oh my! So who are you to question Queen Cate? In summation...


Sunday, March 22, 2020

10 Off My Head: Social Distancing Tracts

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Once upon a time we told people there was safety in numbers, but the Coronavirus has laid that old chestnut in its final resting place, RIP. Welcome to the Age of Social Distancing. We're now encouraged -- the word "encouraged" feels ridiculously inadequate -- to keep the depth of a grave, six feet, between our bodies and those of strangers at all times. How this will shake out in the long run is anybody's guess, I'm no future theorist, but I do know that the Movies have been telling us about the danger of large crowds for ages and that, as a lifelong misanthrope and wannabe shut-in, is a subject I do find myself particularly versed in. So here, a list of such lessons, to make us feel a little better about our self-isolating this Sunday... next Sunday... the Sundays after that...

10 Movies Scenes That Encourage the Keep Away
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The Birds (1960) -- You're not exactly safe when you're alone (see that attic scene) but every time people gather into groups in Alfred Hitchcock's 1960 animal-attack masterpiece is when those lil' birdies really drop out the stops -- Cathy's birthday party? Check. Everybody shut up together in the diner in town? Check. Hell even five people standing around in a living-room is too much, too many. But it's the one-room school house full of innocent little kiddos where Hitch unleashes his most morbid fury -- close the schools, he cries! Risselty rosselty, or else!
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The Matrix Reloaded (2003) -- Nothing most people would define as "bad" actually happens during this scene from the Wachowski's second Matrix movie -- people dance and have sex and feel oh so sexy, ooh la la -- but I'm not most people, and this scene in this movie always set my phasers to cringe. So much tattered knitwear and embarrassingly sloppy touching. No thank you I say! Keep those fingers to your damn self, Harold Perrineau!
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An American Werewolf in Paris (1997) / Blade (1998) -- The admittedly killer opening scene of Blade always gets credit for this conceit, that of mythical beasts (in Blade's case vampires) luring unsuspecting humans into being the surprise main course for an orgy of bloodbathery. But the slightly underrated (if only for how damned cute Tom Everett Scott is in it) American Werewolf sequel actually did it a year earlier with its lycanthrope dance club called Club de la Lune that locks its doors as the moon goes full for its monthly monster feast.
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Scream 2 (1997) -- One of my favorite things, as an introvert with isolation tendencies already baked in, about living in a big city is the way you can feel absolutely alone even in the most crowded of places. I once, in the middle of an emotional breakdown I won't get into, took a train ride to Times Square and sat down among the tourists and had my breakdown there, unobserved, and there was real comfort in that disappearing act. That said this same idea has its horrible flip-side, maybe never better observed than in the opening scene of Scream 2, where the masked killer manages to brutally murder Jada Pinkett Smith's character in full view of a swarming whooping-it-up crowd without anybody even noticing until she drops dead in front of the movie screen.
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Blow Out (1981) -- Similar to that above scene from Scream 2, the deeply downer final act of Brian De Palma's 1981 master-class in tension editing sees Nancy Allen's character snatched by the murderous John Lithgow in the middle of the great big Bicentennial festivities in downtown Philadelphia, fireworks exploding around them as he strangles her to death, her would-be hero John Travolta unable to get to her in time because the damned marauding parade people that won't get the hell out of his way. RIP Sally, you queen.
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Messiah of Evil (1973) -- Somewhere between a zombie movie, a cannibal flick, and a Body Snatchers sorta film, only doing it with more style and hallucinatory strangeness than most of those much as I love 'em all have conjured, this Willard Huyck & Gloria Katz directed freak-out classic sees some unsuspecting tourists getting more than they ever might have bargained for while visiting the remote seaside "artist's colony" of Point Dume, California. (Dume, Doom -- get it?) Like an episode of Dark Shadows written by Hunter S. Thompson on a real bad trip, we see them set upon one by one by ravenous but surprisingly well-dressed and coiffured ghouls -- the two stand-out scenes involve a supermarket and a movie theater, the latter seen above in all its "who's that suddenly breathing down my neck" glory.
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Midsommar (2019) // The Wicker Man (1973) -- Our pal Stacie Ponder of Final Girl calls them "Town with a secret" movies -- the just mentioned Messiah of Evil is definitely one as well -- where a stranger comes to a remote place and unravels its dark mysteries always just a second too late to save themselves. But you add the white-eyed fanaticism of religion to the mix, like this double-feature does -- see also some of those Mrs. Carmody scenes in The Mist -- and you've got a real recipe for craving a safe cloister somewhere far, far, far away. That moment when you look around yourself and see only mad smiles smiling back? I say no thank you.
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World War Z (2013) // Train to Busan (2016) -- Zombie movies are the pinnacle of Social Distancing cinema -- they've been warning us about the way crowds can gobble up our guts ever since Barbara got trapped in that farm house, and I could've done a list of only them. But none of them have gone to quite the extent that these two recent entries have in detailing a literal crush of bodies -- monstrous stampedes stretching as far as infinity, even towering up into the sky. Busan's train station scene is particularly notable -- the way the hordes spin and smash and flop through glass and keep coming to swallow us up.
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The Host (2006) -- I've always felt more mixed towards Bong Joon-ho's much heralded monster movie than most people but there's no denying the triumph of the fish monster thing's first attack in broad daylight in a heavily populated waterside park in Seoul, South Korea. Tossing out every rule about how much of the monster we're supposed to see until its late-film reveal this scene happens only eleven minutes into the film, immediately showcasing the monster in all its CG glory, and telling us right upfront that there is no safe place to stand.
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Society (1989) -- The one that brings them all together -- It's a town with a secret! It's cannibalism, it's hallucinatory, it's a single-minded horde! It's the misbegotten sexiness of The Matrix's rave scene smashed up with the misshapen tangle of bodies in Train To Busan! It's the social critique of Pasolini's Salo as play-acted out by Garbage Pail Kids cards. It's all of those things multiplied by Cronenberg, divided by Lynch, straddling George Romero's throbbing metaphorical member. It's the most insane scene I think I've ever seen in a movie in my entire goddamned life, and somehow it's on YouTube right now. I don't know how, but it is. Brian Yuzna, you absolute nutter, bless.

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What are some of your favorites?
Tell me in the comments...
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Thursday, October 24, 2019

By Bloody Glory

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Buffy and How To Get Away With Murder actor Charlie Weber -- see our previous posts on him here -- just 'grammed this photo from the set of HTGAWM, saying "a lot happens" on tonight's episode, and I don't watch that show but it looks like what he is saying might be true. Anyway that photo reminded me of a poll I did a couple of years back around Halloween time involving a whole bunch of hot guys slathered in karo syrup, and when I went looking for the post I found the poll service I'd used back then wasn't working any more. So I fixed it, and now you should go back and vote on that poll again. I promise you lots of sexy bloody hotness at the link will be your prize for clicking through.
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Friday, March 08, 2019

I Am Link

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--- No Really Now - As I've been previewing for weeks now (months, actually) Gregg Araki's giddy gay day-dream for Starz called Now Apocalypse is premiering this very weekend, on Sunday night. I recommend you watch it, I have found the episodes I've seen so far bonkers sexy fun. Anyway there is a very good piece on Araki, that chats with the man himself, over at The Ringer -- they look back at his entire career and how it's all been trash-compacted-up (that is meant as a compliment) into this show, which touches on everything he's stood for since he started the 90s.

--- The Sheen Is Off - It's a big year for our boy Michael Sheen -- Neil Gaiman's Good Omens premieres on Amazon in May, which has him playing the sissy angel Aziraphale. But he's getting his evil on this year too -- he's just signed on to play a serial killer on a FOX drama called Prodigal Son. Dubbed "The Surgeon" (that sounds promisingly gross) he's the father of the lead character, a criminal psychologist who learned how killers think from dear ol' dad.

--- Big Horror Scream writer Kevin Williamson is teaming up with Hostel director Eli Roth for an adaptation of the book The River at Night, which is giving me some Descent-vibes description-wise -- a girl who's recovering from the death of her brother goes on a wilderness rafting trip with some girlfriends to get her mind off things and, well, things don't go as planned. Okay they don't mention cave monsters so maybe it's more like Deliverance than The Descent.

--- Smile Jacky Boy - It seems like a good idea to me for Jack O'Connell to do something a bit lighter, movie-wise -- I feel like he's always grimacing and grunting (sexily, but still) whenever I see him on-screen. So I look forward to this sci-fi romance called Little Fish that he's just signed on for, which'll have him living in a world where memory is running out, opposite Bates Motel and Ready Player One actress Olivia Cooke. 

--- Squad Member - I remain agnostic on there being a Suicide Squad sequel since the first movie was so so so very lousy even with such a mostly good cast, but the cast just got a little more interesting to me now that Will Smith has left the project and Idris Elba has been brought in to replace him as the super-shooter Deadshot. Will Smith wasn't even really that bad in the first film, to be honest - he certainly wasn't one of its biggest problems, anyway - but I still prefer looking at Idris on all counts. Him and Jai Courtney palling around? Yes please. (thx Mac)

--- And Finally hey remember when I posted that video of Alessandro Nivola doing some shirtless karate training on his Instagram? That was for a movie called The Art of Self-Defense that has him playing the "charismatic and mysterious Sensei" (according to IMDb anyway) to Jesse Eisenberg, who's looking to learn how to defend himself. Well the film is about to play South By Southwest next week (before it hits theaters in June) and the folks at BirthMoviesDeath have got the first teaser trailer -- check it out here. And below I giffed what is naturally my favorite moment...


Monday, January 14, 2019

Six Six Six Scary Movies in 150 Words or Less

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I've gotten woefully behind on reviews again (the eternal drum-beat!), nowhere moreso than with a pile-up of horror flicks I've tried to catch up on as the year of 2018 ended. So here are six (natch) quick takes on six (natch) horror or at least horror-adjacent flicks...

The House With a Clock in its Walls -- It's really strange to realize that Eli Roth has now directed a film starring Cate Blanchett, isn't it? And I say that generally as a fan of Eli's work, a stalwart defender of both Hostel films. Do you think Cate sat down and watched Hostel II at some point to familiarize herself with her director? Maybe she's a secret Torture Porn enthusiast! I could totally see that being true. As with all of our great actors she's got a hint of madness in her eyes - it's not too far a stretch to picture Cate getting stoned and cackling as the infamous leg shaving scene happens in Cabin Fever. Does it seem as if I'm avoiding talking about The House With a Clock in it Walls? Yeah you ain't mistaken. Snooze, next. 

Unfriended: Dark Web -- Don't ask me how this franchise turned out actually pretty good, but here we are two movies in and the Unfriended movies have legit burrowed under my skin two times now. (Here's my review of the first one.) This one, as ever the case with horror sequels, feels the need to expand outward from the first one - speaking of Hostel II it kind of has the feeling of that, with a vast conspiracy of crazies (or... you might say... a Dark Web) turning tech on its dumb-dumb users. But conspiracies of crazy people are almost always fundamentally scarier to me than demon possession or ghost infants and this army of hooded google ghouls (Goo-Ghouls?) shiver me timbers. It's clever and mean enough to make you need the lights on later.

The Housemaid -- Jump-scares don't normally get me but there are a couple of fun jump-scares in this atmospheric South-Korean-directed Vietnam-set ghost flick that got me; mostly though it reads as kind of a wan mash-up of The Handmaiden and Ju-on. It's also comically unsexy when it thinks it's being sexy - there are a whole lot of humping scenes in here that're about as hot as swamp butt on a first date. It also suffers from hot fits of non-sensical plotting a la Karyn Kusama's Destroyer that only make sense at the end of the film, but which un-do the viewer's goodwill before the time you get there. You're so irritable at people doing what seem like dumb things at the time that it's hard to work up a care once their actual motivations get unfurled.

New Year, New You -- Not as glimmeringly unnerving as director Sophia Takal's 2016 film Always Shine with Mackenzie Davis and Caitlin FitzGerald was (here's my review of that) but, well, that starred Mackenzie Davis and Caitlin FitzGerald, after all. But Suki Waterhouse fares better here than she did in The Bad Batch I thought, and Mr. Robot's Carly Chaikan as her former teen tormentor turned lifestyle blogger is insidiously awful (thats a compliment - she's meant to be). Best in show is probably Melissa Bergland as the malleable hanger-on willing to go full psycho for web sensation status. Still I was a little turned off by the pile of dead lesbians by film's end, and the constraints of its format - this is a 90 minute episode of a Hulu anthology series Into the Dark - stay felt.
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Apostle -- Starts out weird, gets way weirder - it's always a treat to see Michael Sheen (full stop) getting his nuts on (fuller stop) and his gig here as an old-timey preacher-man gone full woodland cult psychotic is a bonanza of bearded bug-eyed fun. The presence of Dan Stevens confusedly skulking about brings with it a whole meat-sack of reminders of his superhero TV series Legion though - these're both projects that often get lost up their own gobbledygook, and the more out-there their shenanigans the less invested turned my attention. Still it's kind of Baskin lite starring movie stars and, uh, that in itself is so crazy you can't help but be a bit impressed. 

Bird Box -- Our culture's become so infinitesimally fractured that we leap at any opportunity for something approaching a shared experience - anyway that's the only reason I can come up with for why this silly un-scary mash-up of ten things better things before it became such a meme generator and topic of conversation. Once we knew Netflix's numbers we grasped for what we could! Sandra Bullock does what she can - she is Sandra Bullock for a reason, after all - and there are lots of names here I have no doubt that Netflix's algorithms know we love watching (John Malkovich being John Malkovich! Tom Hollander being Tom Hollander! Trevante Rhodes... call me!) but like that SUV in Sarah Paulson's fickle hands it all just sort of crashes into the sky.
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Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Pleased To Eat You

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I don't know why they went and added the qualifier to the title but the movie called The Meg now has been bandying about (as just plain ol' "Meg") for quite a long time - I remembered writing about it when Eli Roth was going to make it in 2015 but that post led me to an even older iteration where Jan De Bont was going to make it in 2006! Anyway those folks never got it done - it took John Turteltaub, the director of the National Treasure movies (or if you're feeling nostalgic for the 1990s the director of 3 Ninjas and Cool Runnings) to get it done. Or more likely it took star Jason Staham to get it done.

Anyway I don't know why it's taken Statham so long to star in a movie that's gotten him into a wetsuit, given his professional speedo past but I'm glad we're here at last. The Meg is out on August 10th and lo behold it has a trailer (I'm sharing the International one but you can watch the US version right here):
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It looks fun in the same old trashy way all of these Jaws 
rip-offs are - if it's up to the lofty trash standards of 
Shark Attack 3: Megalodon we'll be doing fine. 


Friday, March 30, 2018

Who Wore It Best?

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When I saw this picture on Jay's Instagram last night I immediately had to google for a reason why Jay Hernandez and Garrett Hedlund might know each other and it turns out they were in the original Friday Night Lights movie together in 2004 (which I have never seen). I was hoping that Jay was a new addition to the cast of Triple Frontier, the film that Garrett's been "filming" in Hawaii for the past couple of weeks - "filming" is in quotes because all we've seen is him and Charlie Hunnam blowing each other in the sand not once but twice without cameras of the non-paparazzi type in sight.

Anyway if IMDb is telling the truth Jay isn't listed in the cast for Triple Frontier but he IS making a Magnum PI movie, hence him being in Hawaii I guess. I like Jay very much, have ever since Hostel (hell maybe even since crazy/beautiful with Kirsten Dunst... hey I wonder if Jay is the connection between Garrett and Kristen, who dated for a long time?) but where's the stache, Jay? You cannot play Thomas Magnum and not bring stache! Maybe that stubble is the start stache-ward? Better be. (There best at least be short shorts.) Anyway since Jay & Garrett wore the same hat I gotta ask...
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survey services

Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Telling Time With Cate Blanchett

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June of last year was when we first heard that Eli Roth, the director who eviscerated a naked Dawn Weiner on screen that one time, was making a kiddie movie called The House With a Clock in its Walls. We didn't actually know how kiddie it was going to be at the time since it's an adaptation of a book (written by John Bellairs) that was illustrated by Edward Gorey and Gorey, though juvenile, runs dark. But the trailer for the film, just released, makes it clear this is Eli's big-screen Goosebumps by way of A Series of Unfortunate Events. Oh and it stars Cate Blanchett, of all people. Watch:
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Did any of you bother seeing Eli's recently-released and (apparently) controversial Death Wish remake? I heard all the hullabaloo about the film seeming pro-gun but mostly ignored it because I knew I'd never watch the movie the second I saw the trailer and realized that the plot hinged on Elisabeth Shue getting brutally murdered - I have a fine stomach for most violence but there are some lines I can't cross and my beloved Elisbaeth Shue being hurt is one of them. I have absolutely no desire to ever see Elisabeth Shue, girl of my teenage dreams, ever get murdered on screen. Can't do it!

Anyway The House with a Clock in its Walls 
is out on September 21st.What do we think?
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Tuesday, December 05, 2017

5 Off My Head: Siri Says 2006

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It's time to fire up the iPhone and ask our old friend Siri to choose a number between 1 and 100 for our "Siri Says" series, huzzah, celebration, et cetera et cetera. And today the lil' lady was feeling devilish and gave me the number 6, so today we will look back at the Movies of the year 2006, and name our favorites. 

Truth be told glancing back 2006 was kind of a shit year, you guys? It was an excellent year for Horror Movies (we have Cheney & Friends to thank for that) but I didn't have a very hard time narrowing everything down to this Top 5 - a great Top 5, for sure. But normally with a year so recent I have trouble narrowing down a Top 10, and while technically I could make a Top 10 most of them would just be likes, and not emphatic loves. Hmmm. You decide.

My 5 Favorite Movies of 2006

(dir. Alfonso Cuarón)
-- released on December 25th 2006 --

(dir. Guillermo Del Toro)
-- released on December 29th 2006 --

(dir. Neil Marshall)
-- released on August 4th 2006 --

(dir. Sofia Coppola)
-- released on October 20 2006 --
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(dir. Richard Eyre)
-- released on December 25th 2006 --

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Runners-up: The Departed (dir. Scorsese), Talladega Nights (dir. Adam McKay), The Fountain (dir. Darren Aronofsky), Perfume: The Story of a Murderer (dir. Tom Tykwer), The Hills Have Eyes (dir. Aja), Hostel (dir. Eli Roth), Monster House (dir. Gil Kenan), Little Children (dir. Todd Field), Silent Hill (dir. Christopher Gans), Final Destination 3 (dir. James Wong)...

... Little Miss Sunshine (dir. Dayton & Faris), Idiocracy (dir. Mike Judge), Crank  (dir. Neveldine & Taylor), Volver (dir. Almodovar), The Devil Wears Prada (dir. David Frankel), Casino Royale (dir. Martin Campbell), For Your Consideration (dir. Christopher Guest), The Lives of Others (dir. Florian Henckel Von Donnersmarck)

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What are your favorite films of 2006?
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