Showing posts with label brian depalma. Show all posts
Showing posts with label brian depalma. Show all posts

Thursday, September 04, 2025

Everything You Ever Need To Know About Life...

 ... you can learn from:

Sisters (1972)

Grace: I want to write about the apathy in the police force, 
about where the heroin goes after a bust,
about the fat political cats! 
Mrs. Collier: You don't have to shout right here on the street. 
What's the matter with you? I've never seen you like this. 
Grace: I'm on to something big! 
Mrs. Collier: Are you on diet pills again?

A happy 81 to actress Jennifer Salt, who's the lead in this incredible early De Palma movie and yet always gets overshadowed -- for obvious reasons, but still -- by Margot Kidder's deranged double performance as killer twins. I'm as guilty of it as anybody -- every time I sit down to re-watch the movie I'm like, "Oh right, her!" Which is mean of me because she's a lot of fun in the movie -- just in the not-quite-so-showy part. (Her and Kidder were roommates before they made it big.) Salt hasn't acted since 1990 but when she was acting she did lots of notable stuff, from Play It Again Sam to Brewster McCloud to Midnight f'ing Cowboy. (Her father won an Oscar for writing the latter's screenplay.) And here's something you might not know -- she's spent the past twenty-plus years being a producer on several Ryan Murphy projects including Nip/Tuck, Ratched, and American Horror Story! How great is that? She also co-wrote the script for Eat Pray Love! We love this for her.


Wednesday, January 22, 2025

Everything You Ever Need To Know About Life...

 ... you can learn from:

Carrie (1977)

Margaret: I can see your dirty pillows. Everyone will.
Carrie: Breasts, Mama. They're called breasts, 
and every woman has them.

The grand Piper Laurie was born 93 years ago today!
Have some roadhouse whiskey in her honor!

Thursday, December 19, 2024

Quote of the Day


There is a chat with director Luca Guadagnino and writer Justin Kuritzkes in Dazed magazine right now (thx Mac) about their latest colaboration Queer (the William S. Burroughs adaptation out in theaters now that I reviewed right here) and besides it containing several images from that film's set that I adore -- that one of him in a Carrie t-shirt above is going straight onto my mood board -- it's also got several bits of information I really enjoyed reading. Luca talks about why there's so much Nirvana in the film, and he also admits that Twin Peaks was an influence on it (but refuses to elaborate further). But it's the bit at the end that has nothing to do with Queer that has me the most excited -- and if you've seen my hemming and hawing then you know it's not about his possible American Psycho remake. 

No it's about An Even Bigger Splash, his long-gestating longer cut of his already divine 2015 film A Bigger Splash, which stars Tilda Swinton, Matthias Schoenaerts, Dakota Johnson, and Ralph Fiennes. Luca has been mentioning this was a thing on his mind for awhile, and bless this interviewer for getting a very brief but important update:

 "Yes, for sure. 100 per cent. We’re finalising it."

Supposedly this cut has a full seventy more minutes! I don't know whether this is a good idea or not either, but Luca always proves my doubts wrong so you'd think I'd have learned my lesson at this point. And even if it does prove to be too much of a good thing -- am I going to complain about seventy more minutes of a movie where the godline Matthias Schoenaerts runs around in itty bitty shorts looking like a fucking sculpture? I don't think so. In summation here is a new photo that dropped online this week from the set of Luca's other 2024 film Challengers, with him in a spot where so many of us would love to be -- half-straddled by Mike Faist in his tennis gear:


Wednesday, September 11, 2024

Everything You Ever Need To Know About Life...

 ... you can learn from:

Raising Cain (1992)

Nan: You know Dr. Nix, 
I should be going out with older guys. 
I'll tell you somethin'. For a man your age, 
you're uh, you're still pretty cute. 
Cain: It's not the mileage, honey. It's the make.

A happy 84 to the legend Brian De palma today! I've actually been re-watching little bits of the 2015 doc De Palma this week in an unrelated coincidence, which I recommend everyone see if you haven't before (here is my review) -- it's nothing but two hours of the man telling stories about making his movies and it's riveting. It's exactly what I want from a doc about a filmmaker. I wish they'd make one for every master still at work right now just like this. 

Anyway do we think that he's got another movie in him? IMDb has two listed as "In Development" -- one called Catch and Kill described as "a horror film set in Hollywood and featuring a predatory movie mogul" and one called Sweet Vengeance that's described as being "reportedly a murder mystery inspired by two real-life murders." But it's been five full years since his last movie Domino came out and that one wasn't well-received at all (with good reason since it wasn't great) -- still I would love for him to drop at least one more sleaze-bomb on us. Not that his legend isn't secured -- I am just greedy!


Monday, August 05, 2024

Trap in 250 Words or Less


Fantastic fun with a career best performance from Josh Hartnett -- and to any people who might be like "Has Josh Hartnett given a good performance before?" I say begone before somebody drops a house on you. (Also go watch Penny Dreadful and wash your mouths out with soap.) I was honestly totally enthralled by M. Night riffing hard on De Palma -- not just the very obvious diopter shot but this is very clearly his version of Snake Eyes -- and above all just having fun. I think this period of his career, since Old really, will be looked back on with great admiration for how much fun he seems to be having making movies right now. I know he's been compared to Hitchcock his entire career but he has been earning it for the way his movies are pure entertainment machines that're not at all concerned with making "sense" in a logical way over them just being engines for cinematic playfulness. I had a dumb grin on my face the entire run of Trap, from Hartnett's nerdy girl-dadding to Kid Cudi's hilarious turn -- how was he the only person who recognized what a stone-fox they had in their mix? And then for absolutely no reason Shyamalan has Josh take his shirt off for the last act. Pure joy. This movie's pure silly delight.

Wednesday, July 03, 2024

MaXXXine, You Forgot To Put On The Red Light


I thought George Miller's Furiosa was going to be my greatest disappointment of 2024, but here comes Ti West's MaXXXine to kick Furiosa outta the way with one high-heeled boot and snatch that feeble crown. Both subsequent films in franchises that are named after their leading ladies -- does this mean that I hate Strong Female Characters? Or maybe I just hate shitty movies? Y'all decide -- I'm too spent from drowning in disappointment this whole damned summer.

As a fairly rabid fan of both X and Pearl -- I've never been able to choose a favorite between the two as they hit very different joy buttons making it depend on my mood -- it brings me absolutely nothing but pain to share that MaXXXine did next to nothing for me. The giddiness I felt for the first half an hour or so here watching Mia Goth klick ass -- and even though this movie has very little idea what to do with her Mia Goth never stops kicking ass -- speeded out of me like air fizzling from a gently pricked balloon.

I'm seeing it a second time next week and I am fervently hoping that I'll be less down on it after that, but as it stands now on a single watch MaXXXine just feels like whiff after whiff -- it sets up what oughta be homerun after homerun and then just spins its wheels around them, unsure where to go or what to say or do. Nothing feels very propulsive, or meaningful -- ideas are introduced only to suffocate from lack of oxygen.

Stylistically it's sometimes fun, but only on a surface-level -- yes okay you're using the Brian De Palma split-screens, but where is any sense of De Palma's sleaze and perversion? Nowhere, that's where. It's a heap of red herrings lit up by neon signs. There's no urgency, no danger -- Maxine herself is such a force we never fear for her, and she remains so singlemindedly antisocial that the "friends" she's made, the ones who are in danger, never register enough for us to care when their times to bleed come.

I know there's been some retroactive appreciation for Scream 3 over the past several years -- mostly due to Parker Posey's hilarious turn in it -- but all I could think of watching MaXXXine was Scream 3 and not in a good way. There are half-baked meta allusions about the brutality of behind-the-scenes Hollywood yadda yadda but neither film makes them amount to much. And MaXXXine doesn't even have a Parker Posey to rescue it. It's Scream 3 without Parker Posey! Imagine!

Of course Goth is never bad and she gives it her all, but there's just nowhere for Maxine the character as written to go -- not as this movie shows it anyway. The pieces of the mystery that she finds herself in click into their expected place with a complete lack of surprise, or oomph -- MaXXXine feels like everybody cashed their checks and was halfway out the door before the first clapboard could slap Action. This was so fucking depressing.



Tuesday, April 25, 2023

Wednesday, June 15, 2022

Riz Drums Up Criterion's September Line-up


Criterion has today announced their September 2022 line-up of blu-ray and 4K releases, and as we do every month at this blessed moment let us dive in and look see! First and fore-hottest they are dropping Darius Marder's terrific 2019 film Sound of Metal (or as it was known round these parts "the shirtless-drummer-Riz-Ahmed movie" -- which got Riz rightly nominated for a Best Actor Oscar. Even better this is one of their 4K titles -- this movie looked great but it sounded even better, so I'm most interested in the "5.1 surround DTS-HD Master Audio soundtrack" and a program devoted entirely to sound design in its special features.

And speaking of incredible sound design they're also dropping Brian De Palma's masterpiece Blow Out in 4K -- John Travolta be damned this is one of my favorite movies ever. On the similar title front they've got the 2004 film Take Out on tap, which was co-directed by Red Rocket director Sean Baker alongside Shih-Ching Tsou and tells the story of a Chinese immigrant in post-9/11 NYC who's trying to steer clear of a loan shark he owes money to. I have never seen this, but given that I've loved all of baker's movies at this point I should clearly change that fact.
 
The other three (or I should say "three" given the breadth of one of these) titles for September are Henri-Georges Clouzout's 1943 flick Le Corbeau (which I've never seen but you can read about it here) and then Atom Egoyan's 1994 flick Exotica, which I remember really wanting to like in the 90s and feeling extremely cold towards once I saw it. I imagine that I saw it right after I had fallen head over heels in love with The Sweet Hereafter (now there is a movie needing a Criterion release) and those two movies seemed worlds apart at the time -- I ought to give it another go? 

Anyway that makes Criterion's final September title a fourth edition of Martin Scorsese's "World Cinema Project," which and I quote "gathers six important works, from Angola (Sambizanga), Argentina (Prisioneros de la tierra), Iran (Chess of the Wind), Cameroon (Muna moto), Hungary (Two Girls on the Street), and India (Kalpana)."  Here I admit I have refrained from diving into any of these collections because I just don't know where to start, and also I can be super basic when it comes down to it. So if y'all are fans of these sets tell me about them please! Where do I ever start?


Friday, April 29, 2022

5 Off My Head: The Pfeiffer Lady


The one and the only Michelle Pfeiffer, who is turning 64 today, can be seen at the moment on Showtime's The First Lady series, giving in my consideration the best performance on the show as Betty Ford -- I'll admit up front that I went into the show being pretty unfamiliar with Betty Ford, besides the the Cliff's Notes stuff with regards to alcoholism etc, so I don't have a person in my head that I have been comparing her to. But she's giving by far the most human and grounded performance...

... on the series, which is admittedly a bit of a mess. (Oh Viola, what are you doing?) Anyway what's new -- Michelle literally never puts in a bad turn, and yet she continually goes under-appreciated. I'm just glad she's working consistently again after taking so much time off to be with and raise her kids. So let's celebrate her here on her birthday today, with a list I am shocked to admit I've never done before...

My 5 Favorite Michelle Pfeiffer Performances

Selina Kyle, Batman Returns
"It's the so-called 'normal' guys who always let you down. 
Sickos never scare me. Least they're committed."

Angela de Marco, Married to the Mob
"Everything we own fell off a truck!"

Woman, mother!
"This is all just... setting."

The Countess Ellen OlenskaThe Age of Innocence
"Don't make love to me. 
Too many people have done that."

Elvira, Scarface
"Don't toot your horn, honey, 
you're not that good."

Runners-up: French Exit, Where is Kyra,
The Fabulous Baker Boys, Stardust

What are your favorite Pfeiffer performances?

Tuesday, January 26, 2021

Pic of the Day


Saw, Insidious, Aquaman and Conjuring director James Wan has a new single-word titled horror flick coming out this fall -- it's called Malignant, and he shared the above promotional image today on his Instagram, serving up some seriously sharp giallo vibes. (It's actually making me think of De Palma's Phantom of the Paradise the hardest though, haha.) Anyway alongside Edgar Wright's Last Night in Soho I've got hopes that we might be entering a New Giallo phase of horror this year, which would tickle me purple -- I do love that ridiculous genre so, and it's odd how few get made these days. Here's what Wan had to say on his movie, which stars Annabelle Wallis from Annabelle:

"MALIGNANT comes out September 10th. I finally wrapped it last week. This was supposed to be my “little horror thriller” I do between the big ones, but the pandemic pushed it as long the big ones. I’m super excited for this film. I don’t even know how to describe it. I wanted to do something original and genre-bending, and different to my other work, but still in the spirit of the horror-thrillers I grew up with. More to come."


Thursday, October 15, 2020

My Favorite Horror Movies! Of Ever!

It's the day I've been waiting for slash dreading -- over at Final Girl my beloved pal Stacie Ponder has shared with everyone my Top 20 Favorite Horror Movies list! Actually my list is actually 21 because I changed my mind after sending it and she gave me the bonus. On that note I say "dreading" because there's nothing more difficult in all this world than narrowing down this sort of thing, and my list could have been one thousand titles long. You make all sorts of qualifications in this sort of whittling down process -- you want to represent yourself, as a whole person, so entries that feel redundant get excised in an effort at a larger vision, if that makes sense? 

Anyway click on over, see my 21 picks with a few rambling thoughts about each one tossed in for good bad measure, and make sure you keep checking Final Girl all month long as Stacie's annual "Shocktober" celebration keeps churning out the quality content. And make sure you're listening to Stacie's podcast Gaylords of Darkness (with the wonderful Anthony Hudson) too! It is literally -- I'm not even exaggerating -- the only podcast I listen to. I'm not a podcast person. But Gaylords got me through quarantine and I'm now a hardcore addict to their weekly fix.



Tuesday, September 01, 2020

Good Morning, World

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Did y'all watch Narcos? I didn't watch Narcos even though I love its leading men with the heat of a vinyl backseat in Charleston August -- Pedro Pascal! Wagner Moura! And today's birthday boy, Boyd Holbrook! I just seem to have an aversion to dramas about the drug wars -- I can't think of a single one I love. I don't even truly love Brian De Palma's Scarface (besides Michelle Pfieffer obviously) -- if you asked me to rank my favorite BDP movies Scarface probably wouldn't even crack the Top 10. 

Anyway I don't know why I am talking about Scarface now -- it's Boyd Holbrook's birthday! I deeply, profoundly recommend you take a hike through our Boyd Holbrook Archives here at MNPP -- there are posts, like this one especially, that will show you why he's a fave... in ways these gifs from Narcos might not. Not that I'm discrediting what's seen here! The stache, after all. But these are a little vanilla and when you see some of his modeling shoots from his younger days... hoo doggy. That's some Neapolitan shit. Hit the jump for the rest...

Thursday, May 14, 2020

Every Dog Has His Day

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Hoo boy, this is some news today! Variety is reporting that our bellissimo director boyfriend Luca Guadagnino has signed on to direct a new remake of Scarface. Word is that the latest script was written by the Coen Brothers (!!!) and it'll be set once again in Los Angeles. Can I just say...
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We know that Luca knows how to do remakes right -- well anyone of the (correct) opinion that his re-do of Dario Argento's Suspiria is a stone-cold masterpiece does, anyway -- so color me fuckin' intrigued. Save Pfeiffer (obviously, perfection) and some of the over-the-top gruesomeness (oh and Steven Bauer's tight pants, I guess) I've never been too infatuated with Brian De Palma's 1983 film -- it has its moments but Pacino's just way too fucking much. And yes I am fully aware that De Palma wanted Way Too Fucking Much, but it's way too fucking much. 

Of course all this makes me wonder about is all the other stuff Luca's attached himself to -- there's the remake of Lord of the Flies for one, and well yeah yes indeed for another there's the Call Me By Your Name sequel, which he keeps insisting he's going to do, despite all of You People (not me!) whinging about it. What will actually be next for Luca once things are happening in the world again? Besides his HBO series We Are Who We Are I mean, which he's actively in post-production on right now for a probable end-of-year drop. Speaking of, hello Tom Mercier...


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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Wednesday, October 30, 2019

13 Cakes of Halloween #11

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A good chunk of the first act of Brian De Palma's 1973 flick Sisters revolves around a cake. Philip (Lisle Wilson) hooks up with a girl he meets through outlandish circumstances (it involves a prank television show) and overhears it's her birthday...

... so while he runs out for an errand for her (that involves medication) he on the sly picks up a birthday cake and brings it back to her apartment to surprise her. Unfortunately for sweet Philip he's the one that gets the surprise. 

What's meant to be an act of kindness, of sweetness, is turned rotten by the ol' switcheroo -- the fact that Philip met this girl via a prank television show has already set up he's the oblivious type but this is the sort of prank that nobody sees coming and that nobody's laughing at. And now I have to break this sequence down into individual  shots because this is some prime stuff from De Palma:




The scene before this section was long and drawn out in order to lull us into that sweet sense of false security, and then boom Margot Kidder comes bursting out from under the blankets and all hell breaks loose. I love the shot of the not the knife itself but the knife's shadow passing over the birthday cake and blowing out the candles as it does -- and then the reverse as it's pulled back.

Like the "Shower Scene" in Psycho (sorry but all critics are contractually obliged to bring up Hitchcock while talking about De Palma) BDP wants us to follow the movement of that knife and the action through his edits...

Cause and effect though cuts. The gag here of course is the literalization of "cuts" -- what Hitch and De Palma have done is inextricably link the actual process of film-making with violence in the telling of their violent stories. It drags us into this and it implicates us as we watch. We made this happen too. We wanted our cake, and now we gotta eat it.