Monday, October 19, 2015

13 Nights of Shocktober: The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari

by A.J.

This is my favorite time of year, second only to Christmas. Autumn has arrived, the weather is cooling down, and October becomes the month long celebration of scary movies called Shocktober. There are a lot of horror movies out there, but as a genre, horror is still looked down upon by some mainstream critics and moviegoers. It doesn’t help that, admittedly, there are so few quality horror movies made but, like comedy, it’s a very difficult and subjective genre. So, in the days leading up Halloween I’ll be posting some recommendations for scary movies to help you celebrate Shocktober.

Night 1: Silent Night, "Spirits surround us on every side..." 

The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari
I always like to include a silent film in my Shocktober viewing since they can be as spooky and scary as modern horror films. The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari is maybe the most visually interesting movie I’ve ever seen and is certainly one of the eeriest films I’ve seen. The first time I saw this movie was in a film history class in college. I found it strange and creepy then and I still do now. It influenced the look and style of later horror and fantasy films both in Germany and abroad throughout the rest of the silent era and into the early sound era though no film would quite match its extreme visual distortions. Those films would of course influence later horror films and so forth until the present.
Directed by Robert Wiene in 1920, The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari is the prime example of German Expressionism in film, a visual style in which characters and settings are distorted and out of joint. The film is set in a town on a pointy hill covered with sharp angular houses; it is obviously a painting on a backdrop, and we are meant to know so. Doors are triangular and slanted, windows resemble rhombuses, zigzag lines are meant to represent grass, and chimneys are tilted. There is not a single aspect of any set that is not distorted in some way. 
The movie begins with an old man and young man sitting on a bench outdoors. The old man tells the young man that the world is full of spirits. The young man, Francis, then tells him his own story of how he came to lose his fiancĂ©. The mysterious and sinister looking Dr. Caligari (who with his top hat, cane, and stout figure resembles the Batman villain, the Penguin) applies for a permit to showcase his somnambulist, Cesare, who has been asleep all 23 years that he has been alive. Caligari awakens Cesare from a coffin (or cabinet) before a crowd touting that Cesare, who wears all black and has a very pale face, knows the answer to any question. A friend of Francis's asks when he will die. The somnambulist replies…before the next morning. The prediction comes true; the friend is murdered. Caligari has total control over the somnambulist and uses him to carry out murder and other sinister acts. When Cesare abducts Francis’s fiancĂ© from her bed I was reminded of the scene in King Kong where Kong picks Fay Wray out of her room and carries her away. As Francis follows Caligari to learn more about the sinister doctor the plot thickens, and even twists, and the film only gets stranger.


The horror in The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari comes from its distorted depiction of reality. It puts you in an uneasy mood right from the start and you feel as though you are in a surreal nightmare. As the film goes on you realize that there is no explanation for the bizarre shapes of things man-made and nature-made; this is simply the shape of the world. That daytime scenes are in a hazy yellow-orange filter and nights in an eerie blue just adds to the curious, but creepy, atmosphere of the film. This is a genuinely spooky, but not-too-scary movie that is also an important part of film history and an excellent film to watch this Shocktober. 

Sunday, October 4, 2015

Classic Movie Picks: October 2015

by Lani

Each month, I scour the Turner Classic Movies schedule for upcoming films that I can't miss. The highlights are posted here for your reading and viewing pleasure! (All listed times are Eastern Standard, check your local listings or TCM.com for actual air times in your area. Each day's schedule begins at 6:00 a.m.; if a film airs between midnight and 6 a.m. it is listed on the previous day's programming schedule.)

Spotlight on Women Filmmakers
This month TCM kicks off a three-year initiative to shine a spotlight on women in film while raising awareness of the lack of gender equality in the industry. October's festival focuses on directors from the early days of cinema through to the current generation of trailblazing women. 47 women directors will be profiled over 9 nights. There is a lot to choose from, so check out the full schedule online. Here are some of the films I'm looking forward to from the series: 


10/6, 8 PM - Dance, Girl, Dance (1940) dir. Dorothy Arzner
10/13, 8 PM - Crossing Delancey (1988) dir. Joan Micklin Silver
10/13, 11:45 PM - A Dry White Season (1989) dir. Euzhan Palcy
10/15, 11:30 PM - The Life and Times of Rosie the Riveter (1980) dir. Connie Field
10/22, 9:45 PM - Daughters of the Dust (1991) dir. Julie Dash
10/22, 1:30 AM - Middle of Nowhere (2012) dir. Ava Duvernay
10/27, 11:15 PM - Salaam Bombay! (1988) dir. Mira Nair
10/29, 10 PM - Walking and Talking (1996) dir. Nicole Holofcener


Decline of Western Civilization Parts I, II, and III
10/15, 2:45 AM - Part I (1981)
10/16, 2:30 AM - Part II, The Metal Years (1988)
10/24, 2:45 AM - Part III (1998)
This documentary trilogy directed by Penelope Spheeris chronicles music subcultures of Los Angeles in the 1980s and 90s. Part I, which looks at L.A.'s thriving punk scene circa 1980, airs on October 15 as part of a night devoted to women documentarians. Part II takes up seven years later as the punk scene is being overshadowed by glam metal and Part III looks at a group of homeless young gutter-punks. This year, for the first time, all three films were released as a DVD set; however, you can see them for free this month on TCM - set your DVR!


10/9 - Roving Hands
8 PM - Mad Love (1935)
9:30 PM - The Beast with Five Fingers (1946)
11:15 PM - Hands of a Stranger (1967)
Mad Love and Hands of a Stranger were inspired by the same source material, the 1920 novel Les Mains d'Orlac. In fact, the novel has spawned at least five film adaptations including 1991's Body Parts which until now I knew only as a movie whose VHS cover I would try to avoid looking at when browsing my local video store. This category of VHS tapes included other 80s-90s horror films like Nightmare on Elm Street, Child's Play, and Monkey Shines -- and I haven't watched any of these films to this day. However, the films in tonight's line-up have just the level of horror that I can handle.
In Mad Love, Peter Lorre plays a mad doctor who gives a pianist a hand transplant. The hands happen to be from an executed murderer and they exert an evil influence over their new body. Hands of a Stranger, reverses the sympathies of the story, with the doctor having noble intentions and the pianist as the crazed maniac. Beast with Five Fingers has Lorre again, this time being stalked by the severed hands of his former employer, an ex-concert pianist. (Note: beware concert pianists who've undergone any type of hand surgery!) 

Bonus Pick: 10/31, 3 PM - The Tingler (1959)
This is one of my favorite low-budget horror films from a king of the genre, producer/director William Castle. The premise, which revolves around a lobster-esque monster which feeds on fear, is ridiculous enough to remove any terror. However, there are some moments of real tension and star Vincent Price is excellent, as usual. 



10/18: Silent Lost and Found
8 PM - The Grim Game (1919)
9:30 PM - Sherlock Holmes (1916)
11:45 PM - The Grim Game (1919)
1:15 AM - The Round-Up (1920)
2:30 AM - The Life of the Party (1920)
Tonight's line-up features four silent films once thought to be lost. The Grim Game stars escape artist and illusionist Harry Houdini as a wrongly imprisoned man who must escape (surprise!) in order to save his fiancee. The two showings tonight feature alternate scores; at 8 PM, you'll hear music by Brane Zivkovic and the later version will have music by Steve Sterner. The other films tonight include a Sherlock Holmes story and two features from 1920 starring Fatty Arbuckle. Should be a treat for silent film enthusiasts.


10/28: Semi-Spooky Selections from the Disney Vault
8 PM - The Three Little Pigs (1933)
8:15 PM - The Big Bad Wolf (1934)
8:30 PM - Three Little Wolves (1936)
Three Silly Symphonies shorts featuring the Three Little Pigs and their wolfish nemesis.

8:45 PM - The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad (1949)
Animated adventures of characters from The Legend of Sleepy Hollow and The Wind and the Willows, featuring the voices of Bing Crosby and Basil Rathbone. 

10 PM - The Old Mill (1937)
Oscar-winning animated short about a community of animals inhabiting an abandoned mill threatened by a severe storm.

10:15 PM - The Plausible Impossible (1956)
Episode of the Disneyland TV show in which Walt Disney explains how animation can make the impossible "real."

11:15 PM - Escape to Witch Mountain (1975)
5 AM - Return From Witch Mountain (1978)
Popular live-action film about supernatural siblings on the run from an unscrupulous millionaire (Ray Milland) and the sequel in which the kids must escape the clutches of  maniacs out to rule the world (Christopher Lee & Bette Davis).

1 AM - Lonesome Ghosts (1937)

Mickey Mouse short which proves that Mickey was ghost hunting before it was cool.

1:15 AM - Frankenweenie (1984)
An early short film by Tim Burton about a boy scientist who brings his dog back to life.

2 AM - Mr. Boogedy (1986)
3 AM - The Ghosts of Buxley Hall (1980)
Two made-for-TV movies about hauntings at a family home and military academy, respectively.

Monday, August 31, 2015

Classic Movie Picks: September 2015

by Lani

Each month, I scour the Turner Classic Movies schedule for upcoming films that I can't miss. The highlights are posted here for your reading and viewing pleasure! (All listed times are Eastern Standard, check your local listings or TCM.com for actual air times in your area. Each day's schedule begins at 6:00 a.m.; if a film airs between midnight and 6 a.m. it is listed on the previous day's programming schedule.)


9/14: Directed by Sidney Lumet
8 PM - Deathtrap (1982)
10:15 PM - Running on Empty (1988)
12:30 AM - The Verdict (1982)
2:45 AM - Just Tell Me What You Want (1980)
4:45 AM - Bye Bye Braverman (1968)
Tonight's line-up spotlights the films of the versatile director Sidney Lumet, ranging from mystery-thriller to courtroom drama to romantic comedy. Trained as an actor in the theatre, Lumet was known for bringing out great performances from his actors and made several successful film adaptations of stage plays. Deathtrap was a hit play on Broadway in the late 70s, the story of a washed-up playwright who plots to murder a younger writer and steal his work. Starring Michael Caine and Christopher Reeve, the film's twist may seem less shocking to today's audiences, but it is still a fun thriller. Running on Empty follows a family on the run from the law and how the actions of the parents have had (predictably) adverse effects on their children. Screenwriter Naomi Foner and River Phoenix, portraying the rebellious teenage son, both received Oscar nominations. The Verdict features a great performance by Paul Newman as an alcoholic lawyer with a challenging case. The last two films tonight --  Just Tell Me What You Want and Bye Bye Braverman -- are two comedies set in Lumet's home base of New York City. Both films make the most of the location, such as Just Tell Me's fight inside Manhattan department store Bergdorff-Goodman, and feature eclectic casts including Myrna Loy, Alan King, Ali McGraw, George Segal, Jack Warden, and Joseph Wiseman (aka Bond villain Dr. No).


9/15, 6:15 PM - Agatha (1979)
This film comes at the end of a day-long birthday tribute to writer Agatha Christie featuring film versions of some of her best-loved mystery stories. However, Agatha takes the author herself as the subject of the central mystery, speculating on what might have happened during Christie's eleven-day disappearance in 1926. Vanessa Redgrave portrays Christie and Dustin Hoffman stars as an American journalist who befriends her. 


9/19: Starring Anton Walbrook
8 PM - The Red Shoes (1948)
10:30 PM - The Soldier and the Lady (1937)
12 AM - I Accuse! (1950)
It's always a treat when Anton Walbrook shows up in a film. Originally from Austria (aka Adolf Wohlbrueck), his acting career flourished as a character actor in British films with some of his best roles in collaboration with the Archers -- filmmakers Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, including tonight's first film, The Red Shoes. Walbrook is wonderful as the controlling ballet impresario Boris Lermontov. Even though he's the villain of the piece, I always find myself perking up during his scenes -- some feat considering the film's famous dance sequences. I Accuse! is director-star Jose Ferrer's take on the Dreyfus affair, a notorious espionage scandal from 1890s France. Often cast as the villain, Walbrook portrays the traitorous Maj. Esterhazy. The Soldier and the Lady was Walbrook's first Hollywood film and he stars as a Russian courier who must trek behind enemy lines to deliver military messages. It should be a nice change to see Walbrook as the hero in this one!

9/29, 12 PM - The Age of Innocence (1934)
In this first film adaptation of Edith Wharton's prize-winning novel, Irene Dunne stars as the glamorous Countess Olenska who catches the eye of a young attorney engaged to another woman. I've read that this film is perhaps inferior to Martin Scorsese's wonderful 1993 version starring Michelle Pfeiffer. However, I'm such a fan of Dunne's that I'm very interested in seeing her take on this emotionally complex part.

Thursday, July 30, 2015

Classic Movie Picks: August 2015

by Lani

Each month, I scour the Turner Classic Movies schedule for upcoming films that I can't miss. The highlights are posted here for your reading and viewing pleasure! (All listed times are Eastern Standard, check your local listings or TCM.com for actual air times in your area. Each day's schedule begins at 6:00 a.m.; if a film airs between midnight and 6 a.m. it is listed on the previous day's programming schedule.)

After a summer vacation from blogging, I'm back with monthly classic movie picks -- and just in time! August is "Summer Under the Stars" on TCM with each day's programming devoted to a single star. It's a favorite time of the year to discover new-to-me films featuring stars that I enjoy, get a new appreciation for an actor or actress I'm not familiar with, or just catch up with favorite classics. 

Since I'm feeling refreshed, I've picked a film for every day of the month and every star.  Some of these picks are films which I've seen and possibly even recommended before; these picks are marked with a "*". The rest of the films are ones that I'm looking forward to seeing for the first time (so if it turns out to be a stinker, please know that I'm suffering along with you!).


8/1: Gene Tierney
8 PM - The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947)*
In this supernatural love story Tierney is luminous as the young widow Lucy Muir who takes a cottage on the English coast which happens to be haunted by the ghost of a sea captain.

8/2: Olivia De Havilland
8 PM - The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938)*
De Havilland stars opposite frequent screen partner Errol Flynn as Maid Marian to his Robin Hood in this classic adventure.

8/3: Adolphe Menjou
7:30 AM - A Woman of Paris (1923)
In this silent melodrama directed by Charlie Chaplin, leading lady Edna Purviance is jilted by her lover and runs off to a life of sin in Paris, including becoming the mistress to a dashing rake played by Menjou.

8/4: Teresa Wright
9:15 AM - The Steel Trap (1952)*
An underseen gem! Joseph Cotten stars as a frustrated bank manager who attempts a clever robbery, yet finds his plan thwarted by circumstance every step of the way. His wife, played by Wright with her usual wholesome strength, serves as his conscience...but is it too late to turn back?


8/5: Fred Astaire
11 AM - Top Hat (1935)*
My favorite of the Astaire and Ginger Rogers musicals, this film has all the hallmarks of that series - a farcical plot involving mistaken identity, toe-tapping music, exuberant dancing, and glamorous settings and costumes from start to finish.

8/6: Michael Caine
3:30 PM - The Man Who Would Be King (1975)*
Caine and Sean Connery star in this epic adventure as swindlers who install themselves as rulers of a remote Asian land. The lead characters are not the heroic types we're used to seeing in adventure tales, but rather roguish opportunists who serve as prime examples of the corrosive effects of absolute power.

8/7: Katharine Hepburn
3 PM - Adam's Rib (1949)*
My favorite Hepburn-Tracy pairing has the two stars facing off as married lawyers on opposite sides of an attempted murder case. The scene-stealing supporting cast includes Judy Holliday, Jean Hagen, and David Wayne.

8/8: Raymond Massey
9:45 AM - The Scarlet Pimpernel (1935)
In this costumed adventure set amid the French Revolution, Leslie Howard plays the titular British vigilante and Massey is the crafty Frenchman on his trail. Often cast in colorful villain roles, Massey cited this film as a favorite.

8/9: Robert Walker
6:15 PM - The Clock (1945)*
This understated romance provides strong roles for both Walker and leading lady Judy Garland as a young G.I. on leave and the young woman who catches his eye. There is a magical quality to this film which is not only a love story, but a love letter to New York City (though it was shot almost entirely in Hollywood).


8/10: Joan Crawford
3:30 PM - The Women (1939)*
Crawford has a leading role among this cast of over 130 women (they say even the animals were female). In a perfect bit of casting, she's the scheming mistress who has enticed away poor Norma Shearer's dumb husband. Her final line is one of the movie's best!

8/11: Rex Ingram
10 PM - Cabin in the Sky (1943)
Ingram plays Lucius Jr., aka Lucifer, in this musical about the battle for a gambler's soul. The cast includes Eddie "Rochester" Anderson as the gambler, Ethel Waters as his faithful wife, and Lena Horne as a vampy temptress.

8/12: Robert Mitchum
10:45 PM - Thunder Road (1958)
Mitchum starred, produced, and wrote the original story for this drive-in classic about a Tennessee bootlegger who clashes with gangsters and the Feds. Look for Mitchum's son Jim, cast as the elder Mitchum's brother, and jazz singer Keely Smith.

8/13: Ann-Margret
8:30 AM - Viva Las Vegas (1964)*
This has to be the definitive Ann-Margret film; she gets to sing and dance with abandon, and she makes a perfect foil for the film's star, Elvis Presley. The first time I saw this as a kid, her dancing scared me a little -- she's like a wild animal! I wasn't used to Elvis having a screen partner who could match his raw energy and charisma, but that's really what makes the movie so fun!

8/14: Groucho Marx
8 PM - Monkey Business (1931)*
In this first Marx Brothers film made in Hollywood, Groucho plays..."Groucho." He, along with Harpo, Chico, and Zeppo also playing "themselves," is a stowaway on an ocean liner who gets mixed up with rival mobsters and their dames, all the while staying one step ahead the ship's crew. Love the gag where the brothers each pretend to be popular French crooner Maurice Chevalier (yes, even Harpo!). 

8/15: Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.
10 PM - The Corsican Brothers (1941)
You get double the "Young Doug" in this classic swashbuckler about conjoined twins who are separated at birth, both physically and geographically, but reunite as adults to avenge their parents' murder. 


8/16: Patricia Neal
8 PM - The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951)*
In this sic-fi classic, the alien Klaatu arrives on earth with a message of peace, but finds that humans don't necessarily want to hear it. Neal plays a single mother whose son forms a bond with the strange visitor. 

8/17: Lee J. Cobb
9:45 PM - 12 Angry Men (1957)*
If you've ever been called to jury duty and imagined yourself as Henry Fonda's thoughtful and reasonable Juror 8, well, you're surely not alone. Cobb is a stand-out among this talented ensemble cast as Juror 3, so certain of the defendant's guilt due to his own prejudices, that he stubbornly resists any argument to the contrary.

8/18: Vivien Leigh
3:45 AM - A Streetcar Named Desire (1951)*
Can an actor have two signature roles? I think so; after all, Harrison Ford is Han Solo and Indiana Jones. If Scarlett O'Hara was Vivien Leigh's "Han," then perhaps Streetcar's Blanche DuBois -- a delicate, but troubled woman who clashes with her loutish brother-in-law -- is her "Indy." Of course, Leigh won an Oscar for both roles! 

8/19: John Wayne
8 PM - The Quiet Man (1952)*
Just a gorgeous movie -- for the Irish countryside in which it takes place, stars Wayne and Maureen O'Hara, and the lovely story of a quiet American newcomer who courts an independent Irish beauty. Wayne and O'Hara have an undeniable chemistry that gives the film a surprising amount of sex appeal.

8/20: Mae Clarke
8 PM - Waterloo Bridge (1931)*
I think I prefer this version of the tragic romance between a streetwalker and a soldier to the better-known 1940 film of the same name starring Vivien Leigh. Made in the pre-code era, the 1931 version is a bit grittier and features a memorable performance by Clarke.

8/21: Alan Arkin
1 PM - Wait Until Dark (1967)*
This tight thriller pits Audrey Hepburn, as a newly-blind woman, up against a trio of thugs led by a menacing Alan Arkin who invade her home to locate smuggled cargo. Both Hepburn and Arkin give first-class performances. 


8/22: Marlene Dietrich
8 PM - Witness for the Prosecution (1958)*
Dietrich is deliciously wicked in this courtroom drama adapted from an Agatha Christie play. Her other-worldly demeanor is used to great effect as a wife taking the stand when her husband is tried for murder.

8/23: Debbie Reynolds
8 PM - Singin' in the Rain (1952)*
Debbie is a "shining star in the cinema firmament" as a young actress who helps a silent-film actor transition to talkies. I guess this is my favorite Debbie Reynolds movie, since it is my favorite movie full-stop!

8/24: Warren Oates
6 PM - The Thief Who Came to Dinner (1973)
In this light caper, Oates plays an insurance investigator pursuing a jewel thief infiltrating Houston high society, played by Ryan O'Neal. Looking forward to seeing the Houston locations, including the Museum of Fine Arts.

8/25: Virginia Bruce
11 PM - Born to Dance (1936)*
This is a fun depression-era musical featuring the stellar dancing of Eleanor Powell and the not quite as impressive singing of Jimmy Stewart. These two youngsters get embroiled in a love triangle when sailor Jimmy rescues the pet pekingese of the famous actress Lucy James, played by Bruce, and her press agent manufactures a romance between Jimmy and Ms. James.

8/26: Greta Garbo
8 PM - A Woman of Affairs (1928)
This silent romantic drama stars Garbo and real-life boyfriend John Gilbert as lovers kept apart by prejudice and circumstance, triggering a series of tragedies.

8/27: Monty Woolley
8 PM - Holy Matrimony (1943)*
A frequent supporting player, Woolley takes the lead here as a famous, but reclusive artist who adopts the identity of his recently deceased valet to pursue a life outside the public eye. Complications arise, as they must in such comedies, as Woolley's ego gets in the way of his anonymity.

8/28: Ingrid Bergman
4:15 PM - From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler (1973)
A TCM premiere! Bergman plays a wealthy patron of the arts who helps two children hiding out in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. I've heard mixed reviews of this one, but I've been waiting about 20 years to see it! I remember reading the children's book of the same name and wanting to watch the movie version so that I could see what the museum looked like. (I had never been to New York and this was before the internet was available.) 


8/29: George C. Scott
5 PM - Patton (1970)
Scott won an Oscar (and famously refused it!) for his performance as the larger than life General George S. Patton in this biopic which also earned Academy Awards for Best Picture, director Franklin Schaffner, and its screenplay by Francis Ford Coppola.

8/30: Gary Cooper
9:30 AM - Friendly Persuasion (1956)*
In this late-career role, Cooper plays the head of an Indiana Quaker family whose values of non-violence are tested when the Civil War reaches their doorstep.

8/31: Shelley Winters
12:45 AM - The Poseidon Adventure (1972)
Winters received her fourth Best Supporting Actress Academy Award nomination, having won twice, for her portrayal of a Holocaust survivor and former champion swimmer who is one of the surviving passengers aboard a capsized ocean liner. A classic of the disaster film genre!

Sunday, July 26, 2015

Review: It Follows

by A.J.

It Follows
I must sound like a broken record (or corrupted mp3 file) when I say that quality horror films are few and far between. A good horror film can keep you on the edge of your seat, thrilling you with clever scares or unnerving imagery. But any horror fan knows that in searching for a good horror film, you’re going to see a lot of bad ones. Unfortunately, It Follows falls into the latter category. 

This film has a familiar beginning, though skillfully done: a teenage girl in red high heels bursts out of her house and runs out into the street then to her car. She runs, but doesn’t get away. There is definite skill in the staging, and it was clear from the outset that this was aiming to be a low-key, subtle horror film, but something was amiss with that opening scene. The random teen girl being menaced in the first scene is not just a horror movie clichĂ©, she, and those red high heels even more so, are a signifier that It Follows is a film that will emphasize style over substance. That would be forgivable if It Follows was engaging and scary. However, It Follows also emphasizes style over scares.

The premise of this movie is intriguing and fresh. After having sex for the first time with her older boyfriend, young Jay (Maika Monroe) is attacked by him, drugged, and tied to a chair. He explains to her that he has passed to her a ghost that will follow her until it catches up with her and kills her. If it does, the presence will go back to following him. “It” can appear as anyone, even people she loves, and though it moves slowly it won’t ever stop following her. There is nothing she can do to get rid of it, only pass it along to someone else. Though clearly aware of the allegorical implications -- STDs/AIDS, or adulthood/maturity, both of which amount to decay and death to a teenager -- the film never fully embraces this subtext, insisting that the theme is open to a broad interpretation.
It Follows steers clear of some horror movie clichĂ©s (there is almost no violence or blood), but falls into others (Jay’s "nerdy" friend is characterized by big glasses and reading Dostoevsky's The Idiot). There are, of course, a few pop-up/startle scares. The climax is capped off with a creepy and memorable visual element. However, too many times I noted that while what I was seeing looked creepy, I wasn’t actually creeped out or scared. Is that figure in the distance behind Jay “It” or just a normal person? Speed walking or a light jog in the opposite direction is all it would take to diffuse the situation. 

At certain points It Follows moves too slowly, and the non-scary scenes fail to build dread and danger. The "scare" scenes, or potentially scary scenes, are separated by scenes of Jay and her friends talking like they are adults on True Detective. They wax poetic about the line between the suburbs and the bad parts of town, but those ideas are not explored any further. The one consistently effective element of It Follows is the haunting synth score by Disasterpeace.
I very much enjoy slow-burn horror films (Audition, John Carpenter’s Halloween,  and Val Lewton/Jacques Tourneur movies are some of my favorites). Because these films typically have low budgets, they avoid effects-heavy set pieces in favor of a grand, thrilling finale. The most successful examples make up for a lack of spectacle by building atmosphere and tension and creating full characters. It Follows clearly aims to be like the classic slow-burn horror films from the late 70s and early 80s, but ultimately it falls short in those crucial areas of mood and character and instead fills the time with dull teenagers talking to each other in rooms. 

Horror films can be flawed and still be successful. A good horror movie can have flimsy characters, plot holes, contrivances, it doesn’t even have to make sense (I’m looking at you Suspiria and Hausu), but it must spook, unsettle, creep, disturb, or unnerve. It absolutely must scare and, even more importantly, entertain. It Follows did not have me anywhere near the edge of my seat. Instead I was slumped back, my mind wandering to memories of other horror movies.

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Maps to the Stars: Review

by A.J.

David Cronenberg’s latest film pairs well with his previous film, Cosmopolis. Both are steely portraits of wealthy, detached characters. Both have a polished, glamorous look. Both feature Robert Pattinson in a limousine. Both are obviously the work of a serious and skilled filmmaker, and both films, while interesting, fall short of being a fulfilling experience.

Maps to the Stars is not quite the black comedy/Hollywood satire certain critics and advertisements have made it out to be. It shows us a hyperbolically dark Hollywood that only exists in nightmares. Sure, Hollywood is rife with poorly hidden narcissism and depravity, but it is still functional. Julianne Moore gives an excellent performance that borders on, but never spills into, parody as needy, middle-aged movie star Havana Segrand, who is desperate to star in the remake of the movie that won her actress mother an Academy Award. John Cusack and Olivia Williams are the parents of the self-absorbed, mean spirited Benjie, who is fresh out of rehab and has a major movie franchise riding on his teenage shoulders. But the clear stand out in this ensemble is the incredibly talented Mia Wasikowska as Agatha, who wears long gloves to cover burns and speaks so softly of big things ("I’m friends with Carrie Fisher") that we are inclined not to believe her, even though we feel like we probably should. The movie brings all of these characters to a disturbing, if not predicable, intersection.

Maps to the Stars fails at being a satire because neither Cronenberg’s direction nor Bruce Wagner’s screenplay make any moral judgments of the characters or their actions. Cronenberg’s style for this movie is to be observational and neutral. The most interesting scenes of Maps to the Stars involve the “ghosts” that appear bathed in cool, dreamlike light to certain characters reminding them of past misdeeds. It is unclear if these characters actually see ghosts or if they are hallucinating, bringing an eerie chill to an already dark story. The tone for the entire movie is of a bad dream teetering on becoming a nightmare. There are good performances -- a great one from Mia Wasikowska -- beautifully shot scenes of Los Angeles, and interesting themes that bubble just below the surface, but unfortunately do not rise much further. Maps to the Stars seeks to be more than exploitative sleaze sprinkled with tongue-in-cheek humor, but ultimately falls short of being anything other than an interesting retread of scenes and ideas from other movies about the dark side of the rich and famous. I am a big fan of David Cronenberg and I believe that he is a master filmmaker. What better proof is there than delivering a first rate second-tier movie?

Sunday, April 5, 2015

Classic Movie Picks: April 2015

by Lani

Each month, I scour the Turner Classic Movies schedule for upcoming films that I can't miss. The highlights are posted here for your reading and viewing pleasure! (All listed times are Eastern Standard, check your local listings or TCM.com for actual air times in your area. Each day's schedule begins at 6:00 a.m.; if a film airs between midnight and 6 a.m. it is listed on the previous day's programming schedule.)

4/5, 8 PM - Easter Parade (1948)
Besides religious epics, there aren't many films that we can call "Easter movies." However, I'm of the mind that a major holiday requires some sort of companion film to be watched, as a tradition each year. Not to slight the epics, but they're all over 2 hours long and, given the subject matter, a bit heavy. Luckily, there is at least one film appropriate for watching while snacking on Easter candy - the sprightly 40s musical Easter Parade. The holiday serves as a bookend for the film's story, beginning and ending with a grand parade down Fifth Avenue. The rest of the plot takes places over the course of a year as vaudeville star Fred Astaire grooms the green Judy Garland to be his new partner. There are some really fun musical numbers along the way, including Fred Astaire's prop-dance "Drum Crazy" and Ann Miller's signature rapid-fire tapping on "Shakin the Blues Away."


4/14, 8 PM and 11:30 PM - Robert Osborne 20th Anniversary Tribute
Robert Osborne seems to be one of those rare people who is universally beloved (I would put Project Runway's Tim Gunn in this category, too...but not many other people come to mind). As the host of TCM, his introductions are a highlight of watching the channel and many fans will tell you they sometimes tune in just to hear those anecdotes and bits of trivia. No, he doesn't write those intros, but Osborne's warmth and enthusiasm for classic films is clear. So, when TCM had its 20th anniversary, they had to give a special tribute to the man who has been the face of the channel since the beginning. Alex Trebek hosts the "This is Your Life" style tribute, filmed at the 2014 TCM Classic Film Festival, featuring Osborne's family and friends, as well as celebrity guests.

BONUS PICK: 12:30 AM, Mirage (1965) - In addition to the tribute special, tonight's schedule features films picked by Robert Osborne. Mirage stars Gregory Peck as a scientist who just can't remember why gunmen would be after him; Diane Baker (a guest at the Osborne tribute) co-stars along with a rogue's gallery of character actors of the era including Walter Matthau, Kevin McCarthy, Jack Weston, and George Kennedy. I haven't seen this film, but it has similar elements to other films from the era that I like -- North by Northwest, Charade, and Arabesque (also starring Peck) -- so, it seems worth a look.
By the way, Charade will screen on 4/12 and North by Northwest on 4/14 and 4/24.


4/25: Francis Marion
8 PM - The Wind (1928)
9:45 PM - Without Lying Down: Francis Marion and the Power of Women in Hollywood (2000)
Francis Marion was a top screenwriter in the early decades of Hollywood and a two-time Oscar winner; however, her name is not as recognizable today as those of the stars she wrote for, among them Wallace Beery, Mary Pickford, Greta Garbo, and Lillian Gish. It is Gish who stars in The Wind as a young woman struggling to find her place in the wild west of Texas, and being driven to madness by an unrelenting wind. The second film tonight is a documentary about Marion and other female pioneers in the early days of filmmaking.


4/26, 2 PM - The Spanish Main (1945)
Avid viewers of TCM have likely seen the lovely short about Paul Henreid, narrated by his daughter Monika Henried. In her tribute, Monika gives special mention to The Spanish Main, a swashbuckler that shows off Henreid's athleticism. The clips caught my attention, so I was happy to see that TCM had scheduled the film again this month. 
Henried's best known roles are resistance hero Viktor Laszlo in Casablanca and the dashing Jerry in Now, Voyager opposite Bette Davis. Typecast as "the lover," Henreid apparently wanted to prove he could do more than smoke cigarettes and make goo-goo eyes at his leading ladies. So, he devised a film about a Dutch pirate who is wrongly imprisoned in a Spanish port, then seeks revenge upon the port's corrupt governor. According to his daughter, Henried performed many of his stunts, putting to use his training in fencing, gun handling, and the like. The film also features Walter Slezak as the governor (he would play a very similar role three years later in The Pirate) and Maureen O'Hara as Henreid's love interest -- no reason to leave out romance completely!