Always watching – Jorge Luengo Ruiz celebrates the voyeurism of Alfred Hitchcock as evidenced by scenes from The 39 Steps (1935), Young and Innocent (1937), The Lady Vanishes (1938), Rebecca (1940), Foreign Correspondent (1940), Notorious (1946), Strangers on a Train (1951), Rear Window (1954), To Catch a Thief (1955), The Trouble with Harry (1955), Vertigo (1958), North by Northwest (1959), Psycho (1960), Marnie (1964), Topaz (1969), Frenzy (1972) and Family Plot (1976).
Category Archives: Film
Gameplay
atUncanny Valley – a very polished short from Argentinian production company 3Dar. An unnerving thought for anyone who’s ever played a FPS. To wit:
In the slums of the future, virtual reality junkies satisfy their violent impulses in online entertainment. An expert player discovers that the line between games and reality is starting to fade away.
Ba-Na-Na
atScreen Junkies’ ‘honest trailer’ for Minions – the global marketing event that was also a film, apparently.
Who knew?
Trilogesque
atAn officially licensed poster series in the style of Saul Bass and Alexander Girard celebrating the original Star Wars trilogy by Ty Mattheson.
Visionary
at16″ x 20″ giclée fine art portraits of five famous directors with elements of their respective oeuvres:Hitchcock, Kubrick, Scorsese, Lynch, Burton, or Tarantino available (signed by artist Julian Rentzsch in limited editions of 200 prints) from Stellavie for €90 each.
Empire Line
atBLACK MASS (122 minutes, 15A) Directed by Scott Cooper. Starring Johnny Depp, Joel Edgerton, Benedict Cumberbatch.
Johnny Depp can’t resist another dip into the dress-up box for this Boston crime drama, but the results are far more impressive than any of his recent output would lead us to expect.
Black Mass spans the 25 year-period when James “Whitey” Bulger (Depp) headed the notorious Winter Hill gang. Beginning in 1975, Bulger forges a mutually beneficial alliance with his childhood friend and FBI agent James Connolly (Joel Edgerton), whereby Bulger feeds information on rival gangs to the FBI, and in return his illegal activities are overlooked. Bulger takes out his competition and Connolly gets promoted, but there’s trouble ahead, naturally.
Scott Cooper (Crazy Heart) finds some inventive ways of presenting shots and transitions with a creative flair that keeps things interesting. There is however a noticeable slump in the final act. The factual basis of the material often ties the film down and prevents it from realising the dramatic potential of The Departed or The Town.
It must be said that as Bulger’s powerful diplomat brother, Benedict Cumberbatch fails to convincingly pahk his cah in hahvahd yahd, but the rest of the supporting cast (including Kevin Bacon and Jesse Plemons) are terrific. Besides, this is Johnny’s gig, and he is utterly terrifying. He brings an unpredictable, savage intensity to the role that is mesmerising. It’s a pleasant surprise to see Depp acting again, because he’s rather good at it. With sequels to Alice in Wonderland and Pirates of the Caribbean on the horizon, perhaps we shouldn’t get used to the idea.
Note: Black Mass is currently on limited release. It will be on general release from 25th November.
LOVE (135 minutes, 18) Directed by Gaspar Noé. Starring Aomi Muyock, Karl Glusman, Klara Kristin.
With films such as Irréversible and Into the Void under his belt, we should be well accustomed to Gaspar Noé testing our levels of patience and endurance, but here the filmmaker crosses the line from provocation to outright trolling.
Love is essentially two hours of unsimulated sex – in 3D – with 15 minutes of story wedged in-between the cracks (fnar). Murphy (Karl Glusman) receives a phonecall informing him that his ex-girlfriend, Electra (Aomi Muyock) is missing and possibly suicidal. He then eats some opium and reminisces about all the weird sex they had together. And that’s an awful lot of sex… sex in parking garages, sex in niteclubs, and a 10-minute threesome that’s like watching snakes fighting on a bed with Harold Faltemeyer’s Top Gun Anthem playing over the top.
Yes it’s shocking, but for all the wrong reasons. Clunky dialogue such as “I’m just really in my head right now” and a risibly pretentious voiceover give the impression of a bad student film. The first-time actors are fine at standing still, staring and autoerotic activities such as ejaculating, but their inexperience is woefully apparent in scenes where speaking (or actual acting) is required.
It’s all very tiresome. The 3D sex is a gimmick, and can’t disguise the fact that Noé has nothing to say. Tommy Wiseau should watch his back. Love may yet displace The Room’s reputation as the “Citizen Kane of bad movies.”
Also on release from Friday: THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY PART 2; THE DRESSMAKER, THE PERFECT GUY.
Smiley Wars
atThe original Force Awakens trailer recreated in emojis by Alish Erman.
Because much too excited not to.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FthEJGR61c8
‘Movie overanalysers’ The Film Theorists explore the deft editing of camera tilts, whip pans, push-ins, blurred and dark screens (inspired by Hitchcock’s Rope [1948]) that made Alejandro González Iñárritu’s Birdman seem like one long continous shot.
Which it wasn’t, obviously.
Deftly be-giffed movie posters by Who Is Pablo.
Full screen for optimum effect.
Previously: Parallel Indiana Jones




























