[BOOK REVIEW] ‘TITANIC’ MEETS ‘THE SHINING’ IN S.A. BARNES’ ‘DEAD SILENCE’
Literary minds have been breaching the outer limits of space well before humans have even touched the stars, with some considering Johann Valentin Andreae’s The Chemical Wedding – first published in 1616 and thought to be written by the allegorical German aristocrat, Christian Rosenkreuz – as readers’ first…
[REVIEW] THE INDIE-ART HORROR OF ‘DOUBLE WALKER’ IS A GOOD HAUNTING
While trauma is a basic tenet of the horror genre as a whole, the purest expression of it within the genre has got to be the ghost. Psychologically, trauma is something that follows an individual throughout their lives, so the ghost is the eternal spiritual manifestation of that, a trauma…
[REVIEW] NIGHT HAS A THOUSAND EYES BLU-RAY RELEASE
Directed by John Farrow from a screenplay written by Barré Lyndon and Jonathan Latimer, and based on the novel by Cornell Woolrich, the 1948 supernatural noir film NIGHT HAS A THOUSAND EYES is a remarkably intriguing melding of genres. “When heiress Jean Courtland (Gail Russell, CALCUTTA) attempts suicide, her fiancé Elliott…
[Review] THERE’S NOTHING TO FEAR WITH THE BEAUTIFUL 4K RESTORATION OF ‘POSSESSION’
Andrzej Zulawski’s English-language classic POSSESSION has been subjected to a rocky release history. Part of this has to do with the fact that the film was originally considered a flop after being widely distributed. Thankfully, it has since reached a cult following for its nightmarish direction and mad performances by stars…
[IN THEATERS FRIDAY!] WEREWOLVES WITHIN (2021)
I don’t have enough money to gamble, but if I did, I’d be willing to bet that WEREWOLVES WITHIN is the only horror-comedy whodunnit video game adaptation that opens with an ironically spooky Mr. Rogers quote. The television icon’s emphasis on being neighborly permeates director Josh Ruben…
[SXSW 2021] A STAR IS BORN IN PAUL DOOD’S DEADLY LUNCH BREAK
There were a lot of conversations/debates about subverting expectations when THE LAST JEDI came out—some praised the sequel for taking bold strides while others were frustrated by its anticlimactic curveballs. PAUL DOOD’S DEADLY LUNCH BREAK is built on subversion, finding new ways to zig at every opportunity to zag. The…
[SXSW 2021] NINJABABY IS A SURPRISE ATTACK OF AWESOME
Despite centuries of societal change, intellectual evolution, and untold numbers of permutations, there’s still a lot of specific imagery and assumed elements when discussing families. There are, of course, certain basic ingredients of biology shared in producing a baby, but everything else but those few (literally tiny) building blocks varies…
[CHATTANOOGA FILM FESTIVAL 2020] SCARE PACKAGE
Horror fans of a certain age fondly remember a time, long ago, when they would wander the isles of video stores as children, their eyes popping at the lurid, ghastly cover art, beckoning impressionable minds into a netherworld of sex and violence, seducing them with images of torn flesh…
‘DON’T RUN’ STUMBLES, BUT THE FILMMAKER’S RACE IS NOT YET DONE
You can find stuff like PRIMER or PI, and other indie delights that reveal true talents and outsiders’ perspectives. DON’T RUN isn’t a revelation mostly because it’s technical issues and storytelling problems bog it down, but it is clearly a passion project with some legitimately good ideas and moments of strong execution. Hopefully writer/director/producer Ben Rood is able to take this movie and use it as a way to another project, while learning from the pitfalls of DON’T RUN and constantly improving (as all artists must).
[35TH ANNIVERSARY] ‘STREETWALKIN” HITS THE SWEET SPOT BETWEEN SLEAZE AND ENTERTAINMENT
In a field as crowded as the “prostitutes and killer pimps” subgenre of exploitation movies, sometimes its takes decades for the better entries to rise to the top. Critically reviled when it was released in 1982, VICE SQUAD is now considered a classic with an all-timer performance by Wings Hauser….
[Review] ‘HUMAN ZOO’ Makes You Appreciate Your Own COVID Isolation
Give the makers of HUMAN ZOO this: they do manage to capture the soulcrushing, brain-numbing ennui of the situation their characters find themselves in. We’ve all seen this kind of SAW-a-like before, multiple times over, in the past couple decades: a diverse group of folks attend a casting call for…