Thursday, March 31, 2022

Viewings: March 2022


Harry Kümel's fantasy horror, Malpertuis was my favourite discovery this month. Crazy seeing the same actor from the utterly disturbing Born For Hell (1976) in the same film as Orson Welles. Here's the obligatory part where I would be wishing for one of the boutique film labels to release the film with a lavish remastering and top quality extras, but considering the prices they're charging lately, I would probably have to sell a kidney just to cop one. Only other Kümel film I've seen is Daughters of Darkness (1971), so he's two for two for me before diving into the rest of his filmography.
 
Also really enjoyed Kwon Oh-seung's cat and mouse style thriller Midnight and Jesse V. Johnson's WWII actioner Hell Hath No Fury from last year. Both somewhat ludicrous, but found them highly entertaining nonetheless. 
 
Surprising amount of vintage horror smut this month.

Film:

Touch of Evil (Orson Welles, 1958)

I Start Counting (David Greene, 1969)*

The Devil's Nightmare (Jean Brismée, 1971)*

Malpertuis (Harry Kümel, 1971)*

Wake in Fright (Ted Kotcheff, 1971)

French Connection II (John Frankenheimer, 1975)

Draguse or the Infernal Mansion (Patrice Rhomm, 1976)*

Le bijou d'amour (Patrice Rhomm, 1978)*

Dracula Sucks (Philip Marshak, 1978)*

Deadly Games (Scott Mansfield, 1982)*

Corruption (Roger Watkins as Richard Mahler, 1983)*

After Hours (Martin Scorsese, 1985)

The Believers (John Schlesinger, 1987)

Tales From the Hood (Rusty Cundieff, 1995)

Shadow of the Vampire (E. Elias Merhige, 2000)

Trouble Every Day (Claire Denis, 2001)*

Drag Me To Hell (Sam Raimi, 2009)

Hell Hath No Fury (Jesse V. Johnson, 2021)*

Madam Claude (Sylvie Verheyde, 2021)*

Midnight (Kwon Oh-seung, 2021)*

Spider-Man: No Way Home (Tom Watts, 2021)*

All My Friends Hate Me (Andrew Gaynord, 2022)*

The Seed (Sam Walker, 2022)* 

Fresh (Mimi Cave, 2022)*

Studio 666 (B.J. McDonnell, 2022)*


Television:

 Mastermind - Episodes 25-29 (Bill Wright, 2021/2022)*

Peaky Blinders - Episodes 1-5; Season 6 (Steven Knight, 2022)*


* First time viewings.

 

Dada Debaser Notes:

  • Found Fresh to be a completely derivative and tonally incosistent horror comedy. Could have been great if this was helmed by someone more capable. Solely focused on subversion for the sake of it.
  • Surreal seeing Reggie Nalder (albeit credited under a pseudonym) in Dracula Sucks with recognisable golden era pornstars. Turns out some of them have some real acting chops. Not surprised Brian De Palma initially cast Annette Haven for his film, Body Double (1984), before having to give the part to Melanie Griffith.
  • Did not expect to hear a rip-off version of Morricone's theme to The Thing in a vintage pornographic film like Roger Watkins' Corruption
  • Think I've mined every worthwhile slasher from the golden era, as all I've found have been duds like Deadly Games ever since. Still hoping in vain for some long lost classic to be unearthed.
  • Best thing about Foo Fighters' splatter comedy, Studio 666, was John Carpenter's opening theme and the Lionel Richie cameo.
  • Embarrasingly watched the wrong Madame Claude film (meant to watch Just Jaeckin's version). This recent version makes the same mistakes many biopics and period dramas have been making all too often, as they're heavily reliant on the hair, make-up and wardrobe department - f**k everything else! Tired of directors shoving their entire Spotify playlist in their movies, too.
  • Wasn't won over by Spider-Man: No Way Home, but then again I'm not a zoomer who gets giddy over a meme reference shoved in a movie. Did enjoy seeing Willem Dafoe again and those cool end credits, though.
  • Woeful as it was, The Seed gets a point for fooling me into thinking it was an American film. All three actresses fared better with their fake American accents than Ewan McGregor ever did.
  • Can't believe both of my favourites from this season of Mastermind got knocked out in the very same episode. Farewell, Paul Risebury-Crisp 🤓 and Patrick Wilson
  • Already have a one and done dedicated post about The Oscars this month, but it was hard to escape from the big shock this year:
 

4 comments:

Kelvin Mack10zie said...

I finally saw Station Six-Sahara. Worth the wait and definitely might have been a big influence on Wake In Fright.

Saw Red Rocket at the cinema. Never thought I'd dig a movie starring Simon "Dirt Nasty" Rex but here we are.

Caught Dangerous Davies... on Talking Pictures on the other night. You seen that? British whodunnit sorta-comedy with Bernard Cribbens as a Columbo type detective. Lots of familiar faces in it.

Spartan said...

Didn't catch that Bernard Cribbins film, but Talking Pictures is a treasure trove of movies for me. Way better picks than anything Film Four has on. They've got The Return of Count Yorga and The Town That Dreaded Sundown as part of a triple bill tomorrow night. Amazing!

Got Station Six-Sahara in my unwatched pile. Desperate to go and catch X when possible.

Kelvin Mack10zie said...

Nice. Talking Pictures got an encore service now too.

Spartan said...

Will probably have to sign up.

It's a big help with my list of Best British Films I'm trying to compile sometime later this year.