Free time was a bit scarce this month. Hence, the usual obscene amount of films took a hit. Edward Dmytryk's The Sniper was the only real highlight for me.
Film:
The Sniper (Edward Dmytryk, 1952)*
The Curse of Frankenstein (Terence Fisher, 1957)
Dr. Who and the Daleks (Gordon Flemyng, 1965)
The Las Vegas Strangler AKA No Tears for the Damned (William Collins, 1968)*
Creatures the World Forgot (Don Chaffey, 1971)*
Craze (Freddie Francis, 1974)*
Identikit AKA The Driver’s Seat (Giuseppe Patroni Griffi, 1974)*
Damage (Louis Malle, 1992)*
Tokyo Decadence (Ryû Murakami, 1992)*
Sweatshop (Stacy Davidson, 2009)*
The Iron Claw (Sean Durkin, 2023/2024)*
Lisa Frankenstein (Zelda Williams, 2024)*
Poor Things (Yorgos Lanthimos, 2023/2024)*
Stopmotion (Robert Morgan, 2023/2024)*
Television:
Doctor Who - Various Episodes (Sydney Newman, 1963 - 2024)*
Mastermind - Episodes 27 - 30 (Bill Wright, 2023/2024)*
*First time viewings.
Dada Debaser Notes:
- The NSFWish film poster for Tokyo Decadence is better than the actual film. Would have enjoyed it a lot more if it didn't make such a radical tonal shift in the second half.
- Jack Palance as a London antiques dealer sacrificing women to an African wooden statue good called Chuku should have been an amazing film. Instead, Freddie Francis turns this bonkers concept into a police procedural. Great cast though, including Diana Dors as an amorous landlady.
- Expected Indentikit to be for Elizabeth Taylor what The Swimmer (1968) was for Burt Lancaster. Sadly, it wasn't. This was boring, but well shot shite.
- Really wish Stopmotion was a stop-motion feature film rather than the cliched horror that we got. Kind of pales in significance after the twisted awesomeness of Mad God (2021).
- Watched three Frankenstein themed films; best of the bunch was Terence Fisher's film. Forgot how cold blooded and ruthless Peter Cushing was in it.
Zac Efron looking like Lou Ferrigno if he were coated in creosote rather than green paint.
ReplyDeleteWhich Who stories did you watch this month then?
Efron was well hench in that.
ReplyDeleteTwo Tom Baker era Doctor Who stories: The Seeds of Doom and Robots of Death.
Ah, the latter is a classic. Great concept, very tense, Baker at his peak and the robots look fantastic even tho you can see the Marigold logos on their gloves 😆
ReplyDeleteThe Antartica part in The Seeds of Doom reminded me of The Thing, while the desert mining craft from Robots of Death evoked Dune for me.
ReplyDelete