Friday, July 9, 2010

Perfect Blue

1998 | Director: Satoshi Kon | Japanese | IMDB

Perfect Blue is about a pop idol named Mima who, on the advice of her management, decides to quit her singing career to pursue acting. Having more trouble than expected, she agrees to star in a rape scene, breaking her squeeky clean pop star image. She is haunted by this decision as she descends into madness, with reality, televison and her dreams merging into one. Meanwhile, there is a serial killer murdering the people in her new life as a television actress.

I know what you’re thinking, “This is anime, it shouldn’t count!”, but it has more in common with Inland Empire than Dragonball. Infact, this movie is probably the closest thing you will find to an animated giallo. Its graphic murder scenes rival anything by Argento in terms of brutality, and its story twists and turns like you would expect from a textbook giallo too. This seamlessly combines with the Lynch-like surrealist collapse of reality Mima undergoes, which makes this film feel really unique. I know that Dario Argento and David Lynch seem like lazy comparisons, but believe me, they are spot on. It has strong themes of identity and fame that naturally emerge from the plot, which elevates this film to a level of maturity that isn’t really seen in most horror films, let alone anime.

El día de la bestia a.k.a The Day of The Beast

1995 | Director: Álex de la Iglesia | Spanish / Italian | IMDB

A priest discovers that the anti-christ will be born on Christmas day, 1995. He decides to earn the devils trust so that he can find out where the birth will be and kill the baby.

I'm not the biggest fan of horror comedies, they are usually too self aware for their own good or just aren't funny. Luckily, this movie doesn't suffer from either of these downfalls. It has a dry and mostly smart sense of humour, with a few cheap laughs sparsely thrown in for good measure. With the likes of a drug addled metalhead and a sleazy TV psychic, the characters are really colorful and are well fleshed out by some on point acting and some fantastic writing. Visually speaking, its subdued yet competent, with only a handful of stylish shots. The effects range from good to just passable, however this is not an effect driven movie so it barely detracts from the viewing experience. If you're in the mood for a chuckle, you could do much worse than this finely balanced, charming little film.

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Habit

1996 | Director: Larry Fessenden | American | IMDB


Sam is an alcoholic down on his luck. His father recently passed away and his girlfriend just broke up with him. At a friends Halloween party he runs into Anna, and finds solace in her arms. After several highly sexual encounters, Sam slowly starts to believe that she may in fact be a vampire, draining him of not only his blood, but his soul.

This movie is a starkly original, very realistic take on the classic vampire tale. This movie feels very personal and plays as an allegory for any number of relationships. Larry Fessenden directed, wrote, edited, mixed and starred in this film, which is what gives it its air of uniqueness. While its blatantly obvious to the viewer that Anna is a vampire, Sam naturally takes a long time to reach this conclusion. This combined with the subdued camera work, the underplayed acting and the slow burn pace of the movie make Habit feel very real and provide an air of normalcy. For anyone interested in a vampire movie with a take on the genre as unique as Let The Right One In, this is well worth checking out.

Monday, May 31, 2010

Posrednik

1990 | Director: Vladimir Potapov | Russian | IMDB

In a forest not far from a small provincial Soviet town, falls a black sphere of extraterrestrial origin. An alien force posseses the minds of those it comes in contact with, suppressing their will and slowly infiltrating the local community. A large radio telescope outside town is its target, a means of signalling a mass invasion of Earth...

This movie originally premiered on Soviet TV in 3 parts, which when watched together add up to an epic three and a half hours of brilliance. It's basically a very simple body snatchers plot presented in a very stylish manner. Every single shot in this film is exquisitely framed and heavily feature muted sepia tones, with occasional dollops of bright red. The shots are usually very long and often in slow motion, accompanied by a very reverberated sparse soundtrack, with very little dialogue at all. All of this adds up to create an atmosphere so thick you can carve it. This one is pretty hard to track down but is available on various small corners of the internet, with subs available at opensubtitles.org. If you enjoy very slow paced, moody features, watching this is worth the hunt.

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Felidae

1994 | Director: Michael Schaack | German | IMDB

After moving to a new town, Francis the cat discovers that someone in his new neighborhood is brutally killing cats in a state of sexual arousal. With the aid of some newly found friends, he sets out to solve the murders, and gets caught up in a dark world full of secrets, cult worship and animal experimentation.

Do not be decieved by the child friendly look of the film, this is ultra violent, complex noir at its finest. Its utterly bizzare, i have no idea who this movies intended audience is. The very nicely drawn and animated talking cartoon cats have a very 70's Disney feel to them, but the plot and subject matter is so mature. You have foul language, dark opressive themes, unbelievable levels of violence (seriously, I'm talking Fulci levels) and even an explicit sex scene. It also has clues to what is happening presented to Francis in surreal nightmares. The plot has a surprising depth to it and keeps you guessing through out, and the characters are colorful staples in the noir genre. I'm really bummed that I can't find a subtitled version of this, as the American dub is pretty poor, and the original voice cast features the likes of Mario Adorf. Despite this its still worth tracking down, you will never see a another movie like it.