Author Archive

  • DVD Review: HIGH (1967)

    0

     

    A fortunate encounter at this years edition of Fantasia has led me to a treasure trove of Larry Kent (Canada’s godfather of indie and counterculture cinema who has been active from the early sixties right up to two new films in the past 4 years) DVDs which I will be exploring over the next couple weeks. The kick-off is the drug psychedelic kill-trip that pre-dates Natural Born Killers and The Doom Generation by several decades: 1967′s HIGH.

    Tom is a college drop-out who keeps his sex and drug fuelled lifestyle going by playing gigolo to older women (and stealing their husbands credit cards, post-coitus), selling oregano to undiscriminating acquaintances, while keeping the good ganja for himself, and otherwise confidently hustling his way in and out of situations. He is somewhat of a cross between Breathless-era Jean-Paul Belmondo and Fritz the Cat, who may or may not have a few bastard children scattered about his stomping grounds of late sixties Montreal. His femme-du-jour, Vicky, may on occasion, pester him about ‘the future’ but for now – and in the now – she has no issues about getting down in an impromptu, casual three-way with her roommate under marijuana-laden red-filter cinematography. One of the films best scenes (and one of several sex scenes) has the contrast so low that you can only make out hats and hair: an animated tangle of long locks AND short pubes. Tom’s recent score of a Finnish Diplomat’s Charge-Ex card leads to a getaway weekend consisting of airports, 5-Star hotels, upscale city eateries and romping around in the fountains and shops along Kings St. in Toronto. Upon the couples return to Montreal, there is a desire for a little more of the good life, obtained the easy way. Before you can say, “Live fast, die young, and leave a good looking corpse,” director Larry Kent has (whether intentionally or not) changed the rules of the criminal youth on the run genre before they have even been fully fleshed out. Both Bonnie and Clyde and High at the time were playing festivals simultaneously, and while the latter doesn’t have the caliber of actors featured in the former, or the technical resources for that matter, it makes up for it with the tools of the indie filmmaker, a veneer of exploitation and lot of pluck. Supposedly, Warren Beatty was a big fan when both films played alongside one another in the Montreal International Film Festival in ’67.

    For someone born in the 1970s, I have to wonder how High was received at the time of its release, beyond the simple factual history of its censoring and banning by the Quebec government. Sporting a psychedelic soundtrack, an in-the-moment vibe that seems to celebrate and condemn the free-loving hippie life-style and straddling the divide of a porn peep show and a Canadian riff on European arthouse of the day. With the French Nouvelle Vague in full swing in arthouse circles, Jack Smith on the experimental film/theatre side of things in New York, and the Summer of Love writ large in popular culture of the time, High seems to exist right middle of all these things while still being its own vérité beast. Viewing a film like this 40+ years after its release it can on one hand be considered a fascinating cultural document, on the other hard to disentangle from trends and fads of the day. Cinematic capture of street scenes and drug squatter homes of Montreal recall the aimless and confused romp down Yonge in Don Shebib’s Goin’ Down The Road. But surprise! When a plot of sorts starts to coalesce within the film, several interesting things, from feminism to genre subversion, start to click into place.

    » Read the rest of the entry..

  • Trailer: We Need to Talk About Kevin

    0

    Oh, Ms. Ramsay, we’ve missed you a lot. It’s been almost 10 years since the shocking and effective Morvern Callar, and lord knows, we are due for another round of disturbing and slightly off-putting social behaviour. Judging by this trailer, (possibly the best cut trailer of 2011) We Need To Talk About Kevin, is looking to be just that. I’ll be there with bells on when it screens at TIFF.

    Tilda Swinton and John C. Reilly Star in another spin on the “School Shooting” film:

    The mother of a teenage boy who went on a high-school killing spree tries to deal with her grief — and feelings of responsibility for her child’s actions — by writing to her estranged husband.

    The trailer is tucked under the seat.
    » Read the rest of the entry..

  • Talk Amongst Yourselves (Nihilsm Edition)

    9

    An artist does not have the social responsibility of a citizen. He has, in fact, no social responsibility whatsoever.

  • Friday One Sheet: Grindhouse Fargo and other delectable mash-ups

    3

     

    We live in the age of the ironic mash-up, and while it can get exhausting and uninspired at times, there are twinkling lights of creativity blinking from various upper-floor windows in the town called Internet. Vide this series of posters for classic films done in B-film, drive-in and Grindhouse style. I know what you are thinking, “Didn’t we go through that Grindhouse poster phase about 3-4 years ago with that Tarantino/Rodriguez double-bill thingy?” Rest assured, these posters are not about fold lines reproduced in Photoshop, but about particular design aesthetics and exclamation point laden taglines that have been used since the 1940s to advertise B-Product, but wonderfully subverting for Oscar Winners and Dramas that most film fans are familiar with. See if you can guess the particular design homage applied to each one after the link.

    See the entire Series here. (Courtesy of Cracked, via Twitch.)

  • Can There Be A Libel Suit in Key Art Design?

    3

     

    Not only does Brett Ratner’s action comedy Tower Heist look dreadful, lazy and clutter-assembled from better movies, it looks as if the marketing department couldn’t even come up with their own original poster design.

  • Trailer: A Lonely Place to Die

    2

     

    I am a big fan of Julian Gilbey’s white knuckle chase-film, A Lonely Place to Die (Kurt’s Review). It is a film that absolutely must be seen on the big screen in glorious 2.35:1 scope. I’ve caught this one at two different film festivals with very enthusiastic audiences (one of which, ActionFest, the won the award for best feature film.) While it has one more big stop on the genre-fest circuit, Film4Frightfest, before its commercial release in the UK in September, (note that Yanks and Canucks will have to wait for any sort of release in November or so) Kaleidoscope Entertainment have cut together a trailer that surprisingly isn’t all that spoilerish, unless you count the first act set-up, and really this one is all about the action and the pacing, not so much the plot.

    A group of five mountaineers are hiking and climbing in the Scottish Highlands when they discover a young Serbian girl buried in a small chamber in the wilderness. They become caught up in a terrifying game of cat and mouse with the kidnappers as they try to get the girl to safety.

    The trailer is tucked under the seat.
    » Read the rest of the entry..

  • Hello! I’m Shelley Duvall

    5

    This will give you more nightmares than Kubrick’s The Shining combined with Altman’s Popeye. There is something about robotic repetitiveness that simply freaks me out. Whether it is Benedict Wong in Code 46 or when the in-game-characters get stuck in eXistenZ, the hair stands up on my neck when people go all robot. And yes, Ms. Shelley Duvall is one of the all time great go-to character actors, if you want strange and unusual (and vulnerable) – think of poor Sloth from Seven only healthier, sprightlier and with make-up on.

    Press play, below, only if you want this particular and peculiar mind-virus swimming in your head for the next 48 hours or longer.

    (Thanks Coilhouse Magazine for pointing this one out.)

  • Nolan’s Catwoman looks a lot like Wimmer’s Ultraviolet

    16

     
     

    While I have no doubt that tone, acting and overall groundedness of Ms. Hathaway (many of us are fans of some of here recent films) will be just fine in the new Bat flick, I’m getting a big Ultraviolet vibe from this photo.

  • Friday One Sheet: Tinker Tailor Soldier Quad

    0

     
     

    We don’t often post Quad style posters on Friday One Sheet, but the new one sheet for the Gary Oldman starring 70s spy throw back, Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy is far better than the American version.

  • Oscar By Ratner

    0

     
     

    Looks like the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has their Bad Idea jeans on again. They have selected Brett Ratner to co-produce the show (with usual producer Don Mischer) which will be aired in 2012. Hmmm, so this is what the Mayan calender points to.

    Either way the show will likely be better than that awful looking Tower Heist movie he has coming out. The only silver lining in this is that Ratner may bring back Hugh Jackman, who worked for him in X3: Franchise Killer.

    Moron…er…More on this at the Hollywood Reporter.

  • Trailer: Resurrect Dead – The Mystery of the Toynbee Tiles

    1

     

    It is Zodiac meets Exit Through The Gift Shop filtered with an X-Files sensibility in one of the most pleasant surprises on the documentary front this year, Jon Foy’s Resurrect Dead (Kurt’s Review.) Structured like a mystery-thriller the doc offers a primer on the baffling 20+ year old history of the Toynbee Tile mystery: A series of linoleum tiles embedded in asphalt across the eastern seaboard, all the way down to a few cities in South America with a rather esoteric text message carved into each one. Resurrect Dead is well worth a look, whether or not you are a fan of documentaries or street art, mainly due to the plethora of interesting personalities and surprises along the way.

    Screenings in your area? Check here.

    The trailer is tucked under the seat.

    » Read the rest of the entry..

  • Trailer: Twixt

    5

     

    To be fair, I’ve not ventured into any of Francis Ford Coppola’s neo-revival (Youth Without Youth, Tetro), but they’ve not seemed as ‘straight up genre’ as Twixt does. Somewhere between In The Mouth of Madness and 1408 the film is stacked to the gills with interesting actors: Val Kilmer (and his ex wife, Joanne Whalley), Bruce Dern, Elle Fanning (that’s her covered in blood in the above poster), Ben Chaplin and David Paymer. While this doesn’t look half as strong or nuanced as Shutter Island, I’m certainly willing to give it a shot despite the cheap cinematography and poorly put together trailer that seems to be cribbing voice-over from Throw Mama From The Train, “The Night Was…Humid.”

    A writer with a declining career arrives in a small town as part of his book tour and gets caught up in a mystery involving a young girl. That night in a dream, he is approached by a mysterious young ghost named “V.” Unsure of her connection to a murder in the town but nevertheless, he is grateful for the story being handed to him.

    The trailer is tucked under the seat.
    » Read the rest of the entry..