Thursday, December 31, 2015
Once Upon a Time in China (1991)
Directed by: Hark Tsui
Runtime: 134 minutes
This movie is about Doctor Wong Fei Hung. A skilled doctor, skilled martial artist, martial artist instructor, militia leader, and defender of the weak and down trodden. His life and deeds have been the inspiration for numerous films and television programs. So I'm willing to believe that he was able to break the laws of physics, flick a soft lead round hard enough that it can enter someone's skull, and can use a bamboo splinter to turn the human body into high pressure blood fountain. This is the fun madness that is Once Upon a Time in China.
The movie opens in a ship filled harbor somewhere in China in the late 19th century. Wong Fei Hung is an honored guest of the Black Flag army. The Black Flag army was a company of bandits that ended up becoming a celebrated regiment of the Chinese empire. The Black Flag army is about to head out and kick someone's ass so they celebrate by setting off firecrackers and a dragon dance. A near by French ship has it's marines take exception to this celebration and they open fire. This disrupts the celebration and causes all kinds of chaos on the ship. Luckily Wong Fei Hung is on the ship and fixes the situation.
This is the majority of the conflict and resolution in the film. There is some sort of problem, other people try to fix it, the fixing makes the problem worse, and Wong Fei Hung shows up to kick ass and fix the problem. I understand that they are trying to put Wong Fei Hung on the biggest pedestal that they can. But it's done on the backs of characters that historically were as interesting as the main character.
The main plot of the movie revolves around the influx of foreigners and the problems they are creating and a local gang who is enforcing aggressive protection racket. The problems with the foreigners is that locals getting shot because they get too close to foreign ships and the marines on these ships are too trigger happy. Also, a foreign company is exploiting Chinese workers by promising them great wages and a better life. Only to be thrown into slavery and are being worked to death. The gang is extorting stupid amounts of protection money out of the local merchants. This in turn causes the business to go under or fire their staff and in turn they seek out the company that exploits them.
So it is up to Wong Fei Hung to stop the gang and keep his own militia from being arrested. He also has to stop the exploitation of the Chinese people. He also has deal with the awkward romance with his Aunt Yee (or Aunt 13 according to the subtitles).
A lot going on in this movie aside from what I mentioned. All the slice of life in China in the late nineteenth century, the personal lives of the other members Wong Fei Hung's militia, and lots of impressive martial art fight scenes. Overall, a must see for anyone who is a fan of Hong Kong cinema, the Kung Fu genre, and Jet Li.
MVT: The work put into the numerous fight scenes throughout this movie.
Make or Break: The movie assumes that the viewer is well versed in the history of this time period. It can take you out of the movie if you want to know why the story focuses on this person or why the extras collectively loose their bowels because a character walks into scene.
Score: 7.55 out of 10
Wednesday, December 30, 2015
La Residencia (1969)
Young Theresa (Cristina Galbo) is carted off to
Mademoiselle Fourneau’s (Lilli Palmer)
private school for wayward girls (even though she seems like the most normal
person in the place), where hard discipline is the order of the day. There, Theresa has to contend with the likes
of the cruel, manipulative Irene (Mary
Maude) as well as learning the politics of the academy. All this and a mysterious killer who
intermittently takes out the occasional girl for diabolical reasons which will
soon be made clear in a manner most ghastly.
Narciso Ibañez Serrador’s La
Residencia (aka The House That
Screamed, the version I watched for this review via Elvira’s Movie Macabre
release, so I’m fairly confident that the film was heavily edited, but it still
packs a hell of a punch) is a film which is simultaneously semi-classy
melodrama and sleazy exploitation/psychothriller. The cinematography is gorgeous, and the
camera moves fluidly throughout scenes, following characters and accentuating the
gothic, harsh confines of the school’s estate.
The editing is smooth as silk and on point (maybe just a little too
on-the-nose with its metaphoric usage but not distractingly or offputtingly so,
in fact quite the opposite). It’s odd
(but somehow fitting for how the film’s scenes form a cumulative effect rather
than a singular narrative; it might have been interesting to see this film as
directed by the late, great Robert
Altman) in how characters who we expect to have some long term significance
in the film don’t, and things happen offscreen (but again this could be from
the version of the film I saw) only to be referenced later on as if we were
given this information (a common enough occurrence in European genre fare).
There is a heavy focus on the
interactions between the characters rather than on the murders, and I believe
this is because the killings are a symptom of the twisted environment of the
school’s interior community. On its
exterior, the school is portrayed as a very proper, very orderly place for
“troubled girls” to be molded (by force) to fit back into society. Naturally, the dark underbelly lying beneath
this façade of civilization is more akin to a prison than a school. Fourneau posits that the activities in which the
girls partake (like dance and needlework) “prevent them from indulging in
morbid thought” (i.e. sex), but the inner world of the academy revolves around
sex and perhaps even moreso around control.
The two go hand-in-hand. Fourneau
sends an obstinate girl to “the Seclusion Room” where she will later be
stripped and whipped. Fourneau’s
teenaged son Luis (John Moulder-Brown)
spies on the girls at every possible opportunity, but his mother tells him that
“none of these girls are any good,” and he needs to be with a woman like
her. She is over-protective to the point
of smothering, and her domination combined with the libidinous temptations of
all the young female flesh flitting about is toxic. Irene is a predatory lesbian who blackmails and
inveigles girls into doing her bidding (“all you have to do is obey me”) and orchestrates
the release of the girls’ pent up sexual energy with regularly scheduled trips
to the shed with Henry (Clovis Dave),
the strapping wood delivery (in more ways than one) guy. She abuses the authority granted her by
Fourneau in the same way that Fourneau abuses the authority granted her by the
people who placed her in charge of their daughters. As in a prison, these abuses are common
knowledge to the “inmates” yet are not spoken of in public.
While La Residencia is a Women in Prison film in spirit, it is also about
the curiosity of young people, both sexually and in regards to life in
general. The most obvious example of
this is Luis’ antics around the school.
He wants to see the girls shower so badly, that he puts his life at risk
to get an eyeful. He plays boyfriend to
some of the young ladies, but it’s with the seeming naiveté of a boy in the
throes of puppy love. This can be seen
as a result of how his sexuality is repressed and twisted by his mother (he
knows nothing about the physical act of sex, but he desires the bodies of the
girls) as well as being an act of defiance (just covertly). Another prominently defiant character is
Catherine (Pauline Challoner) who
openly flouts Fourneau’s authority, even though she knows the punishment that
will be visited upon her. Catherine’s
actions are those of a self-discovery of her independence, no matter the
cost. And yet, this is not truly viewed
as a positive in this cinematic world, more like the nail that sticks up
getting hammered down. Upon her arrival
at the school, Theresa notices the signs of Luis following her (a knocked over
plant, doors that are left ajar, and so on), and she approaches these with the
natural inquisitiveness of a young person investigating the world with both
wonder and trepidation (in the same way that she begins to investigate her
sexuality). Nevertheless, the
discoveries that Theresa makes about sexuality in general are not ones that
could be considered healthy. Instead,
she is shown only about how sex is used as a weapon, a tool, and about how the
gaze of people falls on her and other young women without their consent or
desire. Inquisitiveness is not rewarded
in this film; it is punished, with murder being arguably the worst of the
sanctions.
I think there are parallels to be
drawn between this film and Serrador’s
other feature length theatrical film, Who
Can Kill a Child?, and the predominant of these lies in the mentality of
children/young people that have been twisted and perverted by the actions of
the adults around them. These kids learn
from the poor examples they have witnessed, but more than that, they take the
lessons learned and go several steps further, turning things around on the
adults in an augmented, disproportionately appropriate fashion. In this sense, both of these movies are in
the vein of “as you sow, so shall you reap” morality tales. Even with our sympathies lying with the kids,
however, their actions are still terrifying.
After all, these are monsters that we, that adults, created. And they are worse than us.
MVT: The creeping, skanky,
gothic atmosphere of the film maintains interest, even during the more
talkative sections, and it aids greatly in delivering some powerful moments throughout.
Make or Break: The first
onscreen murder is expertly handled in every way from the moment the killer’s black
figure pops up into frame, the use of dissolves, and the lyrical piano score to
the fantastic final sonic effect of a record (like a life) winding down.
Score: 7/10
Wednesday, December 23, 2015
Inseminoid (1981)
**SPOILERS**
Some random thoughts/quandaries/gripes
for you today. Why is there never a
poster or picture frame manufactured in the size that I need (you would think
they would understand that some prints are not “standard” size; of course, this also helps keep
framers in business, but still…)? Why
does Hollywood keep insisting on using CG for absolutely everything, even
though it certainly hasn’t driven production costs down and nine-out-of-ten
times looks like garbage? Are “goth”
kids the new preppies? I am horrible at
choosing gifts for people.
Horrible. The reason I don’t have
my dream job is because I have too many things I love, none of which I have
ever successfully monetized (you’re reading one of them now). I wonder what will happen to my collection of
comics and magazines after I’m dead?
Would they even be worth the price of the paper they’re printed on? Why couldn’t I have been born rich instead of
so good-looking? Why do people think
that walking directly out in front of my car will make it instantly stop? As a side note, are there more people out
there with bodies as dense and tough as steel than I thought? Are Wal-Marts nexuses of surreal freakishness
which are slowly expanding outward in concentric circles, like a rock chucked
into a sea of primordial soup (that some jerk dipped his nuts in)? Why do people enjoy watching “reality shows”
that have the same exact “story” and the same exact interactions every single
week (and this is coming from someone who has a close relationship with
formulaic storytelling)?
Why all this scattershot navel-gazing
in this week’s intro? Well, because Norman J Warren’s Inseminoid (aka Horror Planet)
is a film loaded to the gills with random idiocy. To wit: Dean (Dominic Jephcott) picks up some weird crystals by hand without
using tongs or anything. The love scene
between Mark (Robin Clarke) and Sandy
(Judy Geeson) involves them getting
naked and hugging while standing upright.
Documentation Officer, Kate (Stephanie
Beacham) interviews various crew members like she were a cub reporter
(microcassette recorder and all). She
also has no compunction about killing her colleagues when it’s deemed necessary
and then kicking back in her underwear while listening to her jams (maybe it’s
whale songs or somesuch; who knows?) on her large earphones. The most expedient way to deal with the major
problem at hand is determined to be killing Sandy with explosives. Doctor Karl (Barrie Houghton) doesn’t want to kill Sandy because she’s pregnant
(something about which Mark seemingly has no opinion whatsoever, even though he
has no clue whether he’s the father or not).
The crew watches Gail (Rosalind
Lloyd) kill herself by opening up her space suit helmet and trying to saw
off her leg rather than any of them donning a suit and going out to, you know,
help her or something. Holly (Jennifer Ashley) wields the
intimidating “touch burner” (basically a tack welder… in space!) right next to
Karl’s head as he wrestles with Sandy (surely, nothing could go wrong
here). You can accuse this film of being
dumb (and, let’s face it, it is), but it’s dumb in such arbitrary ways, it
creates a certain charm that makes it enjoyable.
The idea of monstrous
impregnation rears its head in Inseminoid,
and while this is a wholly unoriginal idea (see The Beast Within, Rosemary’s
Baby, Demon Seed, ad nauseum), it
clearly comes directly from Alien’s
face hugger concept. It does, however,
have a couple of twists to it that make it seem a little fresher than it
actually may be. The impregnation
process is both creepy and clinical in its depiction. Sandy is strapped naked to a glowing (metal?)
disco table. The alien inserts his
(glass?) penis-thing into her, and we watch as its eggs flow down the tube and
into Sandy. This plays simultaneously on
the fear of rape and the fear of medical procedures, which are equivocated here
as being invasive and assaultive. Further,
this pregnancy changes Sandy fundamentally, something that many films utilizing
this plot point don’t do (they usually deal more with the human angle of the
mother dealing melodramatically with the tragic circumstances in which she
finds herself, and in Ridley Scott’s
film, Kane [John Hurt] doesn’t even
know something is wrong until it suddenly, violently, is). She goes from being a mild-mannered
non-entity (in a film whose every character is a non-entity) to a murderous,
ghoulish non-entity (she eats a victim to feed her babies). This riffs on some of the old wives’ tales
that revolve around pregnancy, as well as amplifying some of the
actualities. For example, the changes in
hormones that come with being pregnant can cause mood swings and/or odd
cravings (entrails, for example).
Likewise, there is the myth that female infants steal their mother’s
looks (Geeson distorts her face and gurns constantly, and her bulging green
eyes are heavily emphasized). These
changes to Sandy can also be viewed as the intensification of a mother’s
protective instincts toward her unborn children as well as phobias about the “other”
growing in her womb. Sure, she goes
crazy and starts killing off cast members all willy-nilly, but she does it to
keep her spawn safe while being equally terrified of what’s transpiring to her
body.
One intriguing aspect of the film
which is almost entirely abandoned after being initially brought up is the idea
of twins and myths. The space crew are
archaeologists excavating an alien planet, and some of the space hieroglyphics discovered
tell, according to linguist (?) Mitch (Trevor
Thomas), of mythical twins who once ruled the planet. It’s postulated that this fixation may have
come from the planet’s dual suns. It’s
also speculated that the planet’s previous inhabitants were self-destructive
(of course, this is solely put out there to play into the film’s horror
narrative). But the idea of twins goes totally
unexplored, until the twin aliens are born in the film’s third act (you can
view their conception as occurring between a god and a mortal, a scenario with
which mythology is rife). There is no
depth given to what could have been a complex (without being complicated)
concept of duality. These two are not
Romulus and Remus. They are not
Cassandra and Helenus. Hell, they’re not
even Tomax and Xamot. Inseminoid’s xeno-babies are strictly
used like the infants from the It’s Alive
series (and please don’t ever confuse the Larry
Cohen film with the identically-titled Larry
Buchanan film in that regard, because they are worlds apart), but even in
the latter movies the creatures had a modicum of personality. Sandy’s children are gruesome, vicious hand
puppets that are in the film for exactly three reasons. One, they embody the fears of
motherhood. Two, they give the film an
un-shocking “shock” ending. And three,
they raise the body count by a couple of corpses. In a film which is simple to the point of
being simplistic, you really can’t expect much more, though, can you?
MVT: Inseminoid has a sleazy, eerie atmosphere about it that augments
its bleak outlook. It also looks damned slick
for a film made on a shoestring.
Make or Break: As obvious (and
mayhap just a bit crass) as it may be to name it, the Make on this one is the
alien rape/impregnation scene. It’s
visually striking while still being pretty freaky in its own right.
Score: 6.75/10
Wednesday, December 16, 2015
Blood Beach (1981)
**Here There Be SPOILERS**
The Beach Bum is a cinematic
protagonist which is, I believe, uniquely American as well as being, sadly or
not, no longer seen all that much these days.
This is the guy whose whole life revolves around being ultra-casual (almost
hippie-esque) and spending as much time just kicking it around the beach (in
between battling monsters or somesuch), picking up chicks, and generally being
as useless as is humanly possible. Sure,
there are lazy character types in other countries, but the sun and surf world
of the Beach Bum belongs exclusively to the United States, because it has a
flavor specific to our coasts (though generally associated more with the West
Coast than the East, I feel). What the
Beach Bum’s role is, outside of catching some rays (and even occasionally
spouting “sage wisdom”), is to be wish fulfillment for the audience. The Beach Bum has the life people want in a
place many people only get to visit on vacations (or weekends), even while they
kind of resent him for not only being able to live this way but also for taking
advantage of the situation to its maximum potential (which none of us would
surely do if placed in the same position).
As the catalytic Ruth (Harriet
Medin) states to Harbor Patrol cop Harry (David Huffman) in Jeffrey
Bloom’s Blood Beach, he’s the
only person she knows who literally swims to work. For Harry, every day is a perfect, sunny,
balmy day in California. It just sucks
that a monster under the sand had to show up and bum out this Beach Bum’s life.
After the aforementioned Ruth
goes missing, Harry kinda sorta teams up with the levelheaded Lieutenant
Piantadosi (The Clones’ Otis
Young) and the gruffly plainspoken Sergeant Royko (the unrelated Burt Young) to solve the mystery. Ruth’s daughter Catherine (Messiah of Evil’s Marianna Hill), who also just so happens to be one of Harry’s
(many, I’m sure) exes, shows up to throw a total monkey wrench into Harry’s love
life (but not really). Meanwhile, the
likelihood that the perpetrator of these recent murders and mutilations is not
human becomes more and more evident (actually, it’s evident after the second,
very public, attack).
In case it’s not clear from the
film’s advertising campaign (“Just when you thought it was safe to go back in
the water – you can’t get to it,” a line repeated verbatim by the casually
hardassed Captain Pearson [John Saxon]),
its setting, its protagonist, and its attacks which don’t show the creature, Blood Beach is a JAWS clone that strains itself to the breaking point trying to come
up with a different enough angle to not incur litigation. Be that as it may, the film does manage to be
its own thing, despite its disparate elements (romantic melodrama, monster
movie, police procedural, et cetera).
It’s just that the thing it manages to be isn’t all that great. Don’t misunderstand; I enjoy Blood Beach for what it is, and, I will admit, for the massive nostalgia I
feel for films constructed like it (as well as for the remembrances of family
vacations to the seashore it evokes; a place I haven’t been to for years now),
but I can certainly understand any vitriol it garners.
The film relies heavily on what Roger Ebert dubbed an Idiot Plot (“Any
plot containing problems that would be solved instantly if all of the
characters were not idiots”). Even after
sunbathers have been attacked while covered in sand and in full view of a crowd,
there is still the speculation that the murderer may be human. Further to this, not only do people still go
to this beach (it’s “still the best beach” according to one Beach Bunny [the
female equivalent of the Beach Bum] whose friend was attacked), but it takes
forever for officials to close the beach (this takes place offscreen and is
handled in an offhand bit of dialogue; we’re never shown the beach with no one
on it, likely because the filmmakers could never get people to stay off the
beach long enough to shoot it). It’s
never stated or even hypothesized on exactly how this massive creature moves
under the sand; it just does. It takes
an unlikely amount of time for Harry to pipe up about a probable locale for the
monster’s lair. The film uses these dumb
leaps of logic to bolster up its horror film plot with some shaky supports,
while focusing far more on the uninteresting, borderline creepy relationship
between Harry and Catherine.
Which brings me to my specious
theorizing on the actual role of the film’s monster. Outside of its being a kind of punishment
from the past visited on the contemporary, self-indulgent lifestyle embodied by
beachgoers (it lives under an old, abandoned amusement pier; Doctor Dimitrios [Stefan Gierasch], who never met a
conclusion he couldn’t leap to, posits that it may be a creature in a state of
evolution, moving from sea [the birthplace of life on Earth] to land; its
stalking ground is very specifically tied to people’s recreation and a certain
cult of vanity [bikini babes and hardbodied boys and so forth]), the beast in Blood Beach appears to have a much more
singular purpose to its existence. It
is, one could argue, a monstrous matchmaker.
Everything it does is designed to bring Harry and Catherine
together. Its lair is a place the two
used to hang out at in their youth (another callback to the idea of the past). The monster never attacks Harry (who, if you
recall, walks down the beach to get to the ocean every single morning) or
Catherine (who is more menaced by grungy bag lady Mrs. Selden [Eleanor Zee], who also lives under the
dilapidated pier and is another symbol for a past which has been forsaken, than
anything else). The monster kills
Catherine’s mother, Catherine’s mother’s dog (whose death scene is intriguingly
intercut with a sex scene between Harry and Marie ([Lena Pousette], Harry’s stewardess semi-girlfriend who also gets
killed by the monster, linking the two, foreshadowing Marie’s fate, and
painting Harry in a somewhat unflattering light [because he’s enjoying sex
while a dog is being slaughtered right outside his place]; though it’s not
totally surprising an editorial decision, since the film was co-produced by Sir Run Shaw who never had a problem
combining sex and violence in many of his films under the legendary Shaw Bros banner [a fact borne out
again later on in the film]), and anyone who may possibly stand between Harry
and Catherine hooking up. In fact,
Marie’s demise, more than anything else, leads directly to the union between
Harry and Catherine. Not thinking for
one second that Marie’s not showing up at his place may be a cause for concern (because
she’s stood him up before he claims, and thus adds another notch to the film’s
Idiot Plot belt), Harry shows up at Catherine’s with the wine and food he was
going to have with Marie. Because
Catherine’s marriage is on its way toward divorce, and her estranged husband
didn’t come back home with her, there are no other obstacles in her life to
keep Catherine away. I’m almost
surprised that there was never a television series teaming the monster and
Harry up as moonlighting matchmakers.
Hollywood, make it happen.
MVT: Even though I love
cheesy monster effects (and the monster in Blood
Beach is exceedingly cheesy), Burt
Young’s coarse, Chicago-loving Royko steals the show in more ways than one.
Make or Break: There’s a
scene involving superfluous secondary character Hoagy’s (Darrell Fetty) girlfriend (Marleta
Giles) which is both very satisfying and very ridiculous simultaneously.
Score: 6.25/10
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