Creature Double Feature

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I’m really getting my money out of Netflix streaming service. Over the weekend, in honor of my old favorite “Creature Double Feature” which aired on Channel 48 WKBS in the 70’s, I checkout out a couple ridiculous horror movies and loved every minute of it.

The first of these is the horrendous Dracula A.D. 1972. In swinging London, kids seeking a thrill beyond the ordinary party crashing and fashionable chemical stimulus turn to the dark arts to bring back poor old Christopher Lee as the Prince of Darkness himself. It would have been nice for Lee to get a little more screen time in the title roles, but the hot pants were easy on the eyes, so I’m not complaining too much. Of course, the best part is Peter Cushing as Van Helsing. Even in this schlock, there is never a time when Cushing is not perfectly smooth, in control, debonair and stunning to look at. We’re talking serious man-crush here. His wardrobe was impeccable and he smokes with such precision, it was hard for me to remember how the old Grand Moff himself could have been so cool without his Silk Cuts.

After the buffoonery of Lee and Cushing cashing in, all I wanted was to see their glory days in the late fifties. The Horror of Dracula is available for streaming, but I decided to stay in the 70’s for another, more psychotic selection.

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The second part of my double feature was Phantasm. This mind-bender from 1979 is proof that a movie with no coherent plot can still be a drop-dead classic. Much of the credit must go to the film’s extraordinary visual presentation. The set at the funeral home, especially the white marble mausoleum is particularly striking. The film does not shy away from showing extreme gore (it is tame by today’s standards, but it originally got an X rating) in well-lit conditions. That’s a nice touch. Angus Scrimm as the tall man is all gravitas and evil presence. He is often shot in slow motion, with his hair bobbing in the breeze and he makes his relentless approach. It is a chilling effect. And of course, there is the silver ball, which is a stroke of genius as a prop and has now become an institution unto itself. Extra credit for the triple black 1971 Plymouth HemiCuda 340, which is almost as bad ass as Scrimm’s “the Tall Man”.

Gone With The Pope? Right here in Philly? You wouldn’t kid me about stuff like this, would you?

Thanks to the wonderful QuietEarth website, I have learned that this disgusting, exploitative, gore-fest about kidnapping the Pope (!) will be showing at the Philadelphia Film Alliance Danger After Dark Festival.  The trailer is not safe for work, not politically correct, and not lacking in pure 70’s awesomeness:

Big, big, big, big ideas – This is what moves me

Within a tiny droplet of water, there can be an entire ecosystem teeming with life.  The space between two people who get up and go to work and try to find happiness and comfort and fulfillment can be more complicated and multi-faceted than any diamond.  No number of special effects explosions in countless summer blockbusters can equal the poignancy of a moving conversation or a close-up of a human face looking right into the eyes.

Two movie trailers have come my way this morning and they both appear to embody a fearless approach to narrative that pushes my buttons.  Why not make movies that embrace the questions of existence, life and death, why we’re here and what it’s all about?  Why not tackle the most horrifying and unknowable issues that are present for every sentient being?

The first of these comes from a blog called This is Who We Are. It’s devoted to the television program Millenium and the extraordinary and unique talents of that show’s star Lance Henricksen.  He stars in The Penitent Man:

There is a spoiler video of of about 8 minutes, but since it appears this small project will see the dark of moviehouses, I will take my chance and wait.

The next trailer is for a Brazilian film Nosso Lar, and comes to me from the wonderful sci-fi/post-apocalyptic genre website Quiet Earth.  Talk about big ideas, this one goes right after death and the afterlife.  I’ll happy read subtitles for an hour or two if I can get an opportunity to see this:

There is certainly a time for fart-gags and explosions.  There is a time for the Bourne Identity and Inglorious Basterds and romantic comedies and Gladiator.  These are all good things.  But sometimes, you gotta chuck it all out the window.  Sometimes you SHOULD take yourself too seriously.  Sometimes you’ve got to shoot for beyond the moon and beyond convention.  Maybe, just maybe, that is the space that these two films will occupy

From the “Starred Items” in my Google Reader

It doesn’t matter who the author really is, just as long as you like the books.

Eloquent recommendations for your media consumption.

The issue of privacy has been much on my mind, especially after finishing Ken Auletta‘s fine new book about the monster from Mountain View.  Matthew Ingram gets you up to date on the Google convection in Italy and the fact that Google IS a media company.  And Danah Boyd reports from Harvard about evolving privacy norms in the context of teens using Facebook.  Let me put it this way: fifteen years ago, if you knew someone was opening, reading, and analyzing all your mail, would that have been OK with you?  But now you don’t mind?  The world is changing and so are you.

(SPOILER ALERT for links only)  Finally, Tamara from Caprica looks like a total bad-ass with her sub-machine gun because she IS a total bad-ass.  Annalee Newitz knows how good the show is.  Are you watching the best show on television?

Two quick items:

I just started following this discussion at Supervillian that stems from this wonderful series by Matt Zoller Seitz about Michael Mann.  @switzke of Supervillian is taking the Seitz series as a jumping off point for talking about zen pulp and the ‘lone man’ narrative in film.  The discussion is just getting started, so you may want to tune in for the next few essay’s and responses.  Lots of amazing content going to be discussed there.

The other item in my morning inbox was an affectionate note about McCartney’s superb album ‘Ram’ from 1971 aver at Never Get Out of The Boat.  There’s is also information about a muzak instrumental version that McCartney did himself (?!?) and a various artists’ cover version of the album.

Crazy Heart (hearts) the music

I’m 37 years old, going to be 38 in a few months.  I grew up in the mid-atlantic region of the USA and when I went to college, the only criteria I put down for my roommate survey was “no country music”.  I ended up getting matched up with one of the greatest guitar players I’ve ever met or heard, but that’s another story.

During my life, I’ve seen a renaissance in Nashville, where a few singers have become immensely popular and fabulously wealthy playing something called ‘Country’ music.  For me, there’s a tendency to hear this material and think it is overproduced, redneck garbage.  That’s not a nice thing to say, but a lot of what I hear in passing turns my stomach.

The question is, how could I, so in love with music and so in love with guitar, pass such harsh judgment on an entire genre of popular music?

Crazy Heart did not help me answer that question, but it did take me inside the life of a country song: the booze, the women, the road, the trucks, the prejudice (“you speak any Mexican?”), bein’ broke; hell, the only thing that was missing was an old hound dog.  It also showed me something I wasn’t quite expecting – musical genius.

As good an actor as you may think Jeff Bridges is, this was truly the ‘performance of a lifetime’ as advertised.  It is by means of that beautiful performance (in a film about performance) that the musical genius comes across, and it made me feel like my soul was in flight.

Bridges doesn’t do it himself, and a great debt is owed to the amazing T-Bone Burnett who produced the film and co-wrote the music.  But it is Bridges’ performance that makes the magic come off the screen with ten times more sincerity than any “three-dee” experience you may have had in the past few months.  He plays guitar and sings like he’s been doing it for years – because he has.  He brings every ounce of emotion and delicacy to a story as old as story-telling: the old master, fallen on hard times, on a path of self-destruction, against the odds, to make the magic happen and give it ‘one more try.’

And if the story brings only little originality (and includes a highly unnecessary epilogue), Bridges’ performance and the beautiful original music elevates this movie-going experience to something special, almost heart-rending.

The country music is portrayed with both warts and beauty.  Some is overproduced garbage, but some is the simple and sincere chord progression, leaning on the blues, tex-Mex and folk, that tells the story of love and loss.  The result is irresistible.

This is a love letter to American music; singing, songwriting and guitar playing.  The instruments, amplifiers and musical performances are all real.  The people on camera are playing and singing.  The performance footage puts you on stage with the all the excitement and intensity of any ‘real’ concert film (Last Waltz, Hail Hail Rock ‘n’ Roll, Rust Never Sleeps, etc.).  And Jeff Bridges absolutely seals the deal with a subtle and emotional portrayal that is easily the best performance by the extraordinarily gifted actor.

A Dune film that never was (via @Richard_Kadrey)

The amazing Richard Kadrey (Sandman Slim) tweeted about an earlier attempt to make Frank Herbert’s Dune novel into a film.  I was only aware of the 1984 film by David Lynch, which Kadrey describes as “a glorious mess”.  Personally, I’m a fan of the movie, but it’s not a top ten for me, despite the epic source material.  It seems, however, that the earlier attempt by Alejandro Jadorowsky (which was started and dismantled in the mid 70’s) would have been something else altogether – with help from Orson Welles, H.R. Giger, Salvador Dali and Pink Floyd.

OMFG!!!