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  #14371  
Old 17th June 2012, 09:02 PM
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Hope you enjoyed The Killers and Arsenic and Old Lace Bizarre_eye.

Two must have's for the collection in my opinion.
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  #14372  
Old 17th June 2012, 09:31 PM
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I'd love to know your thoughts on Beatrice Cenci,Byleth and Zinda Lash (The Living Corpse).
I'd seen Beatrice Cenci for the first time a few years ago and couldn't remember much about it, so thought I'd give it another go. For Fulci, it's actually very tame and plays out like an oppressive period drama tinged with tragedy. It's an okay watch (mainly for Thomas Milian, and the very pretty Adrienne Larussa), but not one I'd recommend very highly.

Byleth is another I hadn't seen for a while, and again one I remembered little about. In fact, there were a number of crossed wires in my grey matter concerning this and Beatrice Cenci; which is why I most likely decided to watch them back to back (well, that and both hardboxes sit next to each other on my shelf ). Whilst both use the period setting and gothic atmosphere, Byleth is a lot more erotically charged than Beatrice is. The film is also quite dreamy in places, which adds to the interesting atmosphere. I slightly preferred Byleth over Beatrice, but whilst neither were in any way 'bad', I wouldn't recommend either very highly.

The Living Corpse (AKA: Dracula in Pakistan) started off well. The black and white cinematography is excellent (I watched the Mondo Macabro DVD, which aside form a few judders due to print damage makes for an impressively crisp transfer) and the suspense is built very nicely. However, as you approach the 30 minute mark, the inevitable happens. The fact that you are watching a Bollywood style (not true Bollywood, as this film was made in Pakistan and not India) take on Dracula becomes all the more apparent and the singing and dancing breaks out. I'm not oblivious to Bollywood film stylings, and how dance and music is an integral part of their cultural heritage in regards to film making, but it completely de-railed what up until then had been a genuinely interesting and suspenseful little film; Bollywood has its fans, but I am just not one of them. This 'nonsense' then plays out for most of the middle portion of the film, and I was almost ready to right the damn thing off, as you jump from one bemusingly random dance number after another, but I persevered and the film thankfully fell back into the boundaries of (near) sanity at the end.

Overall a very interesting experience, and one I'd certainly recommend. There will be many who will be able to stomach the music and dance routines much better than I (and I don't mean to come across as close-minded or insulting in this micro-review), but for me these perpetrated the 6/10 score I'd give this film over the 8/10 score I had in my mind before that sitar started furiously strumming
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  #14373  
Old 17th June 2012, 09:36 PM
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Hope you enjoyed The Killers and Arsenic and Old Lace Bizarre_eye.

Two must have's for the collection in my opinion.
Arsenic and Old Lace is a classic, and one I never tire of. I'd never seen The Killers, and was a tiny bit underwhelmed to be honest after hearing a lot of great things about it. Still a solid film, and Lancaster is on top form: 7/10.
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  #14374  
Old 17th June 2012, 09:40 PM
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I love Winter Light. I must watch it (yet) again soon.
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  #14375  
Old 17th June 2012, 09:54 PM
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Originally Posted by bizarre_eye@Cult Labs View Post
Arsenic and Old Lace is a classic, and one I never tire of. I'd never seen The Killers, and was a tiny bit underwhelmed to be honest after hearing a lot of great things about it. Still a solid film, and Lancaster is on top form: 7/10.
I actually prefer the Don Siegel/Lee Marvin version of The Killers. Ruthless film and too strong for TV at the time. I had the Criterion set and I'm really hoping it gets a BD upgrade but I think AWE have now released that version on it's own.
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  #14376  
Old 17th June 2012, 10:00 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bizarre_eye@Cult Labs View Post
Arsenic and Old Lace is a classic, and one I never tire of. I'd never seen The Killers, and was a tiny bit underwhelmed to be honest after hearing a lot of great things about it. Still a solid film, and Lancaster is on top form: 7/10.
I think with the classic noir films it is true they don't always grab you, however the more viewings you give them the more the subtle nuances come out and make you appreciate the films.
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  #14377  
Old 17th June 2012, 10:06 PM
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I think with the classic noir films it is true they don't always grab you, however the more viewings you give them the more the subtle nuances come out and make you appreciate the films.
Perhaps. It just seemed a bit 'all-over-the-place' for me, plus didn't engage me as much as other noir films have done. Films like Double Indemnity, The Killing, Scarlet Street, and The Secret Beyond the Door all managed to grab me from the initial viewing.
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  #14378  
Old 17th June 2012, 10:10 PM
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Originally Posted by bizarre_eye@Cult Labs View Post
Perhaps. It just seemed a bit 'all-over-the-place' for me, plus didn't engage me as much as other noir films have done. Films like Double Indemnity, The Killing, Scarlet Street, and The Secret Beyond the Door all managed to grab me from the initial viewing.
That's fair enough.

Not every film from a genre will appeal to everyone.
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  #14379  
Old 17th June 2012, 10:41 PM
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Arachnid - 2001 Spain d: Jack Sholder

The first Fantastic Factory film to let me down. Usually I'll enjoy any old toss if it has killer critters in it, and this does have a few moments, but it's pretty much a disaster. The script is critically under-developed and the characters lazy, tedious cyphers. Some of the shot set-ups are just rubbish and the whole thing falls short of even the most mediocre SyFy channel monster features. Alex Reid was quite foxy in her youth though.

Very disappointed indeed.
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  #14380  
Old 17th June 2012, 11:47 PM
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Anatomy of Hell
The Night Porter
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