| ||||
Quote:
__________________ |
| ||||
This is part of Mark Kermode's wrapup of this week's releases in the Observer: Finally, a pair of nifty domestic thrillers wring dread and tension from that most middle class of social setups: the dinner party. In The Ones Below (Icon, 15), first-time director David Farr (writer of TV’s The Night Manager) effectively plays on the maintenance and reversal of polite British distance as two adjacent couples, both expecting children and occupying the same smart Islington terrace, gradually eat away at one another. It overboils badly in the last act, however, which can’t be said for US director Karyn Kusama’s super-sleek, super-smart The Invitation, which recently popped up on Netflix. Shamefully denied a UK cinema release, this sharp, shivery tale of ex-spouses circling each other at an ostensibly friendly social reunion riven with hidden histories and agendas keeps its mysteries on a teasingly tight leash throughout. It’s a must-see – and for Kusama, left languishing too long in the Hollywood doldrums following 2000’s tough-shelled indie Girlfight, a career-reigniting revelation.
__________________ |
| ||||
Based on true events a worthwhile watch and recomended A experiment On how far would you push boundries even tho you know its not real and only a experiment, and how far would you allow these boundries to be pushed if you could stop it at anytime While messing with their heads and confusing them. Last edited by Nosferatu@Cult Labs; 10th July 2016 at 10:08 AM. |
| ||||
Quote:
__________________ |
| ||||
The Wicked Lady (1983) Michael Winner's take on the classic Margaret Lockwood / James Mason highwayman film The Wicked Lady (1945). This is no gentle romp. Winner takes all the excesses from bawdy historical romps and adds even more Winner exploitation instruments and a terrific cast including Faye Dunaway (In the Lockwood role of the wicked lady), Alan Bates, Denholm Elliott, Oliver Tobias (using a very odd voice), John Gielgud, Prunella Scales and Glynis Barber to create a wonderfully entertaining film. The story of how an aristocratic woman seduces her sisters to be husband, marries him, becomes bored, turns to a life of highway robbery and meets infamous highwayman Captain Jerry Jackson is quite similar to Leslie Arliss' version of the 1945 film, but Winner improves on it quite a lot by adding violence, sex and nudity in great splashes. Including an infamous sequence that had the BBFC in outrage as Dunaway whips Star Trek's Marina Sirtis in front of a crowd until she bleeds and her dress tears off. This is a long scene and is reminiscent of something Jess Franco would use for titillating violence especially when Sirtis gets her own whip and the scene turns into an extended nude catfight in front of a baying crowd. Sadly for Alan Bates fans he doesn't wrestle in the nude in front of a roaring fire in this, he's a little too out of shape i'm afraid, no, in this Winner lets Tobias and Barber **** in a protracted fire lit sex scene. The original film is a British classic, this is tasteless, camp, violent, exploitation. Guess which i prefer. |
Like this? Share it using the links below! |
| |