Thursday, April 30, 2009

New Trailers - Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen & G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra

New trailers for Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen and G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra - view them both right here!

This summer sees the release of two big budget adaptations of Hasbro's tentpole toy franchises, Transformers and G.I. Joe. If this were the mid-1980's, I don't think I'd have been able to contain my excitement - hell, I can barely contain it now!

First up is the expolosive new theatrical trailer for Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, directed by Michael Bay and starring Shia LeBeouf, Megan Fox, and a host of giant robots. Check out the embed below, or head over to Yahoo Movies for an HD version...


Also released is the international trailer for G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra (with French subtitles), which is directed by Stephen Sommers and also features Channing Tatum, Dennis Quaid, Marlon Wayans, Sienna Miller, Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Christopher Eccleston. Again, check out the embed below or head over to Allocine.com for the HD version...


While I've had some reservations about G.I. Joe, it does look like audiences are in for a thrilling, action-packed ride from both movies and there should be plenty to enjoy this summer. Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen is released 24th June in the U.K., and G.I Joe: The Rise of Cobra follows on the 7th of August.

Embeds courtesy of Joblo.com.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Five Essential... Films of Takashi Miike

Gary Collinson selects Five Essential Films of Takashi Miike

Cult Japanese director Takashi Miike is one of the most prolific filmmakers working today, with over seventy credits since his debut in 1991. Miike’s body of work is often violent, sexually perverse and bizarre, mixing elements of different genres to create his own distinct style, which has helped to build a reputation as the king of Asian extreme cinema...

5. Audition (1999)

The film which brought Miike to the attention of Western audiences, Audition tells the story of middle-aged widower Aoyama, who is pressured by a friend into holding auditions to find a new love. Aoyama becomes drawn towards Asami, a quiet and reserved girl who lives alone in an empty apartment. As they get to know one another, Asami opens up and confides in Aoyama about abuse she suffered as a child, and asks that he only love her. However, when Asami discovers a photograph of Aoyama’s dead wife she feels betrayed and the disturbed young woman sets about extracting a brutal and violent revenge. Perhaps the best-known of Miike’s works, in my opinion Audition is also the most over-rated.



4. Visitor Q (2001)

Visitor Q is one of Miike’s most shocking and controversial films, containing graphic sex, incest, necrophilia, lactation, murder, and psychological abuse. A dysfunctional family headed by a failed television presenter (who has sex with his own daughter at the start of the movie for a documentary he is making) are visited by a stranger who, after seducing each of them in turn, manages to change their lives. Visitor Q is insanely disturbing viewing and it is perhaps testament to the director that he manages to inject humour into some of the more reprehensible scenes. Be advised – proceed only with extreme caution!




3. Dead or Alive (1999)

The original Dead or Alive is an ultra low-budget crime thriller and the first of a trilogy of unrelated films starring two of Japan’s biggest cult actors, Riki Takeuchi and Sho Aikawa. It centres on the conflict between two mortal enemies - a Triad boss (Takeuchi) and police detective (Aikawa) – against the backdrop of a Yakuza gang war. Like the majority of Miike’s films it is littered with stylised violence and sexual perversions, and builds towards a climax so absurd and far out that it leaves the viewer absolutely speechless.





2. Ichi the Killer (2001)

An uncompromising, cruel and vicious Yakuza thriller based upon Hideo Yamamoto’s manga of the same name, Ichi the Killer is without doubt the most brutal film on this list, and possibly the most violent movie I’ve had the pleasure of watching (even with the BBFC cuts). While investigating the gruesome murder of his boss, masochistic Yakuza enforcer Kakihara becomes obsessed with the sadistic Ichi, a confused and psychotic young man whom Kakihara believes will allow him to experience the ultimate in pain and suffering. Uncomfortable viewing from the start, Ichi the Killer is a true highlight of extreme cinema and Miike at his twisted best.




1. The Happiness of the Katakuris (2001)

Devoid of the extreme violence and sexual perversions common to his work, The Happiness of the Katakuris is a perfect example of Miike’s range as a filmmaker. The Katakuri family run a struggling guest house where each customer has a habit of turning up dead in the morning. To save their business the family try to conceal the deaths by burying the bodies, but soon the situation begins to spiral out of control. A loose remake of the South Korean movie The Quiet Family (1998), The Happiness of the Katakuris is an infinitely superior film, expertly weaving elements of comedy, horror, animation, and song and dance into one of the most bizarre, crazy, and downright entertaining movies I have ever seen. Absolutely fantastic.


Agree? Disagree? We'd love to hear your comments on the list...

Gary Collinson

Essentials Archive

A Terrence Malick Profile

Rory Barker profiles legendary director Terrence Malick...

As a wave of great American filmmakers were unable to continue making films and the likes of Alfred Hitchcock, Howard Hawks, and John Ford were consigned to history a new, younger generation of US filmmakers emerged. Garnering the golden combination of both commercial success and critical acclaim consistently, this generation - involving Martin Scorsese, Francis Ford Coppola and Steven Spielberg - all began releasing major feature films in the 1970s. Although these three filmmakers have become the most famous and sought after directors in contemporary cinema, another auteur that emerged from this generation then to go on to shun the spotlight was Terrence Malick.

Like Spielberg (Duel, 1971), Coppola (The Godfather, 1972) and Scorsese (Mean Streets, 1971), Malick made his first big budget movie Badlands in the 1970's. Badlands drew many comparisons to Bonnie and Clyde (1967), a great American box office success, and therefore may begin to explain Malick's own commercial success with his film. However, what the critics had noticed was a director ignoring classical narrative structure, creating dream like films with perfect scores and idyllic scenery, and emoting a feeling of poetic cinema.

Malick's background, unlike most other successful filmmakers, does not solely involve film. Malick studied philosophy at both Harvard and Oxford University before becoming a professor in the subject at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, while also writing articles for noted publications such as Newsweek, Life and The New Yorker. Malick's switch into cinema was a sudden and unusual one, having expressed limited passion of the media prior to wanting to make a film. Malick's first foray into film, the short Lanton Mills (1969), ensured production bosses were happy to grant him a relatively large budget of the time of $450,000, with which he made Badlands.

Once Badlands became accessible to a wider audience, it became clear why Malick had chosen this new career path. Badlands was a highly philosophical film, the majority of which came from Sissy Spacek's character, 15 year-old Holly. Providing an ignorant but thoughtful voiceover throughout the film, she displays a simplistic yet insightful view into the actions and reactions of Kit (Martin Sheen), her narcissistic serial killing lover. The film makes several intelligent points on society, many of which are still relevant today including the depiction of Kit, whose moral conscience is non-existent due to his desire to be of importance or even famous. This investigation into the need for fame is one that reverberates around society today, over 35 years after the release of Badlands.

Malick's next film Days of Heaven (1978) was released five years after Badlands and drew many similarities. The setting was once again evocative and filmed artistically, proving integral in the quality of the film with Malick once again painting the American mid-west in an extraordinary light. There was also a repeating classical score, and another parallel was the narration throughout by a teenage girl with a heavy accent, Sissy Spacek being replaced in Days of Heaven by Linda, portrayed by Linda Manz. The film stars Richard Gere as young, handsome farmhand Bill, a role that was turned down by several up and coming actors of the time including Dustin Hoffman, Al Pacino and finally John Travolta (scheduling conflicts).

This was Gere's breakthrough role and the one that brought him to the attention of the American public and Hollywood producers alike. Gere's character Bill is in love with Abby (Brooke Adams) and travels the Midwest with her and her younger sister Linda until they come to work for a farmer, played by Sam Sheppard. A love triangle emerges between Bill, Abby and the farmer, with Malick incorporating silent movie techniques in order to display their relationships, the film surprisingly lacking in dialogue. This triangle has drastic consequences as Malick revisits the themes of morality being disregarded by intense feelings with a dramatic climax.

After the making of Days of Heaven came Malick's strangest action yet. He had already been famed for shunning the limelight, making films and then never taking part in any of the press involved, but he put this reclusive nature into a new stratosphere as he disappeared from the film industry for the next 20 years. His whereabouts never properly confirmed to this day, though rumours that he taught in France for the full period may well be true.

Malick finally returned with his much anticipated World War II film The Thin Red Line (1998), based on the James Jones novel of the same name. This film was eagerly anticipated by critics and Malick enthusiasts who held his previous works in such high regard, but was overshadowed among Hollywood and the American public by Spielberg’s spiralling WWII morality tale Saving Private Ryan (1998). The Thin Red Line nonetheless secured seven Oscar nominations (though not winning any) and included an all-star cast with big names such as John Travolta, George Clooney, Sean Penn, Jim Caveziel, Woody Harrelson, Elias Koteas, Adrien Brody, John Cusack, John C. Reilly and Nick Nolte. On top of this, Mickey Rourke, Billy Bob Thornton, Martin Sheen, Viggo Mortenson and Gary Oldman found themselves flying out to Australia and the Solomon Islands for an extensive shoot only to find their scenes end up on the cutting room floor among at least 6 hours of footage never to be seen.

The extensive casting, along with over a million feet of film shot, was only part of the confusion during production. Malick argued vehemently with the film's producers Robert Michael Geisler and John Roberdeau, resulting in him banning them from the set of the film, as well as the Oscar ceremony. Whether the final product is what he originally set out to make based on James Jones novel is debatable, but there is no argument that the film is anything but typical Malick. His defining style of picturesque locations on a philosophical subject and once again investigating the morality of his characters creates a mesmerizing final film that leaves fans eager to see more of what has been left on the cutting room floor. There is also the voice over narrative - another Malick trait - particularly from Jim Caveziel's character, who in the final film seems to be the lead character and the one most identifiable to the audience.

Malick went on to make The New World (2005), his least successful film. Malick's own take on the story of Pocahontas, The New World features Colin Farrell, Christopher Plummer, David Thewlis and Christian Bale - the stars once again desperate to be a part of one of his few films. The film follows the Malick guidelines of being set in picturesque locations and a particular era of history, another trademark of his films. These trademarks, which have become apparent through his body of work, ensures that Terrence Malick remains one of the great auteurs in contemporary American film industry, and begins to explain why this talented director decided to switch the focus of his career from philosophy to film.

Although Malick's films are few and far between, his distinctive style and his disdain for making a film following classical narrative guidelines means that he has become one of the greatest and most sought after directors of all time.

Terrence Malick is currently in post production for his new film The Tree of Life, currently scheduled for a 2010 release and starring Brad Pitt and Sean Penn, with Pitt taking over after Heath Ledger's untimely death just before filming began.

Rory Barker

Badlands is available on DVD from LoveFilm.com for only £3.73 including postage.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

UK Box Office Top Ten - weekend commencing 24/04/09

UK box-office top ten for the weekend of Friday 24th - Sunday 26th April 2009.

Crime thriller State of Play opened in top spot but it was a slow weekend all round at the U.K. box office post-Easter holidays, with the two other notable releases - The Uninvited and Observe and Report - both disappointing in seventh and eighth respectively.

State of Play, which stars Russell Crowe, Ben Affleck and Rachel McAdams, earned just over £1.5m to claim the crown, while Monsters vs Aliens, Fast & Furious and 17 Again each limped over the £1m mark, dropping one spot each from last weekend. Also dropping one place to fifth was 'bromantic-comedy' I Love You, Man, while political satire In the Loop - based on the BBC series The Thick of It - grossed £100k less than its opening but actually climbed two places to sixth.

Disney's Race to Witch Mountain and Richard Curtis comedy The Boat That Rocked kept their place in the chart at the expense of Marley & Me and Knowing, along with Jason Statham action sequel Crank: High Voltage, which disappears after just one week in the top ten.
















































































Pos.FilmWeekend GrossWeekTotal UK Gross
1State of Play
£1,513,9511



£1,513,951
2Monsters vs Aliens£1,078,6174£18,823,207
3Fast & Furious£1,052,5333

£12,042,090
417 Again
£1,025,3323

£9,222,483
5I Love You, Man£708,0712



£2,387,394
6In the Loop
£348,9982



£1,060,849
7The Uninvited
£343,3781



£343,378
8Observe and Report
£326,7491

£326,749
9Race to Witch Mountain
£250,2503



£2,256,105
10The Boat That Rocked£249,8234



£5,799,392


This Wednesday sees the release of the latest Marvel superhero movie, X-Men Origins: Wolverine, which is bound to claim the top spot despite a much publicised internet leak and negative buzz online. Hannah Montana: The Movie will also look to do strong business, and we should see a revival at the box-office next weekend.

You can also enter our X-Men Origins: Wolverine contest here.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Robert Rodriguez confirms Predator reboot and feature-length Machete!

Texan filmmaker Robert Rodriguez discusses his involvement in a reboot of the Predator franchise, along with confirmation of a full-length Machete film to start production in June...

After our article on the development of Sin City 2 a few weeks back and suggestions that the project may finally moving forward, this week has seen the ever-busy Robert Rodriguez add two more productions to his upcoming slate. Bloody Disgusting received a scoop back in January that Rodriguez had been approached by 20th Century Fox to produce a reboot of the Predator series, and his involvement has now been confirmed as Aint It Cool News spoke to the man himself about the project.

The exclusive interview is a very interesting read, with Rodriguez discussing an early sequel to the original Predator that he was commissioned to write pre-Desperado entitled Predators (which also happens to be the title they're using for this reboot). He also notes that while he's involved primarily in a producing capacity, he does intend to get behind the camera to direct the occassional scene.

Meanwhile, Variety has confirmed a full-length Machete feature is in the works, and that Rodriguez will co-direct with his long-time editor Ethan Maniquis. Machete, based on his own mock Grindhouse trailer, will see Danny Trejo reprise his role as an ex-Federale seeking revenge on a corrupt double-crossing senator, who "just fucked with the wrong Mexican!"

I'm looking forward to seeing another grindhouse-style effort from Rodriguez after the excellent Planet Terror. Personally, I found the Machete trailer alone to be more enjoyable than Tarantino's drawn-out effort Death Proof, and will have high hopes for this one.

If you haven't seen the trailer be sure to check out this embed:




Rodriguez also has the previously announced Nerverackers scheduled for release in April 2010, and looks determined to push Samuel L. Jackson for the title of Busiest Man in Hollywood.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

X-Men Trilogy DVD Giveaway - NOW CLOSED

X-Men, X2, and X-Men: The Last Stand up for grabs on DVD, absolutely free... (Sorry - this giveaway is now closed).


To celebrate the release of X-Men Origins: Wolverine, FlickeringMyth.com are giving away a DVD boxset featuring X-Men (2000), X2 (2003), and X-Men: The Last Stand (2006), abolutely free, and you can enter right here!

The trilogy features the adventures of Professor Charles Xavier's (Patrick Stewart) mutant superhero team X-Men, including Wolverine (Hugh Jackman), Storm (Halle Berry), Jean Grey (Famke Janssen) and Cyclops (James Marsden) as they battle arch-enemy Magneto (Sir Ian McKellen) and his Brotherhood of Mutants.

To enter all you have to do is send an email here, or if you're register with Blogger you can post a comment here. The winner will be picked at random and announced on the site on Thursday May 7th 2009. Please note that the DVDs are Region 2, so make sure your DVD player is compatible if you aren't from the U.K.

While you're at it, why not vote in our new X-Men poll?

X-Men Origins: Wolverine is released on April 29th in the U.K. and stars Hugh Jackman, Liev Schreiber and Ryan Reynolds.

The Prize Finder - UK Competitions
Loquax Competitions
FreeBlogGiveaways

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Cult Classics - Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan

Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, 1982.

Directed by Nicholas Meyer.
Starring William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, DeForest Kelley and Ricardo Montalban.


SYNOPSIS:

After years in exile on a barren world, a genetically-engineered superhuman warrior seeks revenge against the man who sent him there.


Following the cancellation of the Star Trek television series in 1969 and the subsequent success of the original episodes in syndication, creator Gene Roddenberry lobbied Paramount executives for a big screen revival of his sci-fi vision. Instead, network executives planned to reincarnate the franchise in the mid-70’s with a project known as Star Trek: Phase II, which would have reunited the original crew of the USS Enterprise for a new five year mission. However, the critical and commercial successes of George Lucas’ Star Wars (1977) and Steven Spielberg’s Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977) added huge appeal to Roddenberry’s original idea and a big-screen adaptation was soon given the green-light.

Developed from the proposed pilot episode of Phase II and rushed through production, Star Trek: The Motion Picture was released into cinemas in 1979 and broke box-office records on its way to a worldwide gross of $139m. Despite this financial success the movie was criticised heavily for a slow, plodding narrative, lack of action and weak plot, and failed to live up to the expectations of a $49m budget. Roddenberry’s proposal for a sequel was rejected by the studio, which ultimately led to his removal from the project, and executives brought in television producer Harve Bennett and director Nicholas Meyer to deliver a more action-orientated picture on a greatly reduced budget.

Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan opens with Admiral James T. Kirk and Captain Spock (Nimoy) overseeing new trainees including the Vulcan, Lieutenant Saavik (Kirstie Alley, in her debut role), as they sit the simulation programme Kobayashi Maru, a no-win exercise which only Kirk himself has been able to conquer. Meanwhile, Commander Pavel Chekov (Walter Koenig) and the USS Reliant are on an expedition to an uncolonised world, Ceti Alpha VI, which Starfleet hopes to use as a testing ground for their new terraforming contraption, the Genesis Device.

Beaming to the surface of the planet, Chekov and Reliant Captain Terrell are soon captured by one of the more memorable villains from the original show, Khan Noonien Singh (Montalban, in a perfectly over-the-top performance), a superhuman warrior of the twentieth century Eugenics Wars who originally appeared in the episode Space Seed. Awoken by the crew of the USS Enterprise after close to three centuries in suspended animation, Khan and his followers had attempted to take control of the ship only to be thwarted by Kirk and banished into exile. Now he's pissed off and assumes command of the Reliant, swearing vengeance on Kirk and his crew.

Dispatched to investigate, the Enterprise is ambushed en route, with Khan revealing himself to his long-time nemesis and setting up a deadly game of cat and mouse. While Kirk ultimately prevails, Khan manages to unleash the Genesis Device onto a nearby planet, his last act of aggression before death. Badly damaged from the battle, the Enterprise is threatened with destruction by the imminent explosion until Spock makes the ultimate sacrifice in order to save his friend and the crew.

While Spock’s departure is tarnished somewhat by the less-than-subtle hint towards the events of the next movie Shatner and Nimoy still provide a memorable and emotional final scene, while Ricardo Montalban is exceptional throughout as the villain with a blind obsession for revenge. Shatner and Montalban really are on top form as the two ageing leaders; mortal enemies embarking a battle of wits that tests each of them to the core, and provides the audience with a multitude of memorable quotes. Against this action-based backdrop the film also explores the friendship between Kirk and Spock and the realisation that age is starting to catch up (a concept seemingly ignored throughout the rest of the series).

Unlike The Motion Picture, The Wrath of Khan moves with a much swifter pace and harks back to the spirit of the original television series. It was a box office success upon release and remains a highlight of the Star Trek movie series with it’s dark themes of death, resurrection, and vengeance. It was credited for renewing waning interest in the franchise and is head and shoulders above a number of the subsequent sequels, while for sheer entertainment value it is unmatched.

Gary Collinson

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

UK Box Office Top Ten - weekend commencing 17/04/09

UK box-office top ten for the weekend of Friday 17th - Sunday 19th April 2009.

Dreamworks' CGI animated smash hit Monsters vs. Aliens returned to the top of the box office in its third week, leapfrogging last week's number one - the Vin Diesel / Paul Walker vehicle (ahem!) Fast & Furious - on its way to an impressive U.K. gross of £17,343,985 and counting. Two new entries cracked the top five but neither 'bromantic' comedy I Love You, Man or Jason Statham action sequel Crank: High Voltage had enough muscle to dispose of 17 Again, which remained in third position despite topping the charts over in the States this weekend.

Armando Iannuci's political satire In The Loop was the only new British release in the top ten, collecting a respectable £468,954 and placing the film eighth for the weekend behind fellow Brit Richard Curtis' comedy ensemble The Boat That Rocked and Disney's family adventure Race to Witch Mountain.

The top ten was rounded out by science-fiction thriller Knowing and canine comedy Marley & Me, which has earned close to £15m in the U.K. and remains in the charts after six weeks. This meant that there was no place for three of last weekend's top films - Dragonball Evolution, The Haunting in Connecticut and Paul Blart: Mall Cop - all of which fell out of contention.
















































































Pos.FilmWeekend GrossWeekTotal UK Gross
1Monsters vs Aliens
£2,057,3673

£17,343,985
2Fast & Furious
£1,929,1592£10,244,568
317 Again£1,772,8312

£7,583,933
4I Love You, Man
£1,122,2581

£1,122,258
5Crank: High Voltage
£554,5651

£554,565
6The Boat That Rocked£498,8383

£5,305,276
7Race to Witch Mountain£469,0342

£1,901,060
8In The Loop
£468,9541

£468,954
9Knowing£312,5204

£6,373,461
10Marley & Me£304,4336

£14,912,767


Upcoming releases for next weekend include another Asian horror remake - The Uninvited - based on Ji-woon Kim's A Tale of Two Sisters (2003), political thriller State of Play starring Russell Crowe, Ben Affleck, Rachel McAdams and Helen Mirren, Seth Rogen's controversial comedy Observe and Report and action fantasy Outlander, along with a trio of British films - Frequently Asked Questions About Time Travel, Shifty, and City Rats.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Movies... For Free! Last Woman on Earth (1960)

Welcome to our "Movies... For Free!" column, showcasing classic movies freely available in the public domain (with streaming video!). This weekend, continuing our b-movie theme we present the second part of a double-feature...


Last Woman on Earth, 1960.

Directed by Roger Corman.
Starring Betsy Jones-Moreland, Anthony Carbone, and Robert Towne (as Edward Wain).

Newlywed couple Harold and Evelyn Gern (Carbone and Jones-Moreland) are honeymooning in Puerto Rico along with Harold’s lawyer and friend Martin Joyce (Academy Award winning screenwriter Robert Towne, credited here as Edward Wain). After emerging from a scuba-diving session to discover that oxygen has somehow disappeared from the atmosphere, the trio realise that the island’s inhabitants have suffocated and that they may be the last remaining humans left alive.

The three survivors attempt to co-exist in this post-apocalyptic world but Harold and Martin are soon drawn into a love-triangle with Evelyn. Struggling to deal with the hopelessness of their situation, the tension and paranoia builds to a dramatic conclusion as two men fight for the ultimate prize – the Last Woman on Earth.

Roger Corman’s b-movie sci-fi thriller was shot on location in Puerto Rico and is a perfect example of his ultra low budget style. The film was shot back-to-back with two other productions (Battle of Blood Island (1960) and Creature from the Haunted Sea (1961)), and is notable as the debut for Chinatown scribe Robert Towne, who provided the script and was also cast as Martin Joyce to save costs while filming on location.

Last Woman on Earth was released in cinemas in 1961 as a double-feature with another Corman production, The Little Shop of Horrors (1960), which you can also view right here.



Embed courtesy of Internet Archive.

Click here to view all previous entries in our Movies... For Free! collection.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen - New Footage

New footage from this summer's blockbuster sequel Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen arrives online courtesy of director Michael Bay.

Originally shown to the audience at ShoWest, the footage includes an early scene from the movie featuring Shia LeBeouf and Megan Fox alongside his Autobot guardian Bumblebee, with Sam Witwicky (LeBeouf) announcing to the emotional robot that he's leaving for college.

This light-hearted scene is followed by a montage of explosive and exciting large-scale action shots from the movie, providing glimpses of new Decepticon characters such as Devastator and Ravage in action alongside familiar faces including Autobot leader Optimus Prime.

UPDATE - It looks as if the source video has been removed. Oh well. Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen is released on June 24th in the U.K. and the U.S., and also features Rainn Wilson, Josh Duhamel, Tyrese Gibson and John Turturro, in addition to the vocal talents of Hugo Weaving, Peter Cullen and Frank Welker.

New Harry Potter and The Half-Blood Prince Movie Trailer

The folks over at Warner Bros. have released the latest trailer for this summer's highly anticipated Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, the sixth installment in J.K. Rowling's hugely successful wizarding franchise.

The Half-Blood Prince is once again directed by David Yates and will see the return of all the major players from previous movies, in addition to new characters such as Narcissa Malfoy (Helen McCrory) and Horace Slughorn (Jim Broadbent).

Originally slated for a release last November the film was pushed back until this July, with the date recently being brough forward two days for a simultaneous U.K. and U.S. release on July 15th.



Embed courtesy of Joblo.com.

Movies... For Free! The Little Shop of Horrors (1960)

Welcome to this week's "Movies... For Free!" column, where we showcase classic movies freely available in the public domain (with streaming video!). This weekend we present a special b-movie double-bill, and first up is…


The Little Shop of Horrors, 1960.

Directed by Roger Corman.
Starring Jonathan Haze, Jackie Joseph, Mel Welles and Dick Miller.

Low-budget b-movie legend Roger Corman directs this 1960 comedy farce which is notable for an early appearance by Jack Nicholson in a cameo role, as well as the later off-Broadway adaptation and 1986 musical remake starring Rick Moranis and Steve Martin. The movie was shot in two days under the working title The Passionate People Eater, from a script by regular Corman screenwriter Charles B. Griffith.

The story centres on a struggling Los Angeles florists owned by Gravis Mushnik (Welles), along with employees Seymour (Haze) and Audrey (Joseph). After firing the clumsy Seymour for one-too-many mishaps, Mushnik is forced to change his mind when Seymour introduces a fantastical new plant, Audrey Jr., a carnivorous hybrid butterwort and Venus Fly Trap that he has cross-bred.

After the plant begins to wane Seymour discovers that, rather than responding to the usual nourishment, Audrey Jr. has developed a particular taste for blood alongside the rather unusual ability of speech. With the plant reviving the flagging fortunes of the shop, Seymour struggles to satisfy it’s thirst with his own blood and Audrey Jr.’s cries of “Feeeeed meee!!” soon lead him to take desperate, macabre measures.

The Little Shop of Horrors originally screened at the 1960 Cannes Film Festival (albeit out of competition), and proved very popular with audiences when it was released to cinemas as part of a double- bill – initially with the Italian horror Black Sunday (1960), and re-released the following year alongside Corman’s own Last Woman on Earth (1960).



Embed courtesy of Internet Archive.

Click here to view all previous entries in our Movies... For Free! collection.

Be sure to check back tomorrow for the second part of the double-bill - Last Woman on Earth (1960).

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Extreme Cinema - Irreversible (2002)

Irreversible, 2002.

Directed by Gaspar Noé.
Starring Monica Bellucci, Vincent Cassel, and Albert Dupontel.


SYNOPSIS:

A woman is raped and her boyfriend seeks vengeance in a narrative told in reverse.


Irreversible (2002) features strong language, sex, violence and sexual violence in its tale of a woman raped in a subway and whose boyfriend and ex-lover seek a bloody revenge on her attacker. When shown at the Cannes Film Festival, the graphic violence and rape scene caused audiences to walk out appalled. Like Baise-moi (2000) the film already had a reputation before it arrived in England. The length of the rape scene at 9 minutes also set alarm bells ringing.

The film begins with two men Marcus and Pierre (Vincent Cassell and Albert Dupontel) arrested by police and being taken out of a gay bar. Marcus’s arm is broken and so he is taken away in an ambulance. Another man with his face smashed in is also being taken away. Marcus and Pierre had entered the gay bar searching frantically for a man called Le Tenia. Marcus thought he had found him but attacked the wrong man and got his arm broken. His attacker was about to rape him but Pierre used a fire extinguisher to smash Marcus’s attacker’s face in. Marcus and Pierre had traveled to this place after being tipped off by a transvestite prostitute that her pimp Le Tenia was responsible for the rape and beating of Marcus’s girlfriend Alex (Monica Bellucci). Alex had left a party alone and decided to use a subway. She had then encountered Le Tenia beating the transvestite prostitute who managed to get away. Le Tenia had then turned his sights onto Alex and raped her at knifepoint before smashing her face in.

The film features a striking credit sequence which sets the tone and style with the credits written backwards and moving diagonally off the screen. The film also has a very impressive visual style with the camera constantly in motion and unusual camera angles deployed throughout. The minimalist soundtrack also adds to the overall disoriented feeling. The sequence where Marcus has his arm broken by the man in the gay club is shockingly realistic as is Pierre smashing in the attacker’s face with a fire extinguisher. These violent scenes are bearable due to the constant movement of the camera. The rape scene does not however employ any fancy camerawork and is shot directly and brutally. After Le Tenia has sexually assaulted Alex he brutally beats her leaving her face battered and bruised. Alex struggles relentlessly through her ordeal and keeps on screaming and yelling for help as Le Tenia holds his hand over her mouth.

The film was released uncut by the BBFC due to its very unglamorous depiction of rape and violence. Surprisingly the Daily Mail was also upset with this film, despite its message being rather more obvious than that of Crash (1996). It was rather unfortunate that the film’s rape scene would distract from a rather skillfully made film. The reverse narrative means that the audience anticipate awful things are to happen to the protagonists. As the film builds to its ‘happy’ ending there is an undeniable sense of loss as although Alex prior to her ordeal discovers she is pregnant, the audience is aware that her world and that of her partner Marcus will be destroyed.

Santosh Sandhu graduated with a Masters degree in film from the University of Bedfordshire and wrote the short film 'The Volunteers'.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

It's a Wrap - Captain Pugwash vs. The X-Men, Fox, F.B.I. and Navy SEALS

It’s a Wrap – Reaction to the X-Men Origins: Wolverine leak, Paul Walker talks Fast and the Furious 5, Bourne 4 gets a date, and The Expendables blow shit up in our round-up of recent movie news from the world-wide-web.

The leaked work-print of this summer’s superhero blockbuster X-Men Origins: Wolverine, which somehow found its way onto the internet more than a month before the film’s scheduled release date, has been a big talking point over the last couple of weeks. 20th Century Fox described the online copy - a close to completed version of the mutant sequel – as “stolen” and “incomplete”, and warned that “the source of the initial leak and any subsequent postings will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”


To make matters worse for the studio, after threatening legal action against anyone who downloaded the movie (estimated downloads now exceed 1,000,000), Fox columnist Roger Friedman posted a review of the illegal copy on the Fox411 Blog. Friedman also openly discussed downloading other movies such as the Paul Rudd comedy I Love You, Man, describing the process of streaming movies as “so much easier than going out in the rain.” Unsurprisingly, parent company News Corporation was quick to take action, condemning piracy and terminating Friedman’s contract with Fox News with (almost) immediate effect.

It’s good to see that Fox have taken action against Friedman, especially after involving the F.B.I to track the source of the leak. Piracy is as rampant on the internet as that of Somalian waters and perhaps it’s time to get Barrack Obama on the case. Either that or have the studios set up a Special Forces team to despatch the pirates Navy SEAL style, because the problem won’t be going away any time soon.

In somewhat related news, Sony Corporation have announced that they are in talks with Google to post full-length feature films on video-sharing site Youtube. Sony already offer in the region of 60 films and television shows through it’s Crackle.com website, including Ghostbusters (1984), Groundhog Day (1993) and The Opposite of Sex (1998), and would be the first major studio to allow full-length content to be legally streamed via Youtube.

After our article last week regarding the status of Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller’s proposed follow-up to Sin City, Moviehole.net are reporting that the project is finally gathering steam. Producers have allegedly reopened talks with Angelina Jolie to star as Ava Lord, the title character of “A Dame to Kill For”, the graphic novel that will serve as the main focus of the movie. Other actresses previously linked to the role of Ava Lord include Rose McGowan, Rachel Weisz and Salma Hayek.

In other sequel news it seems that action fans will have plenty to look forward to with Bourne producer Frank Marshall suggesting a 2011 release for the next instalment in the spy series via his Twitter page. Matt Damon had previously confirmed that another movie was in the works, with director Paul Greengrass likely to return.

Also, having topped the U.S. and U.K. box offices with Fast & Furious, star Paul Walker has been discussing the possibility of a fifth entry in the fuel-injected franchise. “Without question, with the way things opened up, Vin and I will be coming back, we’re making a fifth one, and we’re going to Brazil”, Walker told MYfm’s Valentine (visit the link to listen to the entire audio interview).

Keeping with the action theme, the first official image from Sylvester Stallone’s upcoming testosterone-fuelled epic The Expendables has appeared online and features – you guessed it – a massive explosion (along with Eric Roberts and Stone Cold Steve Austin). The film is currently shooting in South America with a cast that includes Stallone, Jason Statham, Jet Li, Dolph Lundgren, Mickey Rourke, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Brittany Murphy, Charisma Carpenter, Danny Trejo and Terry Crews. That's some hotel bill. Click the image for more pictures along with regular updates.

Finally, TFW2005 have posted a large selection of CGI-renderings from Michael Bay’s summer blockbuster Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, featuring a host of characters from the upcoming movie, including new additions Devastator, Ravage, and The Fallen, among others. Be sure to check them out!

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

UK Box Office Top Ten - weekend commencing 10/04/09

UK box-office top ten for the weekend of Friday 10th - Sunday 12th April 2009.

There were four new entries into the U.K. box office top ten this Easter Weekend, with the Vin Diesel street-racing blockbuster Fast & Furious screeching to the top of the podium with a mighty haul of £4,928,784. Last weekend’s number one, Monsters vs. Aliens, slipped down into second and has grossed an impressive £11.5m in just two weeks, while the Zac Efron-starrer Big – sorry, 17 Again – debuted in third place.

Walt Disney’s newest release - the family adventure Race to Witch Mountain starring Dwayne Johnson (aka The Rock) - suffered from stiff competition and failed to draw a big enough audience to break in to the top five. The reimagining of Escape to Witch Mountain (1975) opened in sixth behind Richard Curtis’ star-studded music comedy The Boat That Rocked, and sci-fi thriller Knowing.

The final new release – live-action anime adaptation Dragonball Evolution – debuted in seventh place despite awful reviews, one spot behind Marley & Me (starring highest earning actress of 2008, Jennifer Aniston), which has grossed over £14m so far in the U.K. Rounding out the top ten were The Haunting in Connecticut and Paul Blart: Mall Cop, both dropping four places from last weekend.
















































































Pos.FilmWeekend GrossWeekTotal UK Gross
1Fast & Furious£4,928,7841£4,928,784
2Monsters vs Aliens£2,827,4162£11,530,625
317 Again£2,564,1021£2,564,102
4The Boat That Rocked£965,3902£3,956,251
5Knowing£619,3763£5,603,509
6Race to Witch Mountain£581,2501£581,250
7Marley & Me£470,1275£14,136,539
8Dragonball Evolution£436,2241£436,224
9The Haunting in Connecticut£380,2753£3,457,527
10Paul Blart: Mall Cop£233,9724£4,733,633


Notable releases this week include Jason Statham action sequel Crank: High Voltage (also featuring Dwight Yoakam, David Carradine, and... Corey Haim?), along with 'bromantic'-comedy I Love You, Man. Also of interest is Armando Iannucci's political satire In the Loop, based on the BAFTA-winning BBC comedy series The Thick of It.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Extreme Cinema: Baise-moi (2000)

Baise-moi, 2000.

Directed by Virginie Despentes and Coralie.
Starring Karen Lancaume and Raffaëla Anderson.


SYNOPSIS:

Two abused women embark on a robbery and killing spree in revenge against an oppressive society.


Baise-moi caused a great deal of controversy on its initial release in France when its original 16 and Over rating was raised to the rare X certificate by the French government in the wake of protests from the far right pro-family value group Promouvoir. This in turn led to the film being withdrawn as many X theatres no longer existed. The film’s frank depiction of sex and violence had also resulted in scathing reviews in the French media as it openly blurred the line between mainstream cinema and pornography. This was potentially alarming for the British because the French often have a more liberal attitude towards explicit sex and are generally not as easily offended. The title roughly translates as ‘Fuck Me’ so the film was obviously designed to be provocative.

The film is about two women, Manu (Raffaëlla Anderson), a porn star and Nadine (Karen Bach) a prostitute, who go on a robbery and killing spree pausing only to have sex with whomever they choose until the law catches up with them. Manu and a friend are brutally raped at the beginning of the film. Keeping in line with the BBFC’s stance on sexual violence, this scene was cut by 10 seconds to remove its erotic/pornographic content. This is a shocking scene as Manu allows her attackers to rape her, whilst her friend struggles relentlessly with them. Manu’s reaction is as if this is the kind of behaviour she expects from men so is not willing to put up a struggle and be humiliated by them. It is also obvious from the conversation the two rape victims have after their ordeal that despite Manu’s passive response she too did not enjoy her ordeal. This incident is then the catalyst for Manu’s later mentality as she kills her brother, takes his gun and steals his money. She then meets up with Nadine who has killed her roommate. The pair then decide to take revenge on society for what it has done to them.

The explicit sex scenes as the girls use men for their own sexual gratification continue throughout the film spliced with the random killings of whomever the women encounter. It’s confusing as to what the filmmakers want the audience to feel whether they are to be shocked by the violence or aroused by the sex scenes is completely unclear.

The film’s strong language together with its scenes of violence are not much stronger than in their Hollywood counterparts. The film begins well with an interesting grainy hand held camera style and the characters introduced as regular people marginalized by society particularly by the men in their lives. The relentless sex scenes however undermine this and render the film as nothing more than hardcore pornography. Manu is worryingly young looking making her sex scenes unwatchable. This film is nothing more than an exploitation film masquerading as a feminist statement. The film’s somewhat liberal 18 certificate did raise questions about whether the BBFC had been more lenient towards it simply because it is an art film.

Santosh Sandhu graduated with a Masters degree in film from the University of Bedfordshire and wrote the short film 'The Volunteers'.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Movies... For Free! The Stranger (1946)

Welcome to this week's "Movies... For Free!" column, where we showcase classic movies freely available in the public domain (with streaming video!). Read the article and watch the movie right here!


The Stranger, 1946.

Directed by Orson Welles.
Starring Edward G. Robinson, Loretta Young, and Orson Welles.

In the immediate aftermath of World War II, the United Nations War Crimes Commission – including investigator Mr. Wilson (Robinson) - are on the trail of Nazi fugitives who have dispersed across the globe. Their number one target is the monstrous Franz Kindler, mastermind behind the concentration camps, who has managed to erase his identity and flee from custody.

Wilson tracks Kindler to a small town in Connecticut, where he has assumed a new identity as Charles Rankin (Welles), a college professor who is set to marry Mary Longstreet (Young), the daughter of a U.S. Supreme Court Judge. As Wilson’s suspicion grows, he starts to fear for Mary’s safety and must set about proving Rankin’s guilt and bringing the war criminal to justice.

The Stranger features a chilling performance from Orson Welles as the manipulative, evil antagonist Franz Kindler, and is notable for being the only of his directorial efforts to make a profit at the box-office upon release. The timely subject matter (Hitchcock was busy filming Notorious, which also deals with the hunt for Nazi war criminals) may have helped the film to achieve such success, and it is also believed to be the first movie released after World War II to feature actual concentration camp footage.

Although it lacks the depth of some of his other cinematic works, The Stranger is a slick and suspenseful film-noir which builds to a thrilling conclusion, and features excellent performances from each of the leads, in addition to Welles’ signature directing style.



Embed courtesy of Internet Archive.

Click here to view all previous entries in our Movies... For Free! collection.

Friday, April 10, 2009

What's Happening With... Sin City 2?

Gary Collinson looks at the status of Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller’s sequel to Sin City, and wonders whether the project has slipped into the dreaded Development Hell…


The original Sin City (2005), co-directed by Robert Rodriguez and series creator Frank Miller, is one of a handful of films in recent memory where I struggled to take my eyes from the screen for a split-second. A stylish and violent film-noir, it was among the first movies to be filmed primarily on a digital back-lot; an approach which enabled the film-makers to truly bring the source material to life. Based on four of Miller’s stories – The Customer is Always Right, That Yellow Bastard, The Hard Goodbye, and The Big Fat KillSin City featured an all-star cast including Bruce Willis, Clive Owen, Jessica Alba, Mickey Rourke, and Elijah Wood to name but a few.

Sin City opened to mostly positive reviews and proved successful at the box-office, grossing over $150m world-wide against a $40m budget. This immediately led to suggestions of further adaptations, and it was soon announced that two sequels would follow – the first of which would be based on A Dame to Kill For, a prequel to The Hard Goodbye. A Dame to Kill For sees the return of several major players from the first movie in addition to that of Ava Lord, the titular “Dame” who has been linked to a number of actresses including Angelina Jolie, Rose McGowen, and Salma Hayek.

In 2007, Frank Miller announced that “both Robert and I really want to be shooting this thing as soon as possible”, suggesting a late spring start date, , which was then delayed due to Rodriguez’s involvement with his proposed Barbarella remake. Things then seemed to be moving forward once again in 2008 when Miller claimed that the script was completed and they were looking towards an April 2009 start, although Mickey Rourke seemed cautious of a return following his rejuvenation post-The Wrestler.

Fast-forward to April 2009 and rather than starting production, IESB.net broke the news that The Weinstein Company have lost the rights to the follow-up, although they also suggest the alternative finance has been arranged with a private equity group. It has to be wondered whether the disappointing failure of Frank Miller’s latest movie, The Spirit - which was very similar in style to that of Sin City – along with the less-than-expected success of Zack Snyder’s Watchmen, might have cooled some interest in the project.

With little casting news forthcoming (only Rosario Dawson is confirmed as returning), and Rodriguez attached to new projects on a daily basis - Red Sonja, Machete, Nerverackers, and the long-gestating live-action Jetsons movie are but a few examples - it is difficult to imagine that the project is anywhere close to the filming stage at the moment. Worryingly, it does seem to be slipping into a cycle of delays and I’m starting to brace myself for the realisation that it could be some time – if ever – before Sin City 2 sees the light of day.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Classic Movies - Titanic (1997)

Titanic, 1997.

Directed by James Cameron.
Starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet.


SYNOPSIS:

A wreck-salvaging bounty hunter finds not the Heart of the Ocean jewel but discovers an old lady, Rose (an excellent Gloria Stewart), who claims to have worn it in 1912. Through Rose's own story of inter-class love severed by disaster, Brock connects with the human tragedy of the Titanic.


I've enjoyed a love hate relationship with this film over the past 10 years. When I first saw the film in February 1998 shortly after the British release, I was so angered that I went home and wrote three sides of paper on why I disliked it. It was that the Hollywood success formula seemed to have been applied too literally to an inappropriate subject. I felt the framing device of the modern treasure hunt with Bill Paxton to be irrelevant and made the very human drama of the world's greatest ship to be one about money. Yet I had partly missed the point, because the story is how a man obsessed with a materialistic object and the excitement of its recovery learns to see the Titanic disaster as a moving story of human loss and bravery. Perhaps it was because I could not imagine how anyone could see the Titanic in any other light.

Having studied the film on two occasions and now preparing to teach on it, I now see many things in it which I had missed. The butterfly motif - the decoration on Rose's hair combs - is vital to the story. It’s about how a young, unfettered man, Jack (Leonardo DiCaprio) assists a passionate but curtailed young woman Rose (Kate Winslet) escape her unwanted marriage into a dull life. Academics have amused themselves discussing the sexuality of Jack, mostly making ridiculous comments which belong more in the tabloids than in scholarly journals. My own masters essay responded to these and looked instead at that angle in Kate Winslet's character. Jack is not a forceful man (my objection initially being that he looked far too young to be called a man at all). He lets Rose come on to him and make her own choices. French and Saunders laughed at the fact that Jack says 'Never let go' as he and Rose grasps onto wreckage, and then she does. But he meant, metaphorically. He knew that only one of them could live (though the F&S observation about the 'single' piece of wood is valid). Jack bravely chose to end his life which had already been full so that his love, Rose, could begin hers.

In 1998, I felt Jack too young and the romance to rushed to have worked out. Whether it would have is not the point. It is one of those times when a person comes into your life for a short time and has a profound effect. Through Jack, Rose lived to be over 100 and accomplished all the things that they talked about but which, before Jack, Rose felt were impossible for her in her stifling existence. I did feel that feigning one's death to one's family was rather cruel and wondered if Rose ever regretted that. I never will accept the intended extra tension caused by Jack being locked up as the ship sinks, although this did lead to one of the best action sequences by a female lead - and done in a frock. The valet, Lovejoy, was to caricatured. And the theme song went on, but not in way intended!

I've come to really admire the leads and Kate Winslet is among my favourite actresses, and my interest in the ship (which proceeded the film) prevails. Although I've come to see the amount of vision, thought and emotion in the film, I still feel that sadly much of this is not appreciated by many viewers. Many, I think, saw it once and didn’t have any wish to analyse the story - it felt perhaps as if it wasn’t the kind of find that repaid deeper thought or second viewing. And though it told a valid and powerful story, it didn't tell the only one about that disaster - and it will come as no surprise that I have written my own.

Elspeth Rushbrook
www.myspace.com/elspethr

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

British Cinema - Naked (1993)

Naked, 1993.

Directed by Mike Leigh.
Starring David Thewlis, Lesley Sharp and Ewen Bremner.


SYNOPSIS:

Naked follows Johnny (Thewlis) a highly articulate and intelligent loner who drifts through the backstreets of London taking part in violent sex, living on the streets and eloquently engaging everyone in conversation to completely different reactions from each stranger.


Naked is the dark and turgid story of Johnny, played by David Thewlis. Fleeing revenge for the apparent rape of a woman in Manchester, Johnny steals the girl’s family car and drives to London to meet his ex-girlfriend Louise. Johnny enters into a drifter lifestyle as he stalks through the streets of London at night, engaging in violent sex with anyone that he can seduce including Louise’s gothic and lonely housemate Sophie, who quickly falls in love with him. Johnny is an intelligent but disturbed man with apparent mental as well as physical illnesses which are referred to in the film but are never revealed. It is clear though that Johnny is an extremely troubled man with no direction in life.

Writer and director Mike Leigh presents us with this troubled character and veers away from the classical narrative of Johnny 'finding himself' for the better in this film; instead he portrays Johnny as he continues his destructive actions all the way until the climax of this disheartening story. The film’s dialogue was developed in a particularly unusual way with Thewlis improvising almost the entirety of his lines in rehearsals, which were later written into script format by Leigh before filming began. This surely enabled Leigh and Thewlis to construct the lead protagonist in precisely the way they wanted to present him. This style of developing a script and characters is one that has become associated with Leigh, as he uses his experience of directing in theatres and translates this to his work in film.

Although Naked is not Leigh's best known or celebrated film - with titles such as Secrets and Lies (1996), Topsy-Turvy (1999), Vera Drake (2004) and most recently, Happy Go Lucky (2008) among his credits - Naked is considered by many Leigh enthusiasts (myself included) as his sharpest, most poignant film, and therefore his best work. Like all of his films Leigh once again enters into the British genre of 'kitchen-sink realism', low budget stories depicting social realism - a movement which Leigh, in addition to fellow British director Ken Loach, have become the faces for.

Naked is such a stark and brutal film, dealing with themes of violence, theft, rape and even characters' own mortality. Johnny is a violent, immoral character, although the audience is led to sympathise with him as he is cruelly beaten twice, and also because of the character of Jeremy. Although Jeremy has limited camera time he leaves a lasting expression as a materialistic businessman and landlord to Louise and Sophie. He is presented as having no redeeming features at all, Leigh ensuring that the wealthy character is portrayed in as negative light as possible, indulging in more on-screen violent rape than Johnny. The style of portraying the upper class negatively in comparison to the working class is once again a trend in the kitchen-sink realist genre of British cinema, often displaying the working class with much more depth of character than enjoyed by the upper class characters. Leigh characterises his lower class characters with far more affection and detail, therefore ensuring the audience are always drawn towards these people above the wealthier ones.

Overall Naked is an astonishingly original film, depicting a bleak and vicious London of which Mancunian scoundrel Johnny seems only a small part of the problem. The movie offers very little for the audience to smile about, apart from a few witty comments from Johnny, sarcastically undermining other characters at every opportunity. What Leigh and Thewlis have created together defies the idea that the conventional film is the superior, each rewarded with their efforts achieving Best Director and Best Actor at the Cannes Film Festival, and rightly so. Naked leaves viewers with a bitter taste in their mouths, desperate to discover more of Johnny’s turbulent life while unable to stomach his actions and depression-ridden thoughts.

Rory Barker

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Extreme Cinema - Natural Born Killers (1994)

Natural Born Killers, 1994.

Directed by Oliver Stone.
Starring Woody Harrelson and Juliette Lewis.


SYNOPSIS:

A murderous young couple are turned into celebrities by a media obsessed with violence.


Natural Born Killers (1994) was made by director Oliver Stone, who was then famous for making violent uncompromising mainstream films. This film is about Mickey and Mallory Knox (Woody Harrelson and Juliette Lewis) a poor white trash couple who go on a killing spree and are subsequently glorified by the media. Like Kubrick’s A Clockwork Orange (1971), Oliver Stone employed many cinematic tricks to deliver his message. These included colour/black & white film, back projection, stock footage, slow/fast motion, animation and a pounding contemporary soundtrack. Also, like A Clockwork Orange the film would be attacked by a frenzied media.

The film features violence from the outset in which Mickey and Mallory kill the staff and customers in a diner. However, the media satire in the film is often hilarious. The flashback to Mallory’s home life is executed like a twisted sitcom complete with laughter track. Mallory is molested by an abusive father and unprotected by a weak and indifferent mother. Mickey is sent to prison for petty theft but manages to escape. The pair then kill Mallory’s parents before embarking on their killing spree. The film then features a mock reality show called ‘American Maniacs’ about serial killers, hosted by sleazy reporter Wayne Gale (Robert Downey Jnr). Gale doesn’t care as much about the victims of the serial killers as he does about making entertaining shows and getting high ratings. When the police catch up with Mickey and Mallory, they spend a year in prison before Mickey is asked to appear on American Maniacs. During the broadcast a prison riot breaks out enabling Mickey and Mallory to escape, they take Wayne with them but later kill him.

To avoid an NC-17 rating in America, 150 cuts were made to the violent scenes to gain an R rating. Many of these excised scenes were from the prison riot sequence. This was the version which was then given an 18 certificate by the British Board of Film Classification. However before the film was released, it was attacked by the press (tabloids and broadsheets) for inciting copycat crimes in America and France. After it was decided that there were no links between the film and the crimes that had been committed, the film was released.

After receiving a video certificate in 1996, the film was again withheld - this time by its distributor Warner Brothers, who felt it was inappropriate since the release coincided with a national tragedy, the Dunblane Massacre, in which a group of schoolchildren and a teacher were killed by a gunman. The film was eventually released onto video in 2001 despite having been shown on terrestrial television (Channel 5) in 1997. A director’s cut of the film which reinstated many of the violent scenes was shown on the Film Four cable channel in 2001. This version was then released onto video/DVD in 2002.

Now that the furore over Natural Born Killers has abated, it’s difficult to see what all the fuss was about. The relentless style of the film makes the violence bearable, in fact it is almost cartoon like. The fast pace results in the violence passing swiftly, so audiences don’t find it excruciating. The sensationalist newspaper and magazine headlines in the film about the serial killers are very accurate in the way they parody the actual media’s trivializing of sensitive issues. The film’s message is very clear especially since it ends with a montage of actual news stories which don’t seem out of place with the artifice of the film. Years after its release, newspapers and magazines are pandering to a celebrity obsessed culture and our TV schedules are full of innumerable exploitative reality shows.

Santosh Sandhu graduated with a Masters degree in film from the University of Bedfordshire and wrote the short film 'The Volunteers'.