Weekly Movie Roundup

Last week, I watched 6 movies:

'Round Midnight Summertime Hokum
  • ‘Round Midnight is a film full of small, tender gestures and quiet moments of connection and loneliness.
    • Summertime acts mostly as a travelogue for Venice. Which might be more of a problem if I didn’t like Venice so much. The movie is more than a little dated in places, and it meanders more than it has a plot, but it also has a really nice performance from Katharine Hepburn that gets at the quiet loneliness of her character.
      • Hokum, like Oddity and Caveat before it, is exceptionally creepy, sharing not just writer/director Damian McCarthy’s propensity for one-word titles but the way he plays with folk horror tropes. I just wish, like I also dd with those two earlier movies, that it was in service of a more coherent story.
      The Sheep Detectives Caged Heat Take Me Out to the Ball Game
      • The Sheep Detectives is delightfully sweet, occasionally sad, often very funny, and a surprisingly decent little murder mystery.
        • Caged Heat feels like it should be judged against the standards of its genre, the women in prison exploitation movie, more than against the standards of later Jonathan Demme movies. The problem is, I haven’t seen any of the other movies in that genre, and I have seen many other (much better) Demme movies. There are interesting ideas here, a first-time director working within the confines of the genre and his budget, but it’s not necessarily worth watching just as a movie.
          • It has the thinnest of premises, but the songs and dance numbers are more than decent in Take Me Out to the Ball Game, and it’s a fun, well directed little musical.

          I also re-watched three movies:

          Peeping Tom is the best, a genuinely great movie about filmmaking and violence, ahead of its time. The other two are a lot of fun, but both very silly in their own way.

          Weekly Movie Roundup

          Last week, I somehow hit upon watching horror movie sequels, and I watched 8 of them. It did not go very well:

          Ready of Not 2: Here I Come Dracula's Daughter Children of the Damned Slumber Party Massacre II
          • Ready or Not 2: Here I Come takes the very simple (and kind of silly) premise of the first movie and really runs with it. Never mind that there isn’t a lot of room to run with, necessarily—did I mention it was a silly premise?—but it’s more fun than it has any right being, thanks largely to supporting players like Sarah Michelle Gellar and Elijah Wood.
            • Dracula’s Daughter doesn’t really work as a sequel to Dracula, much less specifically the 1931 version, but it tries doing some interesting things that let it stand on its own.
              • Children of the Damned looks decent enough, and flirts with a few interesting ideas, but it mostly just swaps between talking too much or not at all.
                • The first movie in the series was a little confused in its tone, so I guess Slumber Party Massacre II just does what any sequel would do and ramps everything up several notches. But the end result is borderline incomprehensible. It’s not so much that it isn’t scary as a horror movie—though it isn’t—it’s that by the end it’s entirely unclear what, if anything, is actually supposed to be happening or why. The rock and roll themes, while easily the best part of the movie, feel half-baked and tacked on, and the whole thing is just a weird waste of time.
                When a Stranger Calls Back A Return to Salem's Lot Psycho III Fright Night Part 2
                • When a Stranger Calls Back doesn’t just have gaps in its logic, it has wide chasms. There are moments, early in the film, that almost work, largely because they simply replicate the things that almost worked about the first movie, and I think the cast, particularly Jill Schoelen, is pretty good. But the twists the movie takes are just so laughably bad.
                  • In their review, Empire said A Return to Salem’s Lot “is offensively bad in every department and should be left to rot in a vault somewhere.” They were being far too kind.
                    • Anthony Perkins acquits himself reasonably well as a director with Psycho III—sometimes because of, sometimes in spite of, the knowing nods to Hitchcock—but the movie never justifies its existence, not even as well as the second film in the series, and the whole thing falls a little flat.
                      • Fright Night Part 2 is confused and kind of lifeless for most of its run, then ends kind of badly. I don’t have amazing fondness for the first movie, but I remember it being a lot more fun than this.

                      Weekly Movie Roundup

                      Berlin Express Normal Strange Journey
                      • Berlin Express does some interesting things, set (and filmed) in that narrow window of Allied-occupied Germany following World War II, even if its plot bounces around a little too much.
                        • I enjoyed Normal a whole lot less than I expected to. It’s too convoluted, despite what should be a fairly simple setup, and it throws away characters and jokes without a second thought, or doing much of anything interesting with them. I’ve often liked Ben Wheatley as a director, but much less so when he goes for the shootemups.
                          • Strange Journey: The Story of Rocky Horror is a sweet delight of a documentary, talking to just about all of the surviving cast, who all have wonderful things to say about the experience of the musical and movie, and looking at Rocky Horror‘s genuine impact in the world at large.
                          Meteor Project Hail Mary The Paradine Case
                          • I’m not saying Meteor is so boring as to make you welcome the collision of a cataclysmic fireball into the Earth, but I’m definitely not not saying that. It’s a remarkably unimpressive movie.
                            • I really enjoyed Project Hail Mary. Maybe it plays it a little safe, as far as science fiction goes, but it’s genuinely funny and affecting, and I had a blast.
                              • I don’t think I can say The Paradine Case is the worst Alfred Hitchcock movie, but only because I watched Under Capricorn a month ago. This one has some good performance, but they’re not in service of much more than a very stagey, overcomplicated plot and some unlikable characters.

                              I also rewatched two movies, the first accidentally, having not remembered I’d already watched it until midway through, and the other on purpose. The first was The First Deadly Sin, which is an unremarkable serial killer plot, some weird comic-relief side characters, but a fantastic, quiet performance from Sinatra, his last leading role and one of his best. The second was Kwaidan, which is just a remarkably haunting movie with beautiful staging and incredible sound design.

                              Weekly Movie Roundup

                              I watched 8 movies last week:

                              The Leopard Man Sudden Fear The Secret of Dr. Kildare Repo! The Genetic Opera
                              • The Leopard Man isn’t one of the best Val Lewton-produced movies for RKO, but it’s a well made B-movie, directed by someone who also directed the best Val Lewton-produced movies.
                                • Sudden Fear gets a little silly, but the performances are fantastic, and it’s genuinely suspenseful.
                                  • The MGM Kildare movies are hokey and dated, but they’re also pleasantly diverting and sometimes very funny. The Secret of Dr. Kildare is no exception.
                                    • Tasha Robinson, then of the AV Club, had it right about Repo! The Genetic Opera when she wrote, “It’s like nothing else out there, but there’s a perfectly good reason why.: Despite some impressively garish and gaudy visuals, the songs are mostly loud but lousy, the acting is inconsistent, and the story, such as it is, is repetitive and thin to the breaking point.
                                    Marty, Life Is Short Crack in the World Creatures the World Forgot The Snow Woman
                                    • I’m not sure Marty, Life Is Short is deeply revealing as a documentary, but it’s very sweet and honest and funny.
                                      • Crack in the World is a goofy ’60s disaster B-movie, never quite schlock, but decent performances and good fun.
                                        • Creatures the World Forgot is an interesting idea for a movie, no so interesting in execution.
                                          • The Snow Woman was shorter than I expected, but also a sad an ethereal folk tale.

                                          Weekly Movie Roundup

                                          I watched 5 movies last week:

                                          Force of Nature: The Dry 2 A Wedding Dead Presidents
                                          • Force of Nature: The Dry 2 repeats all the same problems I had with the first movie—an unsatisfying mystery too slowly pieced together through conflicting memories—but repeats fewer of the things that I thought worked well there—a sense of place, buried trauma, and a reason to care about any of the characters.
                                            • Roger Ebert gave Robert Altman’s A Wedding three and a half stars, Gene Siskel gave it one and a half, and for the life of me I still can’t figure out which one of them I agree with. Even splitting the difference with two and half stars feels wrong, but it’s such a strange and confusing movie, juggling scenes that sometimes feel simultaneously inspired and awful, that it’s hard to know what to make of it.
                                              • “[H]ere is a film that feels incomplete,” Roger Ebert wrote about Dead Presidents, “as if its last step is into thin air. Scene by scene you feel its skill, but you leave the theater wondering about the meaning of it all.”
                                              True Romance Hoppers
                                              • There’s undeniably high energy in True Romance, but it grows tedious very quickly, this collision of Tony Scott aesthetics and early Quentin Tarantino shoot-em-up. I wouldn’t go as far as to call it “aesthetically corrupt,” as the Washington Post did at the time, but it is definitely a whole lot of ’90s style and over-qualified cameos in search of anything interesting to say.
                                                • Hoppers is a little weird, in the ways it plays with anthropomorphizing (and not) the animals in it, but it’s very sweet and funny and clever.

                                                I also rewatched both The Guest and From Russia With Love, both of which were fine, though maybe not as good as I remember either. Dan Stevens has a lot of fun playing evil in The Guest, and Maika Monroe is good playing off of him, but the movie does a lot less with its premise than I remembered. Meanwhile, From Russia With Love is almost the prototypical Bond movie a little slow in places, but it’s a little slow in places, and I don’t think it’s where they perfected the formula.