Last week, I watched 6 movies:
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- ‘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.
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- 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.

































