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.

                    Weekly Movie Roundup

                    I watched 6 movies last week:

                    The Bride! The Secret Agent Sliding Doors
                    • The Bride! is an bold and audacious movie if you can get on its strange and very particular wavelength, which is something I was never once able to do. Give Maggie Gyllenhaal due credit, the movie is a go-for-broke riff on a thousand different ideas. I’m just not convinced it has anything novel or especially interesting to say about any of them, or that their collision on screen isn’t anything more than a trainwreck.
                      • The Secret Agent, as Matt Zoller Seitz wrote, “doesn’t feel made, but extracted from a dreaming mind.” That sometimes means the movie follows a dream logic, requiring you to pay attention to detail and subtext, with storylines ending or crossing in unexpected ways. But that makes the movie sound more like homework than the rich, sometimes surreal delight that it is.
                        • Sliding Doors is two very boring movies for the price of one. I think the actors, particularly Paltrow, are trying their best with the character sketches they’ve been handed, but I didn’t care about a single one of them, a few are outright insufferable, and the whole thing ends on a weird downer. As Roger Ebert wrote, “Is either time-line interesting in itself? If not, then no amount of shifting back and forth between them can help. And I fear they are not.”
                        Tokyo Twilight Tourist Trap White Material
                        • There’s a certain melancholy and sadness running through most of Ozu’s work, but Tokyo Twilight has to easily be his bleakest film. There are moments of beauty, and the director fills the screen with many of his familiar actors, but it’s not the sort of movie to watch if you need a pick-me-up.
                          • Tourist Trap is a lousy movie, and I spent less time watching it than simply waiting for it to end. In future, before I watch a horror movie, I may want to answer the question “is there a Rifftrax version of this?” and then watch that version instead.
                            • I’m not sure White Material would work, much less half as well as it does, without Isabelle Huppert’s performance at the heart of it. Her character and actions are often inscrutable, even to those around her, but Huppert sells them as having some kind of internal strength and logic.

                            I also rewatched Stir of Echoes, which is a very serviceable ’90s horror movie. Nothing special, and more than a little rushed, but with some nice moments.

                            Weekly Movie Roundup

                            Last week, I watched 9 movies:

                            Exit 8 Seven Veils DeepStar Six
                              I found Exit 8 more creepy and unnerving than scary, but that’s not a knock against it, because the movie is unnerving. And while it’s not exactly subtle about its themes, it’s nice that it’s actually kind of about something.
                              • In/Frame/Out describes Seven Veils, in part, as an exploration of “why the idea that great work is born of suffering serves as an antiquated justification for allowing terrible things to go unchallenged.” Layered, often deeply uncomfortable, with arguably Amanda Seyfried’s best performance to date.
                                • When movies like DeepStar Six fail, it’s usually because the filmmakers put more attention and effort into the creature design than the characters, and here it’s more of the opposite problem. Not that the characters are always well drawn—their deaths are largely interchangeable, and their behavior becomes increasingly inconsistent—but the movie’s cheapness in both design and ideas only shows up at the end, when despite some decent scene-setting and character work, it’s clear they have nowhere interesting to go.
                                5 Fingers Four Men and a Prayer Three
                                • 5 Fingers is a smart, tidy war-time thriller, with terrific turns by both Danielle Darrieux and James Mason.
                                  • Four Men and a Prayer is serviceably entertaining, with a very game cast.
                                    • The last of the three horror stories in Three is probably the best, but they all have their moments, and all three not enough of them. Aside from the very 2002 look to the movie, and the interesting look at horror across different Asian cultures, none of the stories quite come together in the end.
                                    Two for the Seesaw One Body Too Many The Dark Half
                                    • Two for the Seesaw can’t help but feel dated in places, and there plenty of times when the characters sound like anything but real, but Mitchum and MacLaine are terrific together in this strange, sad romance.
                                      • There are better The Old Dark House knockoffs than One Body Too Many, but this one is goofy, short-lived fun.
                                        • The Dark Half is fine, but I kept expecting it to be a lot better than it is.

                                        I also re-watched Zero Effect, which is a weird ’90s riff on Sherlock Holmes, but which is really quite engaging.

                                        And with that, my weird, unexpected numbers game of the week concluded. It wasn’t anything I’d planned, but after following Exit 8 with Seven Veils, both of which I’d been meaning to watch for a while, it seemed all but inescapable, at least the way my brain works. And there were a bunch of really good movies in there I wouldn’t have thought to watch if I wasn’t searching for movies with numbers in them. This is actually isn’t the first time I’ve tried this experiment, and it’s yielded some odd results.

                                        That's Numberwang!

                                        The Friday Random 10

                                        Last week, almost half of the lyrics were guessed correctly.

                                        How will this week go? [Update (5/29/26): Nobody guessed any of these, so the answers are all posted below.]

                                        1. “At Seventeen” by Janis Ian
                                          “And murmured vague obscenities”
                                        2. “Big River” by the Secret Sisters (orig. Johnny Cash)
                                          “Now I taught the weeping willow how to cry”
                                        3. “Civilian” by Wye Oak
                                          “I am nothing without pretend”
                                        4. “Queen of Hearts” by Juice Newton
                                          “Won’t you keep my heart from breaking, if it’s only for a very short time?”
                                        5. “Drag Me Down” by Boomtown Rats
                                          “Bless the night before the day grows old”
                                        6. “Single” by Lissie
                                          “So what’s that thing hanging around your finger”
                                        7. “Don’t Want to Know If You Are Lonely” by Hüsker Dü
                                          “I keep my distance, but that distance is too far”
                                        8. “Nightlight” by Silversun Pickups
                                          “Ladies and gentlemen, it’s time to beware”
                                        9. “Where Is a Woman to Go?” by Dusty Springfield
                                          “Hey, bartender, honey, gimme change for a ten-dollar bill”
                                        10. “The Price I Pay” by Billy Bragg
                                          “So keep that phone out of my way for the things I must say”

                                        Good luck!